BJJ Positional Hierarchy Guide: Dominance Ranking
β°Contents
Learn the BJJ position hierarchy: understand which positions dominate and how to evaluate your position advantage in every match situation.
Understanding Position Dominance
In BJJ, not all positions are equal. The positional hierarchy determines which positions give you the greatest advantage and control over your opponent. Mastering this hierarchy helps you prioritize your game plan and understand when to defend versus when to attack.
Top Tier Positions
Mount Position
Mount is arguably the most dominant position in BJJ. You control both of your opponent's hips with your knees on either side of their body. From mount, you can:
- Apply heavy pressure to limit escape options
- Execute submissions from multiple angles (chokes, armbars, triangles)
- Control opponent's movement completely
Back Control
Back control with hooks is the second most dominant position. You control your opponent's movement and can apply devastating chokes. The rear-naked choke from back control is one of the highest-percentage finishes in BJJ.
Mid Tier Positions
Side Control
Side control puts you across your opponent's body, controlling their torso but not their legs. This position offers strong pressure and submission opportunities while being less dominant than mount or back.
North-South Position
In north-south, you're perpendicular to your opponent with your head near theirs. This position offers unique submission opportunities but provides less overall control than side control.
Lower Tier Positions
Knee on Belly
Knee on belly applies intense localized pressure but offers less overall control. Many competitors use it as a transitional position rather than settling there.
Guard Positions
When your opponent is in your guard, you're on your back. While this isn't dominant, closed guard and high-level open guards (X-guard, butterfly guard) provide strong attacking positions despite the apparent disadvantage.
How to Use the Hierarchy
Understanding position dominance helps you:
- Prioritize advancement: Focus on climbing the position hierarchy
- Make smart transitions: Plan your path through positions efficiently
- Defend effectively: Know which escape options are most viable from each position
- Manage time: Develop strategies based on the match time and score
Position Evolution
The positional hierarchy has evolved as BJJ has progressed. Modern jiu-jitsu recognizes that positions like X-guard and deep half-guard can be more advantageous than their traditional ranking might suggest due to modern sweeping and submission techniques.
Key Takeaways
- Mount and back control are the most dominant positions
- Side control and north-south are mid-tier positional advantages
- Guard positions offer attacking potential despite being "on bottom"
- Use the hierarchy to plan your position progression strategy