Take your half guard to the next level with deep half, lockdown, and underhook systems
Half guard has evolved from a position of survival into one of the most dangerous offensive positions in modern BJJ. Understanding the advanced systems transforms it from a defensive last resort into an active attacking platform.
Deep half guard places your body underneath the opponent, with one arm around their far hip and your head on their far side. From here, you have access to the waiter sweep, Homer Simpson sweep, and back take entries. Jeff Glover and Bernardo Faria are the masters of this position.
In half guard, whoever wins the underhook controls the position. The player on bottom needs the underhook to threaten the sweep and back take. The player on top fights for the underhook to flatten the bottom player and pass. This constant battle shapes all of half guard play.
The knee shield (Z-guard) keeps the top player away and prevents them from flattening you. From knee shield, you can attack the arm, threaten the back, and set up sweeps. The key is maintaining a strong frame while being active with the free leg.
The lockdown traps the opponent's leg and creates extreme leverage for sweeps. Used extensively by Eddie Bravo, it leads to the electric chair, the old school sweep, and back takes. It requires specific hip flexibility but is devastating when mastered.
Top players now use specific counters to half guard: the knee cut pass, the log splitter, and the hip switch. Learning to deal with these from the bottom is essential. The answer is usually to time your underhook fight to the moment the passer commits.
Most practitioners develop functional competency with Half Guard 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.
Yes. Half Guard 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.
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.
BJJ is a linked system. Half Guard Advanced flows naturally to and from related positions. Study transitions in both directions to build a complete positional game.
When you're in Deep Half Guard, if your hips aren't actively driving forward and your shoulder isn't creating a strong base against their hip, they can easily drive their weight down your spine. To prevent this, ensure your chest is low and your hips are pushing into their thigh, using your shoulder as a fulcrum to resist their forward pressure.
To sweep a heavier opponent from Lockdown, focus on using your top leg's knee to drive into their hip socket while simultaneously pulling their ankle towards your chest with your bottom leg. This creates a leverage point to break their base and initiate a hip escape, followed by a scooping motion with your hooking leg to off-balance them.
In modern half guard, maintain constant pressure with your knee shield by driving your shin into their hip and using your foot to create a wedge against their thigh. Simultaneously, ensure your opposite arm is framing against their biceps or shoulder to control their posture and create space for hip escapes, preventing them from collapsing your guard.
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Get Free Access βWhen your opponent postures, focus on using your lockdown to control their leg and create a fulcrum. Simultaneously, use your free leg to push off their hip or knee, generating the necessary momentum to invert or elevate your hips for a sweep.
Traditional deep half often relies on controlling the opponent's leg with your shin and foot, aiming for sweeps like the 'old school' or 'grapevine'. Modern systems, like the lockdown, emphasize a more dynamic, two-on-one leg entanglement, allowing for faster transitions and a wider array of offensive options.
Maintaining tight control of your opponent's leg is paramount. Use your hips to create frames and prevent them from stacking or flattening you. Actively look to reverse the pressure by looking for underhooks or transitioning to a more offensive position.