BJJ Guard Passing Concepts
β°Contents
Master BJJ guard passing concepts: pressure vs speed, breaking posture, leg control, hip mobility, and conceptual frameworks for passing all guard styles.
Guard Passing as a Conceptual Framework
Most beginners learn guard passes as techniques β specific step-by-step procedures. Advanced grapplers understand guard passing as a set of underlying concepts that apply across all guard types. When you internalize these concepts, you can adapt to any guard your opponent presents instead of being stumped when they switch styles.
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The Two Fundamental Approaches
Pressure passing (torreando, smash pass, double under): Uses weight, base, and controlled movement to flatten and immobilize the guard, then step around. Requires strong base and hip mobility. Works best against flexible, active guards.
Speed passing (leg drag, knee cut, running escape): Uses quick movement and timing to go around the guard before it can establish. Requires explosive footwork and good timing. Works best when you can create momentary imbalance.
The best passers use both β switching between pressure and speed creates confusion and prevents your opponent from settling into their defensive game.
Hip Control is Everything
Almost every guard works by controlling your hips β keeping them away, loading your weight, or creating angles. Your goal as the passer is to re-establish hip freedom. Stack passes work by pushing knees to the chest (removing hip control). The leg drag works by clearing one leg to the side. Toreando works by controlling the feet and moving the hips laterally. Understand what controls your hips and attack that control.
Breaking Grips and Connection Points
Guard players need connection (grips, frames, hooks) to operate. Before passing, break these connections. Rip sleeve grips off by rotating them toward the thumb. Post on the biceps to prevent collar grips. Step or knee-slide over ankle hooks. Once your opponent loses connection, they must scramble to re-establish β that's your passing window.
The Importance of Level
Passing too upright gives your opponent space to work sweeps and submissions. Passing too low limits your own movement. The sweet spot is a moderate crouch β low enough to prevent sweeps, high enough to move your feet. As you advance in a pass, progressively lower your level to flatten your opponent.
Dealing with Common Guards
Closed guard: Stand up to break posture control, then open with a knee-in-the-middle or hip rotation technique before choosing your pass.
Half guard: Control the underhook position β if they get the underhook you're in trouble. Maintain a whizzer or post to keep them flat.
Spider guard / collar-sleeve: Attack the bicep grip first β grip removal before the pass. Bullfighter (toreando) works well here.
De La Riva: The leg drag is your best friend against DLR β clear the DLR hook by dragging the leg across your body.
Butterfly guard: Stiff arm the forehead, sprawl to flatten, then choose your pass direction.
Passing Combinations
Set up passes in combinations. Fake a knee cut, then switch to a leg drag. Start a toreando, then attack the underhook side. Chain your passes and your opponent will be unable to defend each one. Think of passing as an ongoing negotiation β each exchange moves you closer to the side position.
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Common BJJ Problems & FAQ
This often happens because you're not creating enough hip pressure and forward drive. To fix this, focus on driving your hips forward and down, using your chest to connect with their hips, and keeping your base wide and stable to prevent them from re-guarding.
Against a larger opponent, prioritize speed and leverage over brute force by attacking their base. Use leg drags and knee slices, focusing on breaking their posture by pulling their knee towards their opposite shoulder while simultaneously driving your own knee through their hip line.
You're likely not keeping your hips low enough and your supporting leg too far away. To correct this, keep your hips much lower than theirs, almost touching the mat, and ensure your supporting leg is close to their hip, creating a strong base and preventing them from easily hooking your leg.
More Questions
What's the most important thing to remember when passing guard?
Maintaining control and pressure is paramount. You need to prevent your opponent from re-establishing their guard or creating space to escape. Focus on controlling their hips and legs while advancing.
How do I deal with someone who keeps their knees really tight?
You need to break their structure and create openings. Techniques like knee slices, toreando, or leg drags are effective for isolating a leg and forcing them to open up. Don't try to force your way through a closed guard; work to dismantle it first.
What's the difference between a pressure pass and a speed pass?
Pressure passes prioritize maintaining constant contact and control, gradually advancing your position by overwhelming the opponent with weight and control. Speed passes rely on quick movements, misdirection, and explosive bursts to get around the guard before they can react effectively.