BJJ Guard Passing Styles Guide
β°Contents
Every BJJ guard passing style explained: pressure passing, speed passing, leg drag, and torreando. Find your passing game and how to build it.
Why Your Passing Style Defines Your Game
Your guard passing style isn't just a technique preference β it's a statement about your entire grappling identity. Pressure passers and speed passers play completely different games. Knowing which suits your body type and temperament will focus years of training.
The 4 Major Passing Philosophies
1οΈβ£ Pressure Passing
Use your weight and body pressure to immobilize the guard, then methodically advance position.
- Best for: Heavier grapplers, methodical players, wrestlers
- Core principle: Remove frames, flatten the opponent, advance
- Famous practitioners: Gordon Ryan, Buchecha, Keenan Cornelius
2οΈβ£ Speed / Movement Passing
Move faster than the guard can adapt. Use direction changes, footwork, and explosive entry to get past.
- Best for: Smaller, more athletic grapplers
- Core principle: Movement creates angles; angles bypass guard
- Famous practitioners: Leandro Lo, Rafael Mendes
3οΈβ£ Leg Drag System
Control one leg, drag it across your body, land in a passing position.
- Best for: All body types
- Core principle: Control leg β nullify guard β pass to back
- Famous practitioners: Bernardo Faria, Danaher System
4οΈβ£ Knee Slice System
Drive your knee through the guard with consistent directional pressure.
- Best for: Mid-level wrestlers, pressure players
- Core principle: Consistent pressure in one direction to cut through
Passing in Gi vs. No-Gi
| Situation | Recommended Approach |
|---|---|
| Gi vs. spider guard | Torreando / bullfighter to neutralize sleeve grips |
| Gi vs. lasso guard | Leg drag to neutralize lasso |
| No-gi vs. butterfly guard | Over-under or toreando (no lapel) |
| No-gi vs. seated guard | Knee slice or leg drag |
Building Your Passing Game
- Choose a primary style (pressure or speed) based on your body type.
- Master 1β2 passes from your primary style first.
- Add a complementary pass from a different style to handle guards that counter your primary.
- Drill entries into your passes as much as the passes themselves.