BJJ Fanatics - John Danaher - Passing The Guard !EXCLUSIVE!
Master the modern guards and pass with pressure and mobility, with this new 8-volume mega release from Andre Galvao. Andre is head coach of Atos, the home of tons of champion black belts, and one of the greatest black belts of all time. Now, he is partnering with BJJ Fanatics to show how he systematically shuts down and passes the most modern guards. Slice through lapel guards and shut down flexible young grapplers with these concepts and fundamentals for success with the man on the cutting edge of passing technique, Andre Galvao.
BJJ Fanatics - John Danaher - Passing the Guard
As Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu evolves, new guards are always emerging that present new problems. Find the most effective solutions to beating these modern guards with the man who has spent more time than anyone else studying them, Andre Galvao. He breaks down in scientific detail what makes the guards dangerous, and then how you can use passing principles and counters to beat those guards and end up in dominant positions like side control, mount, or attacking the back.
This is a masterclass in top game from one of the best black belts and coaches in the world, all based around his specialty of killing the modern game. Andre Galvao is showing his favorite and most effective lapel guard counters, showing all the weaknesses he has discovered that give you a hidden advantage. Shut down flexible open guards and pin your opponent down as you pin with movement and pressure through. This passing system can be your gameplan for passing against the most tricky new guards in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
Danaher begins with addressing some very common actions of the bottom player that we need to keep on our radar. Being pulled forward with the knees can be a real detriment to our guard passing process and this is something we must pay attention to, as it will compromise our posture. He also expresses how unfavorable it can be to have your arm manipulated so that it breaks the centerline of your body. These items can have disastrous consequences, so be sure to monitor them.
Using one foot at a time, Danaher begins to stand, ending up in a square position relative to his partner. . To open the guard, Danaher begins by taking his right knee and placing it as close to the center of his partner's hips as possible.He then bends his leg, tightening his hamstring and applying pressure with his knee. With his opposite leg, he begins to widen and stagger his stance, causing his right knee to fall squarely into place, right in the center of the hips. As Danaher begins to bend down the pressure increases, causing the guard to open. This guard break leaves Danaher in the perfect position to begin passing in a multitude of different ways.
Pass through the closed guard, knee shield half guard, the deep half, butterfly guard, and more, each time breaking down exactly how you should grip and move to avoid giving away sweeps and submissions, before showing you step-by-step details for passing success.Each guard has its own strengths and weaknesses, and Dom helps explain all those to you so that you can use positional concepts and passing answers for a safe top game. Dom is an instructor at Atos, one of the most prestigious schools in the world, and he brings that same high standard of coaching to this series with careful explanations of everything.
This gives us another option when it comes to passing the guard and if done properly it should not put us at much risk, provided we have a solid Kimura grip prior to initiating the roll. So many times, I feel like we look at the guard pass as either going over the legs (knee slice pass) or going under the legs (stack pass), but this gives us another option, simply rolling out of the guard. I know for me this has always been a style of passing that I found intriguing however questioned if I had the athleticism for.
John Danaher is a household name in modern BJJ. From his leg locking system to his guard passing fundamentals, John Danaher is both a wizard and mathematician when it comes to BJJ. In his Passing the Guard: BJJ Fundamentals, Danaher breaks down his five-step system for passing any guard.
The Body Lock Pass system by Lachlan Giles includes narrated rolling in addition to the lessons so you can learn how the masters apply this system during real sparring. Lachlan Giles covers important concepts and applied principles before deep-diving into the entries, methods of clearing the knee line, how to complete the pass, and finally the components of the Sao Paulo Guard Open. If you are looking for a refreshing approach to passing guard, this BJJ Fanatics Instructional delivers.
In the BJJ Fanatics Science of Guard Passing by Lucas Lepri, you gain an entirely new perspective on guard passing that will transform your entire game. Lepri will teach you how to dismantle any guard in open mats or local competition.
In the BJJ Fanatics Polish Power Passing, BJJ black belt Adam Wardzinski shows you his full system based on the knee-slice pass. This passing system addresses the most frustrating guards you will face in BJJ. With precision and leverage, you learn to pass guard with the same mechanics that work for Wardzinski at the elite black belt level.
Whether you get stuck in half guard, wrapped in with De La Riva, or just want to add another passing system to your BJJ arsenal, Polish Power passing delivers the system you need. With world-class breakdowns on the technical aspects of knee-slice passing, Wardzinski brings your game to the next level in no time.
Mostly known for his quick finishes, do not expect to see Rosenzweig doing takedowns, passing guards or even attempting sweeps. He has a very one-dimensional game, but he is second to none in that dimension.
When he first burst on the scene, he dominated his way through EBI, never losing a match and catching seemingly everyone in the now-famous DDS leg lock system and back attack system. At ADCC, he closed the show with a signature guillotine choke from the front headlock. But as he has matured and developed into a next-level grappler, he has had to focus on something that so many of us struggle with: passing the guard systematically and consistently.
Gordon approaches passing with the same laser-focused intensity and study as every other system in his game. He and his coach and mentor John Danaher have broken down each position on a physical, tactical, and technical level and come up with a gameplan that has turned Gordon into a guard passing machine. Now that he has mastered his passing series, Gordon breaks down every detail across 8 volumes in the new release the world has been waiting for, Systematically Attacking The Guard With King Ryan - The 3 Part Formula.
As a beginner or expert practitioner, you will need many guard passing techniques because the guard is one of the most played positions you should handle. The good news is several guards pass in Brazilian jiu-jitsu.
Jon Thomas, a BJJ black belt, displays a fantastic open-guard passing strategy that can be used to break any guard in the video below. It features a variety of guard passes such as Toreando, knee cut, stack pass, and others, as well as a detailed explanation of when and how to employ them appropriately.Source: JonThomasBJJFinal ThoughtsSeveral jiu-jitsu fighters have tested the effectiveness of the above-listed guard passing tactics in various competitions. As a result, you should master some of these guard passes to improve your game and become a brutal competitor.We hope this Brazilian jiu-jitsu article will help you become a great guard passer fighter. So, get to work and use these techniques to pass any guard position, including the half guard, closed guard, De La Riva guard, etc.Speak your mind; What is your favorite guard passing technique? 041b061a72