Transitioning from Closed Guard to Open Guard Thanks Stephen Kesting

So I want to start today’s lesson by talking about a very common error made by many new BJJ practitioners. Take a look at the photo below. I’m lying there with my ankles uncrossed. My legs aren’t controlling my opponent in at all.

Bad Open Guard, Neither Open nor Closed
This Is NOT the Closed Guard!
(And it’s not an Open Guard postion either)

I want to make this crystal clear: what I’m demonstrating above is NOT the closed guard. It’s not even the open guard.

It’s an in-between, good-for-nothing position with very few offensive options. If I use it on a good opponent he’ll realize what’s going on and pass my guard in one or two quick moves.

So with the closed guard you’re either in or out. Keep him tightly controlled between your legs, or bite the bullet and move to the open guard position of your choice.

Even if you specialize in the closed guard there will be times that you’re going to end up in the open guard. Therefore knowing the correct way to get from the closed guard to the open guard is a very important skill to master.

Here is one way to do just that:

Four Steps from Closed to Open Guard

Angle 1
Angle 2
I have Don in my closed guard Closed to Open Guard Transition 1 second angle

Closed to Open Guard Transition 1

Opening my legs I plant my right foot on the ground Closed Guard to Open Guard 2 alternate angle

Closed Guard to Open Guard 2

My left foot goes on Don’s hip and I move my hips backwards to create some space. Closed Guard to Open Guard Transition 3

Closed Guard to Open Guard Transition 3 Alternate Angle

I then put my other foot on the hip to establish a form of open guard. Closed Guard to Open Guard Transition 4

Closed Guard to Open Guard Transition 4 Alternate Angle

 

This move may seem simple, but it needs to be drilled many times so that it becomes absolutely instinctive.

Funny as it may sound, once you learn this movement you then need to remember to use it in sparring. If you’re busy trying to break your opponent’s posture and/or set up an attack it’s easy to forget about the lower half of your body and just let your legs dangle in the air doing nothing.

Remember: you’re either in closed guard, or you’re in a specific form of open guard. Don’t lie there in an in-between position; that’s the twilight zone where you’re neither controlling your opponent nor preventing his guard pass.

You can read more about Stephen Kesting’s closed guard to open guard transitions tips at grapplearts and beginning bjj.  Others promise. He delivers.

Closed guard combinations ala Jason Scully

A sign of progress from beginner to advance student is the ability to start linking moves and transitions. Jiu jitsu is like a game of chess. Beginners tend to get tunnel vision. Seeing only one move, one submission at a time and getting stuck. Think back to your early days on the mat when you had only one or two techniques and the rest of your game was lock down. You know you are progressing developmentally when you start looking for a seeing the transitions for one position to another. There is no easy way to learn this as I have said is developmental. More mat time is the critical factor and of course good instruction ala machineworks.bjj with Jeremy Adkins and Fight and Fitness principle  Brazilian jiu jitsu instructor Alex Ferreira.

Jason Scully  is a well known grappler and Brazilian jiu jitsu black belt with mad skills.  Many of his videos show a series of positions, transitions, and submission and fore go some of the finer details. However, they are designed to give you an idea of what will work.   You can of course send emails and questions to Jason Scully for further clarification.  I will continue to post videos that I believe will help anyone to be a better jits player.

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