6 Mat Tips to Improve Your Closed Guard Attacks!
Author: Paul Greenhill
Date Posted: November 25, 2008
If I said that I could provide you with 6 simple tips that could
make your closed guard more threatening to your opponents, would
you be interested? If you're a grappling nut like I am, the answer
is yes! But I have to warn you, the tips that I'm going to provide
you aren't anything profound like discovering a cure for the common
cold. And yet while these tips may seem basic, they could mean the
difference in you controlling and submitting your opponent or just
waiting for your guard to break down before you get hammered.
Here are Tips 1-3 for improving your closed guard:
Tip #1: Don't allow your opponent to get their
grips - When grappler are sparring and they start out in the guard
position, all too often I see the grappler on the bottom allowing
the grappler inside their guard to get their grips first. Whenever
you allow your opponent that's trying to pass to your guard to get
their grips first, you give them an advantage over you that will
enable them to pass your guard. You need to attack their grips and
force them to deal with you tying them up instead of passing your
guard.
Tip #2: Keep your opponents head in front of their
hips - Someone may be asking right now how I'm supposed to make
that happen while sparring. You do that by forcing your opponent
to keep leaning forward in bad posture and not allowing them to
sit back trying to get correct posture. The easiest way to do that
is by pulling your opponent forward off his base by bringing your
knees towards your head while keeping your heels pressed down on
their lower back. You should do that along with pulling down on
their head while keeping them from establishing their grips (Tip
#1). If your opponent can't keep good posture, it's highly unlikely
they'll be able to pass your guard.
Tip #3: Try to get into your opponent's "blind
spot" by using angle attacks - Whenever you start with your opponent
in your guard and you're aligned or parallel with each other (as
if your opponent could lean forward and head butt you with ease),
your opponent has you in their full vision. But once you start breaking
down their posture while scooting out your hips off their centerline
(requiring them to have to turn their head to keep you in full view),
you're in their "blind spot" and that makes re-establishing their
body alignment more important than trying to pass your guard because
they're vulnerable to sweeps and submissions.
Apply these three tips and you should notice that your opponents
will find your guard more difficult to pass as well as providing
you more opportunities to set them up for your favorite attacks.
In the next article, I will reveal Tips 4-6 for improving your
closed guard.
About The Author
Paul M. Greenhill, "The Wise Grappler", is the creator of The Wise
Grappler System, OG Shadow Grappling http://www.OGShadowGrappling.com
and author of The Wise Grappler Ezine, a weekly ezine that provides
grappling and mental mindset training tips and products for the
older (over 30) and non-traditional/non-competitive martial artists
of all ages.
To learn more about "The Wise Grappler" and to sign up for more
FREE tips like these, visit his site at http://www.thewisegrappler.com
or paul@thewisegrappler.com
(c) 2008 Paul M. Greenhill
Article Source: JKD Street Combat
- online collection of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu articles.
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