

The Five Things Your Opponent Needs to Pass Your Guard
In jiu-jitsu, guard retention isn't passive. It's a defensive cycle with one job: get you back to offense. To understand how to retain, you first have to understand what your opponent is trying to accomplish. Passing your guard isn't one move. It's a sequence of conditions they have to stack on top of each other. Take any one of them away, and the pass falls apart.
Here are the things your opponent needs to pass your guard:
1. Grips. Every pass starts with control. Grips are how your opponent anchors to you and takes away your ability to move freely.
2. Closing the distance. They need to eliminate the space between you. Distance is your friend, and when they erase it, they're one step closer to controlling you.
3. Getting to an outside sideline. Once past your toe line, they work to an angle outside your hips, off your center, where your legs can no longer threaten them.
4. Changing levels. Now they drop their level to get chest to chest or establish knee on belly, killing your hips and your ability to recover.
5. Establish a pin. Finally, they pin your shoulders to the mat for three seconds to lock in the position and score the points.
How You Fight Back
The good news: each condition is a fork in the road, and at every fork you have an answer.
The first three: grips, distance, and angle. This is where the physical skills come in. Using the movements you've drilled, your goal is to return to your center line, center to center with your partner, legs between you and them. As long as your legs are the barrier, you're still in the fight.
The fourth: changing levels. When they start to flatten your level and close chest to chest, you establish frames. Frames buy you space, and space lets you reset back to that center line.
The fifth: the pin. If they've got your shoulders pinned, your first priority is getting your shoulders off the mat. This is where tools like pendulum setups or going back heisting to turtle and start back into your guard retention system.
Notice the pattern: every defensive answer is aimed at the same destination. Getting back to center, getting back to your guard, getting back on offense. Retention is the bridge that carries you from defense to attack.
Let's Build It Together
For the months of June and July, guard retention is our focus at Ground Zero. We'll break down each of these concepts on the mat and teach the exact movements that help you fight these conditions as they arrive, so the next time someone tries to pass, you've already got an answer waiting.
Want to start training with us? Book your free intro here:
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