Posture Breaking
No attack from closed guard works if the opponent maintains strong upright posture. Use collar grips and sleeve grips together to break them down before initiating any submission.
The Triangle Family
Triangle choke, omoplata, and armbar form a natural attack triangle from closed guard. When the opponent defends one, they often open another. Learn all three simultaneously.
Hip Elevation
Lifting your hips into your opponent is the engine of closed guard attacks. Practice the hip thrust drill β explosive hip elevation creates the angle and leverage needed for every submission.
Grips Drive Everything
Strong cross-collar or same-side collar grip combined with sleeve control sets up nearly every closed guard attack. Never go for a submission without first establishing dominant grips.
Sweep First, Submit Second
Threatening sweeps opens submissions, and threatening submissions opens sweeps. Combine the hip bump sweep with the kimura to create this two-way pressure.
Step 1: Break Posture
Establish a cross-collar grip deep in the lapel and a same-side sleeve grip. Pull the opponent's sleeve toward your hip while pulling the collar toward your chest to break their base.
Step 2: Elevate Your Hips
Once posture is broken, practice hip elevation on both sides. This creates the angle for triangles and armbars. Drill this movement until it's automatic.
Step 3: Attack the Triangle
Bring one leg over the shoulder while pushing their opposite arm across your centerline. Lock the triangle and adjust the angle by turning sideways.
Step 4: Flow Between Submissions
If triangle fails, overhook the arm for the armbar. If armbar fails, rotate for the omoplata. These movements connect naturally when hips stay active.