BJJ Wiki › Dicas de Treino de BJJ: 15 Formas de Melhorar Mais Rápido
Dicas de Treino de BJJ: 15 Formas de Melhorar Mais Rápido
Progress in BJJ isn't just about mat time — it's about quality of training. These 15 tips, used by black belts and competitors worldwide, will help you get more from every session.
Three sessions per week beats ten sessions in one week then nothing. Consistency over intensity.
2. Focus on positions before submissions
White and blue belts should invest heavily in positional dominance. Submissions follow naturally from good positions.
3. Drill, don't just roll
Rolling is fun but drilling ingrains technique. Dedicate 20–30 min per session to isolated drilling.
4. Write a training journal
Note what worked, what got you submitted, and what you want to drill next. Review before every session.
5. Tap early and often
Tapping in practice is learning. Fighting a submission until injury is a waste of mat time.
6. Watch competition footage
Study high-level competition on YouTube. Pick one technique and drill it that week.
7. Focus on fundamentals always
Black belts win with basics executed flawlessly. Don't neglect your closed guard just because it's "boring."
8. Rest and recover
Sleep 7–9 hours, eat enough protein (1.6g/kg bodyweight), and take rest days seriously.
FAQ
How many days a week should I train BJJ?
Most practitioners improve fastest at 3–4 sessions per week. This allows adequate recovery while maintaining frequency. More than 5 sessions per week risks overtraining and injury, especially for beginners.
Should I drill or roll more in BJJ?
Both are important. Drilling builds technique precision without fatigue. Rolling (sparring) tests your technique under resistance. A balanced 40/60 drill-to-roll ratio is a solid starting point.
How do I get better at BJJ faster?
The fastest path to improvement is: consistent training (3–4x/week), quality drilling with intention, watching instructional content and competition footage, asking your instructor targeted questions, and competing regularly.
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