i was wondering if anyone could give me any tips on passing the guard from someone who just lays back right when time starts and waits for you to come at them.any help is much appreciated.i've only been in bjj about a month and love it.
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I'm not sure what you mean. Are you saying the person who has you in his guard is not doing anything at all? If that's the case, that would be the best time to pass the guard.
My instructor always tells us our first priority when inside someone's guard is to protect yourself from the various chokes, armbars, sweeps, etc that they can unleash on you. You want to be mindful of what his hands are doing, and be careful with what he does with his legs...especially if he slides on leg up your back and/or puts his feet on your hips.
Once you find a moment where you are safe from submissions and sweeps, you can work on passing the guard. However, if he starts to attack you, your safest bet is to stop the guard passing and protect yourself again.
There are many ways to pass the guard, which I'm sure you'll cover in class over time. Kind of hard to describe the exact motions on these posts.
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If you mean they sit back and play an open/butterfly like guard then a good pass is the under pass.Grab underneath their hamstrings and let yor hands slide up and grab his quads....thrust foward and let go of one leg(let go of the side your NOT passing on)duck your head under while controlling the leg and pass to side control.For passing the butterfly guard there is a pass known as the staple gun which is basicly the same pass you just grab and pass one leg instead of two.
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none associated jkd instructor and army combatitives instructor
There are many ways to pass the guard or defend against it and brazilian jiu jitsu is nothing more than a sport. Many counters and offensive techniques to defeat a bjj practitioner.
Remember always attack their limps no matter what kind of lock. Whenever a grappler especially aground grappler executes a technique, he leaves a LIMB open, you attack those limbs. There is always a limb that is exposed. So gouging, finger or toes locks or breaks, pressure points, biting, spitting, scratching and counter offensive locks from head to toe is what you use for any ground technique such as a triangle or four squarel locks. Head butting, rolling, twisting, striking, kicking, kneeing are all combinations one can use even when in the ground and in a locked position. There is a counter or multiple counters against anything. Most people just don't know or not knowledgeable enough or experienced enough in counterring the unknown. That's how you learn is thru experience. Making too much emphasis on bjj is ridiculous, the japanese jiu jitsu is more effective in real combat fighting and especially chinese shiau chiau and other chin na applications or JKD applications. If you want to be a successful fighter, you cannot have a limited and exclusive art and that is the problem with bjj only groups. when you come out of the box, you learn to develop more proficiently. I personally have toyed with the bjj fanatics. They go by rules, real combat has no rules.I have way too much personal and combat experiences. Best teachers are those filipinos and other world war 2 heroes who actually had to survive hand to hand combat including those who have real life situations in which they survive wherever they are from. You learn from them with what you can and apply it in your own progression. Never put a limit in your learning is the key and applying the JKD concepts and other related concepts is what expands your horizon.
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Originally posted by armyscout43There are many ways to pass the guard or defend against it and brazilian jiu jitsu is nothing more than a sport. Many counters and offensive techniques to defeat a bjj practitioner.
Remember always attack their limps no matter what kind of lock. Whenever a grappler especially aground grappler executes a technique, he leaves a LIMB open, you attack those limbs. There is always a limb that is exposed. So gouging, finger or toes locks or breaks, pressure points, biting, spitting, scratching and counter offensive locks from head to toe is what you use for any ground technique such as a triangle or four squarel locks. Head butting, rolling, twisting, striking, kicking, kneeing are all combinations one can use even when in the ground and in a locked position. There is a counter or multiple counters against anything. Most people just don't know or not knowledgeable enough or experienced enough in counterring the unknown. That's how you learn is thru experience. Making too much emphasis on bjj is ridiculous, the japanese jiu jitsu is more effective in real combat fighting and especially chinese shiau chiau and other chin na applications or JKD applications. If you want to be a successful fighter, you cannot have a limited and exclusive art and that is the problem with bjj only groups. when you come out of the box, you learn to develop more proficiently. I personally have toyed with the bjj fanatics. They go by rules, real combat has no rules.I have way too much personal and combat experiences. Best teachers are those filipinos and other world war 2 heroes who actually had to survive hand to hand combat including those who have real life situations in which they survive wherever they are from. You learn from them with what you can and apply it in your own progression. Never put a limit in your learning is the key and applying the JKD concepts and other related concepts is what expands your horizon.
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There are many ways to pass the guard or defend against it and brazilian jiu jitsu is nothing more than a sport. Many counters and offensive techniques to defeat a bjj practitioner.
Remember always attack their limps no matter what kind of lock. Whenever a grappler especially aground grappler executes a technique, he leaves a LIMB open, you attack those limbs. There is always a limb that is exposed. So gouging, finger or toes locks or breaks, pressure points, biting, spitting, scratching and counter offensive locks from head to toe is what you use for any ground technique such as a triangle or four squarel locks. Head butting, rolling, twisting, striking, kicking, kneeing are all combinations one can use even when in the ground and in a locked position. There is a counter or multiple counters against anything. Most people just don't know or not knowledgeable enough or experienced enough in counterring the unknown. That's how you learn is thru experience. Making too much emphasis on bjj is ridiculous, the japanese jiu jitsu is more effective in real combat fighting and especially chinese shiau chiau and other chin na applications or JKD applications. If you want to be a successful fighter, you cannot have a limited and exclusive art and that is the problem with bjj only groups. when you come out of the box, you learn to develop more proficiently. I personally have toyed with the bjj fanatics. They go by rules, real combat has no rules.I have way too much personal and combat experiences. Best teachers are those filipinos and other world war 2 heroes who actually had to survive hand to hand combat including those who have real life situations in which they survive wherever they are from. You learn from them with what you can and apply it in your own progression. Never put a limit in your learning is the key and applying the JKD concepts and other related concepts is what expands your horizon.
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Mr. Arieson is on a distinguished road
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Geez, what a diatribe from a first poster!!
Anyway, just a quick aside...I am starting BJJ lessons soon. I am just trying to work up the nerve, because from all accounts, BJJ is very, very hard!!!
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Originally posted by blackbelt22i was wondering if anyone could give me any tips on passing the guard from someone who just lays back right when time starts and waits for you to come at them.any help is much appreciated.i've only been in bjj about a month and love it.
You have to try and get around him. That or just go into his guard and then pass it. Another way is lead with your knee right into his groin so he cant you into his guard, and you can slide your knee onto his stomach and then over to pass or get into his half guard. But since you are new, just try and pass . Lift him up, or stand and push his knees down, or stand and twist your hips so you drive your knee into his stomach, which will break the hold. be careful because you will get swept though
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[QUOTE=armyscout43]There are many ways to pass the guard or defend against it and brazilian jiu jitsu is nothing more than a sport. Many counters and offensive techniques to defeat a bjj practitioner.QUOTE]
You are a total idiot and have never grappled with a BJJ practioner
[QUOTE=armyscout43]:There is always a limb that is exposed QUOTE]
Yes yours, which will get snapped like a twig
[QUOTE=armyscout43]:Head butting, rolling, twisting, striking, kicking, kneeing are all combinations one can use even when in the ground and in a locked position.QUOTE]
Yes try biting or eye guaging, that way WHEN the BJJ guy gets your arm or chokes you he shows no mercy
[QUOTE=armyscout43]:I personally have toyed with the bjj fanatics.
They go by rules, QUOTE]
Yes the rules are never quit till the opponent is out. You would be tap dancing faster than a Buddy Rich drum solo, Ive tapped out so many big tough marines than march in and think they rule the world, tap tap tap tap
True there is no rules, but you better be sure you are going to win before you start with the 'dirty' fighting
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Originally posted by armyscout43Head butting, rolling, twisting, striking, kicking, kneeing are all combinations one can use even when in the ground and in a locked position.
Also, try biting someone when you are being choked out. I guarantee it won't work too well. You will be struggling to even open your mouth, while you are halfway to being passed out.
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Troll
Guys,
I think that armyscout43 is a troll. He made one post and all you guys responded. The best bet is to ignore him and hope he goes away.
Your best response is to get back on topic and try and help the guy who is getting caught in the guard.
I must say though, this line cracked me up "I have way too much personal and combat experiences" ha ha ha ha
Blackbelt22, just keep practising. You will find him very difficult to beat if he has a good guard and just falls into it but when you move into Vale Tudo or sparring with punches (assuming your club does this) you will find that he is leaving himself in a crap position. DO NOT COPY HIM just because he is beating you now. Always aim for a top position. If his game is this limited you will start to beat him anyway given enough practice.
Cam
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