Advanced BJJ <strong>Submission</strong> Hunting: Creating and Converting Opportunities
β°Contents
- The Submission Triangle Concept
- Creating Submission Opportunities
- The Trap and Chain System
- Converting Half-Submissions to Full Control
- Submission Hunting Under Fatigue
- π‘ Quick Tips
- Related Techniques
- Frequently Asked Questions
- How long does it take to learn Submission Hunting Advanced?
- Is Submission Hunting Advanced effective for beginners?
- How often should I drill Submission Hunting Advanced?
Elevate your submission game with advanced hunting strategies. Learn how to set traps, chain submissions, and convert half-attempts into dominant positions.
Advanced submission hunting is the art of manufacturing opportunities rather than waiting for them. It combines positional awareness, psychological reading, and technical precision to create a submission threat that opponents cannot ignore or escape.
The Submission Triangle Concept
Elite submission hunters work in triangles: three related attacks that feed into each other. The classic example is triangle choke β armbar β omoplata from closed guard. Each transition is triggered by a specific defensive reaction, making the entire system self-reinforcing.
Creating Submission Opportunities
Submissions rarely appear from nothing. They are manufactured through: positional pressure that forces specific reactions, grip fighting that isolates limbs, and rhythm disruption that catches opponents mid-transition. Study the defensive patterns of common submissions to understand how to bait specific reactions.
The Trap and Chain System
A trap is a submission you offer deliberately with a safe bail-out option. If they defend, you transition to the next submission in your chain. If they don't defend, you finish. The most dangerous submission hunters are those whose opponents cannot determine which attack is real.
Converting Half-Submissions to Full Control
When a submission attempt fails, it often exposes the opponent to a different vulnerability. A failed armbar from guard can transition to a triangle if they posture forward. A defended triangle can become a straight armbar. Treat every 'failed' submission as a transition opportunity.
Submission Hunting Under Fatigue
Advanced competition and hard rolling will test submission chains under fatigue. Practice drilling complete chains at competition pace. Your body must execute the transitions automatically so your mind can focus on reading your opponent's reactions.
π‘ Quick Tips
- Never abandon a submission β transition from it instead.
- Study your opponent's defensive habits before targeting specific submissions.
- Enter submission attempts from dominant positions to maximize leverage.
- The submission that wins competitions is the one you've drilled most, not the flashiest one.
- Use grips strategically β don't grip early; grip when you're already in position.
Related Techniques
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to learn Submission Hunting Advanced?
Most practitioners develop functional competency with Submission Hunting Advanced within 3β6 months of consistent drilling. Mastery β the ability to execute reliably in live rolling against resisting opponents β typically takes 1β2 years.
Is Submission Hunting Advanced effective for beginners?
Yes. Submission Hunting Advanced is part of the core BJJ curriculum and taught at all belt levels. Beginners should focus on the fundamental mechanics and concepts before refining advanced entries.
How often should I drill Submission Hunting Advanced?
3β5 times per week is ideal for rapid skill acquisition. Even 10 focused repetitions per session compounds over time β consistency matters more than volume.
What positions connect to Submission Hunting Advanced?
BJJ is a linked system. Submission Hunting Advanced flows naturally to and from related positions. Study transitions in both directions to build a complete positional game.