The hip escape (shrimp) is the single most important movement in BJJ. Every guard retention, guard recovery, and bottom position survival depends on the ability to create space through hip movement.
A hip escape is a lateral hip movement that creates space between you and the top player. By pushing off the floor and driving the hips sideways (shrimping), you can replace a guard, recover position, or create angles for attacks from bottom.
The most common version. The hip moves directly to the side β used to replace guard when the top player is attempting to pass. Combines with the elbow-knee frame to create the space needed to recover guard.
The hip moves backward and to the side β used to create distance from a pressing top player. Essential for creating space from flat-on-back position.
Combines a sit-up with a hip escape β creates an angle for guard attacks while creating space. The foundation of the Granby roll and many inversion entries.
The shrimp is most effective when combined with frames. A frame on the hip + shrimp = space to replace guard. A frame on the shoulder + shrimp = angle to sit up or invert. The frame and the hip escape work together β one without the other is much less effective.
Shrimping is a lateral hip movement where you bridge and then drive your hips to the side to create space. It's the fundamental BJJ escape movement used in guard recovery, escaping side control, and creating space from bottom.
Drill shrimping in isolation across the mat every class. Then combine with framing drills. The movement needs to become reflexive β you shouldn't have to think about shrimping, it should happen automatically when you feel pressure.