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Guard (grappling)

The guard is a ground grappling position in which one combatant has their back to the ground while attempting to control the other combatant using their legs. In pure grappling combat sports, the guard is considered an advantageous position, because the bottom combatant can attack with various joint locks and chokeholds, while the top combatant's priority is the transition into a more dominant position, a process known as passing the guard. In the sport of mixed martial arts, as well as hand-to-hand combat in general, it is possible to effectively strike from the top in the guard, even though the bottom combatant exerts some control. There are various types of guard, with their own advantages and disadvantages.

Guard
Standard closed guard, demonstrated by US Army Rangers.
ClassificationPosition
StyleJujutsu, Judo, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu
Child hold(s)closed guard, open guard, half guard

The guard is a key part of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu where it can be used as an offensive position. It is also used, but not formally named, in Judo[1] though it is sometimes referred to as dō-osae in Japanese, meaning "trunk hold".[2][note 1] It is called the "front body scissor" in catch wrestling.

Pulling Guard edit

Transitioning directly from standing to the guard position is known as pulling guard. Tsunetane Oda, a judo groundwork specialist who died in 1955,[3] demonstrated the technique on video.[4]

Closed Guard edit

 
The closed guard

Sometimes referred to as full guard, the closed guard is the typical guard position. In this guard the legs are hooked behind the back of the opponent, preventing them from standing up or moving away. The opponent needs to open the legs up to be able to improve positioning. The bottom combatant might transit between the open and closed guard, as the open guard allows for better movement, but also has a bigger risk of the opponent passing the guard.

Half Guard edit

 
The half guard position

Half guard is a position where the guard player wraps both of their legs around one of their opponent's legs. The half guard can favour the passer or the guard player, depending on the many details of the position such as body positioning and grips. The position affords many options for the guard player to initiate techniques such as sweeps and submission holds.

Variants of half guard include the deep half guard, the Z-guard and the reverse De La Riva guard.

Open Guard edit

 
A basic of open guard, as shown in a USMC Close Combat manual

The open guard is typically used to perform various joint locks and chokeholds. The legs can be used to move the opponent, and to create leverage. The open guard allows the opponent to stand up or try to pass the guard, so this position is often used only temporarily to set up sweeps or other techniques. Open guard is also a general term that encompasses a large number of guard positions where the legs are used to push, wrap or hook the opponent without locking the ankles together around them.

Butterfly Guard edit

 
The butterfly guard being used during Judo training. The judogi of the top combatant is grabbed to prevent him from moving away.

The butterfly guard involves both of the legs being hooked with the ankles in between the opponents legs, against the inside of the opponents thighs. The opponent is controlled using both legs and arms. The leverage in the butterfly guard allows powerful sweeps. The guard also allows one to elevate or set the opponent off balance and because of this it is particularly useful in avoiding damage and allows transitions to other dominant positions. The analogous technique in wrestling and catch wrestling is called double elevator.

X-Guard edit

The X-guard is an open guard where one of the combatants is standing up and the other is on their back. The bottom combatant uses the legs to entangle one of the opponent's legs, which creates opportunities for powerful sweeps. The X-guard is often used in combination with butterfly and half guard. In a grappling match, this is an advantageous position for the bottom combatant, but in general hand-to-hand combat, the top combatant can attack with stomps or soccer kicks. Likewise, skilled use of the x-guard can prevent the opponent from attempting a kick, or throw them off balance should they raise a leg. The x-guard was developed by Alexandre "Gigi" Paiva [in the 1990's,?] and popularized by Marcelo Garcia.[5]

Spider Guard edit

The spider guard comprises a number of positions all of which involve controlling the opponents arms while using the soles of the feet to control the opponent at the biceps, hips, thighs or a combination of them. It is most effective when the sleeves of the opponent can be grabbed. The spider guard can be used for sweeps and to set up joint locks or chokeholds.

De La Riva Guard edit

 
The De la Riva guard being used in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu training

The De La Riva guard (also called jello guard) is an open guard popularized by Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu practitioner Ricardo De La Riva, who was successful with it in competition.[citation needed] The guard consists of one of the legs wrapped behind the opponent's leg from the outside, the ankle held with one hand, and the other hand grips one of their sleeves. The De La Riva guard offers a number of sweeps, transitions and submissions, and is more recently used in combination with spider guard.

Rubber Guard edit

 
Rubber Guard diagram, a red figure holding blue figure in the rubber guard.

The rubber guard is a position that keeps an opponent down in your guard. The position was used by Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu practitioner Nino Schembri and popularized and made into a system by Eddie Bravo. Many techniques have been developed from this position including sweeps, submissions, and striking defense. By using a leg to hold an opponent down, one arm is free to work on submissions, sweeps or to strike the opponent's trapped head.

50-50 Guard edit

 
Megaton Dias demonstrating the 50-50 guard

The 50-50 (Fifty-fifty) guard is a position popularized by Roberto “Gordo” Correa and extensively used by the Mendes Brothers, Rafael and Guilherme Mendes, Bruno Frazzato, Ryan Hall and Ramon Lemos from the Atos Jiu-Jitsu Team. In other grappling systems such as catch wrestling and Sambo, it is a form of the "outside leg triangle" type of leg control. In this position, the fighter on the bottom crosses a triangle on the opponent's leg, which allows for the leg to be dominated while leaving the arms free to work on sweeps and submissions. This position has been heavily criticized for use in competitions with restricted use of leglocks due to the potential of stalling a match when the fighter on top cannot pass the guard and the fighter on the bottom cannot successfully perform a sweep.[6][7][8][9][10][11][12]

Passing the Guard edit

In order to overcome the primary defense of one's opponent, their guard, and attain a more dominant position, such as side mount, full mount, or knee on stomach a practitioner must pass the guard. There are several ways of doing so; many involve pain compliance whereby the practitioner persuades the opponent to release their guard through an abrasive action. Examples of this type of action would be digging the practitioner's forearms into the inner thigh of the opponent, standing and attempting a can opener neck crank, or in the case of a mixed martial arts setting, to simply strike the opponent until the guard is released. Passing the guard however has perils of its own, as it has a tendency to leave the practitioner particularly vulnerable to counterattack in the form of sweeps and submissions.

Simple guard pass edit

Simple guard pass also known as the arm/leg pull is a guard pass demonstrated in The Essence Of Judo by Kyuzo Mifune, and it is an unnamed technique described in The Canon Of Judo.[13] In Brazilian Jiu Jitsu this pass is commonly referred to as the Toreando/Bull Fighter Pass.[14] The main characteristic of the pass is the practitioner side-stepping around the opponent's legs whilst simultaneously pulling aside the opponent's leg or pinning the opponents legs to the ground.

Stacking guard pass edit

Stacking Guard Pass is also demonstrated in The Essence Of Judo by Mifune, and it is also an unnamed technique described in The Canon Of Judo.[13] The main characteristic of the technique is the practitioner lifting the opponent and stacking them, into a possible neck crank or blood choke submission, when the practitioner is in the opponent's open guard.

Near knee guard pass edit

Near Knee Guard Pass is also demonstrated in The Essence Of Judo by Mifune as well as Canon of Judo by Mifune.[15] In Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, this guard pass is commonly referred to as the Knee Over Pass.[16] The main characteristic of this pass is the practitioner driving their knee over the opponent's same side thigh while in the opponent's open guard.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ The technique "do-jime" is sometimes incorrectly used to describe the closed guard. The difference is that with do-jime, pressure is applied to squeeze the opponent's trunk to cause asphyxia. Do-jime is a prohibited technique in judo, see IJF Referee Rules (English version).

References edit

  1. ^ Jimmy Pedro. The Pedro Guard Pass by Jimmy Pedro 2010-05-19 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Miller, Chris. Grappling/Submission Fighting. hsma1.com. URL last accessed on March 4, 2006.
  3. ^ Toshikazu Okada. Master Tsunetane Oda
  4. ^ Tsunetane Oda - judo ne-waza 2 of 3
  5. ^ Garcia, Marcelo; Eric Hendrikx; Glen Cordoza; Erich Krauss (2008). The X-Guard: Gi & No Gi Jiu-Jitsu. Sport Series (illustrated ed.). Tuttle Publishing. p. 260. ISBN 978-0-9777315-0-3.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-08-30. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-09-07. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-08-31. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-09-28. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-09-18. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-08-29. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-09-04. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
  13. ^ a b Mifune, Kyuzo (April 2004). The Canon Of Judo. Kodansha International Ltd. ISBN 4-7700-2979-9.
  14. ^ Smith, Andrew (March 29, 2019). "7 Toreando Guard Pass Variations in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu". How They Play. How They Play. Retrieved March 21, 2020.
  15. ^ Mifune, Kyuzo (1958). Canon of Judo. Tokyo, Japan: Seibundo Shinkosha Publishing Co. p. 174.
  16. ^ "The Knee Over Pressure Pass". BJJ Fanatics. BJJ Fanatics. Retrieved April 10, 2020.

Further reading edit

  • Løvstad, Jakob. . www.idi.ntnu.no. URL last accessed March 6, 2006. (DOC format)
  • Page, Nicky. . homepage.ntlworld.com. URL last accessed March 4, 2006.
  • Kesting, Stephan. The X guard position. www.grapplearts.com. URL last accessed March 7, 2006.
  • Bravo, Eddie (2006) Mastering The Rubber Guard. ISBN 0-9777315-9-6

guard, grappling, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, march, 2011, learn, when, remove, this, message, guard, grou. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations March 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message The guard is a ground grappling position in which one combatant has their back to the ground while attempting to control the other combatant using their legs In pure grappling combat sports the guard is considered an advantageous position because the bottom combatant can attack with various joint locks and chokeholds while the top combatant s priority is the transition into a more dominant position a process known as passing the guard In the sport of mixed martial arts as well as hand to hand combat in general it is possible to effectively strike from the top in the guard even though the bottom combatant exerts some control There are various types of guard with their own advantages and disadvantages GuardStandard closed guard demonstrated by US Army Rangers ClassificationPositionStyleJujutsu Judo Brazilian Jiu JitsuChild hold s closed guard open guard half guard The guard is a key part of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu where it can be used as an offensive position It is also used but not formally named in Judo 1 though it is sometimes referred to as dō osae in Japanese meaning trunk hold 2 note 1 It is called the front body scissor in catch wrestling Contents 1 Pulling Guard 2 Closed Guard 3 Half Guard 4 Open Guard 4 1 Butterfly Guard 4 2 X Guard 4 3 Spider Guard 4 4 De La Riva Guard 4 5 Rubber Guard 4 6 50 50 Guard 5 Passing the Guard 5 1 Simple guard pass 5 2 Stacking guard pass 5 3 Near knee guard pass 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 Further readingPulling Guard editTransitioning directly from standing to the guard position is known as pulling guard Tsunetane Oda a judo groundwork specialist who died in 1955 3 demonstrated the technique on video 4 Closed Guard edit nbsp The closed guard Sometimes referred to as full guard the closed guard is the typical guard position In this guard the legs are hooked behind the back of the opponent preventing them from standing up or moving away The opponent needs to open the legs up to be able to improve positioning The bottom combatant might transit between the open and closed guard as the open guard allows for better movement but also has a bigger risk of the opponent passing the guard Half Guard editMain article Half guard nbsp The half guard position Half guard is a position where the guard player wraps both of their legs around one of their opponent s legs The half guard can favour the passer or the guard player depending on the many details of the position such as body positioning and grips The position affords many options for the guard player to initiate techniques such as sweeps and submission holds Variants of half guard include the deep half guard the Z guard and the reverse De La Riva guard Open Guard edit nbsp A basic of open guard as shown in a USMC Close Combat manual The open guard is typically used to perform various joint locks and chokeholds The legs can be used to move the opponent and to create leverage The open guard allows the opponent to stand up or try to pass the guard so this position is often used only temporarily to set up sweeps or other techniques Open guard is also a general term that encompasses a large number of guard positions where the legs are used to push wrap or hook the opponent without locking the ankles together around them Butterfly Guard edit nbsp The butterfly guard being used during Judo training The judogi of the top combatant is grabbed to prevent him from moving away The butterfly guard involves both of the legs being hooked with the ankles in between the opponents legs against the inside of the opponents thighs The opponent is controlled using both legs and arms The leverage in the butterfly guard allows powerful sweeps The guard also allows one to elevate or set the opponent off balance and because of this it is particularly useful in avoiding damage and allows transitions to other dominant positions The analogous technique in wrestling and catch wrestling is called double elevator X Guard edit The X guard is an open guard where one of the combatants is standing up and the other is on their back The bottom combatant uses the legs to entangle one of the opponent s legs which creates opportunities for powerful sweeps The X guard is often used in combination with butterfly and half guard In a grappling match this is an advantageous position for the bottom combatant but in general hand to hand combat the top combatant can attack with stomps or soccer kicks Likewise skilled use of the x guard can prevent the opponent from attempting a kick or throw them off balance should they raise a leg The x guard was developed by Alexandre Gigi Paiva in the 1990 s and popularized by Marcelo Garcia 5 Spider Guard edit The spider guard comprises a number of positions all of which involve controlling the opponents arms while using the soles of the feet to control the opponent at the biceps hips thighs or a combination of them It is most effective when the sleeves of the opponent can be grabbed The spider guard can be used for sweeps and to set up joint locks or chokeholds De La Riva Guard edit nbsp The De la Riva guard being used in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu training The De La Riva guard also called jello guard is an open guard popularized by Brazilian Jiu Jitsu practitioner Ricardo De La Riva who was successful with it in competition citation needed The guard consists of one of the legs wrapped behind the opponent s leg from the outside the ankle held with one hand and the other hand grips one of their sleeves The De La Riva guard offers a number of sweeps transitions and submissions and is more recently used in combination with spider guard Rubber Guard edit Main article Rubber guard nbsp Rubber Guard diagram a red figure holding blue figure in the rubber guard The rubber guard is a position that keeps an opponent down in your guard The position was used by Brazilian Jiu Jitsu practitioner Nino Schembri and popularized and made into a system by Eddie Bravo Many techniques have been developed from this position including sweeps submissions and striking defense By using a leg to hold an opponent down one arm is free to work on submissions sweeps or to strike the opponent s trapped head 50 50 Guard edit nbsp Megaton Dias demonstrating the 50 50 guard The 50 50 Fifty fifty guard is a position popularized by Roberto Gordo Correa and extensively used by the Mendes Brothers Rafael and Guilherme Mendes Bruno Frazzato Ryan Hall and Ramon Lemos from the Atos Jiu Jitsu Team In other grappling systems such as catch wrestling and Sambo it is a form of the outside leg triangle type of leg control In this position the fighter on the bottom crosses a triangle on the opponent s leg which allows for the leg to be dominated while leaving the arms free to work on sweeps and submissions This position has been heavily criticized for use in competitions with restricted use of leglocks due to the potential of stalling a match when the fighter on top cannot pass the guard and the fighter on the bottom cannot successfully perform a sweep 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Passing the Guard editIn order to overcome the primary defense of one s opponent their guard and attain a more dominant position such as side mount full mount or knee on stomach a practitioner must pass the guard There are several ways of doing so many involve pain compliance whereby the practitioner persuades the opponent to release their guard through an abrasive action Examples of this type of action would be digging the practitioner s forearms into the inner thigh of the opponent standing and attempting a can opener neck crank or in the case of a mixed martial arts setting to simply strike the opponent until the guard is released Passing the guard however has perils of its own as it has a tendency to leave the practitioner particularly vulnerable to counterattack in the form of sweeps and submissions Simple guard pass edit Simple guard pass also known as the arm leg pull is a guard pass demonstrated in The Essence Of Judo by Kyuzo Mifune and it is an unnamed technique described in The Canon Of Judo 13 In Brazilian Jiu Jitsu this pass is commonly referred to as the Toreando Bull Fighter Pass 14 The main characteristic of the pass is the practitioner side stepping around the opponent s legs whilst simultaneously pulling aside the opponent s leg or pinning the opponents legs to the ground Stacking guard pass edit Stacking Guard Pass is also demonstrated in The Essence Of Judo by Mifune and it is also an unnamed technique described in The Canon Of Judo 13 The main characteristic of the technique is the practitioner lifting the opponent and stacking them into a possible neck crank or blood choke submission when the practitioner is in the opponent s open guard Near knee guard pass edit Near Knee Guard Pass is also demonstrated in The Essence Of Judo by Mifune as well as Canon of Judo by Mifune 15 In Brazilian Jiu Jitsu this guard pass is commonly referred to as the Knee Over Pass 16 The main characteristic of this pass is the practitioner driving their knee over the opponent s same side thigh while in the opponent s open guard See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Guard grappling Half guard Grappling Grappling hold Brazilian Jiu jitsu JudoFootnotes edit The technique do jime is sometimes incorrectly used to describe the closed guard The difference is that with do jime pressure is applied to squeeze the opponent s trunk to cause asphyxia Do jime is a prohibited technique in judo see IJF Referee Rules English version References edit Jimmy Pedro The Pedro Guard Pass by Jimmy Pedro Archived 2010 05 19 at the Wayback Machine Miller Chris Grappling Submission Fighting hsma1 com URL last accessed on March 4 2006 Toshikazu Okada Master Tsunetane Oda Tsunetane Oda judo ne waza 2 of 3 Garcia Marcelo Eric Hendrikx Glen Cordoza Erich Krauss 2008 The X Guard Gi amp No Gi Jiu Jitsu Sport Series illustrated ed Tuttle Publishing p 260 ISBN 978 0 9777315 0 3 A polemica guarda 50 50 na TATAME 162 TATAME Archived from the original on 2009 08 30 Retrieved 2009 09 13 Comprido defende a polemica guarda 50 50 TATAME Archived from the original on 2009 09 07 Retrieved 2009 09 13 Romero Jacare e a guarda 50 50 TATAME Archived from the original on 2009 08 31 Retrieved 2009 09 13 Checkmat e a saida da guarda 50 50 TATAME Archived from the original on 2009 09 28 Retrieved 2009 09 13 Mendes e Frazzato defendem a Guarda 50 50 TATAME Archived from the original on 2009 09 18 Retrieved 2009 09 13 Esquisito condena a guarda 50 50 TATAME Archived from the original on 2009 08 29 Retrieved 2009 09 13 Irmaos Mendes rebatem defesas a 50 50 TATAME Archived from the original on 2009 09 04 Retrieved 2009 09 13 a b Mifune Kyuzo April 2004 The Canon Of Judo Kodansha International Ltd ISBN 4 7700 2979 9 Smith Andrew March 29 2019 7 Toreando Guard Pass Variations in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu How They Play How They Play Retrieved March 21 2020 Mifune Kyuzo 1958 Canon of Judo Tokyo Japan Seibundo Shinkosha Publishing Co p 174 The Knee Over Pressure Pass BJJ Fanatics BJJ Fanatics Retrieved April 10 2020 Further reading editLovstad Jakob The Mixed Martial Arts Primer www idi ntnu no URL last accessed March 6 2006 DOC format Page Nicky Groundfighting 101 homepage ntlworld com URL last accessed March 4 2006 Kesting Stephan The X guard position www grapplearts com URL last accessed March 7 2006 Bravo Eddie 2006 Mastering The Rubber Guard ISBN 0 9777315 9 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guard grappling amp oldid 1133761219, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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