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✅ Sample Output — Real Technique Breakdown
This page shows exactly what a technique section in the Guard Passing Guide looks like — grip sequences, body position mechanics, common mistakes under resistance, chain transitions, and drill prescriptions. No marketing copy. The actual content.
Section 1 — Grip Fighting for Passers
Grip Priority Sequence: Dissolving the Guard
Priority 1
Break the cross-grip first — the dominant-hand inside grip controls your passing angle. Remove this first or you're always fighting from behind.
Priority 2
Clear the inside grip — opponent's other hand establishing a second controlling grip. Don't let them build a chain.
Priority 3
Address the outside sleeve grip — often the last grip they establish. Breaking in this order prevents reactive recovery.
Read
Don't fight grips in isolation — break one, establish your own grip, then break the next. The passer who controls grip order wins the scramble.
Section 2 — The Knee Slice Pass (Mechanically Dissected)
Knee Slice Pass — Step-by-Step
1.
Establish a cross-face — control opponent's far-side collar with your lead hand, palm down. This creates the angle you need to cut.
2.
Post on your forearm — place your non-collar hand on the mat near opponent's far hip, forearm perpendicular to their torso. This is your base.
3.
Cut the angle — shift your hips laterally across opponent's body. Your knee threads through the guard — not over it. The knee stays low and outside their thigh.
4.
Clear the legs — as you cut, use your posted forearm to fold opponent's near leg across their body. Their legs separate and the guard opens.
5.
Finish to side control — step over the near leg, collapse onto your forearm, and establish a low cross-face. You are now in side control.
Common Mistake
Going over the guard instead of cutting through it. If your knee goes over their thigh instead of through the guard, you're climbing over their frame — slow and easy to hip escape. The knee stays outside, threading through the space, not over the top of their body.
Chain Transition
If opponent recovers guard (half guard or lasso): switch to double underhook and run them to their back. If they frame and post: release, reset grip sequence, come back with pressure pass.
Section 3 — The Pressure Pass (Torso-to-Torso)
Pressure Pass — Step-by-Step
1.
Control the cross-face — same grip as knee slice. Far-side collar control with lead hand. This is your steering mechanism.
2.
Chest-to-chest contact — walk your hips into opponent's hips while maintaining cross-face control. Your torso stays flush against theirs.
3.
Break their frames — as they post to slow your pressure, use your free hand to peel their posted forearm away, one at a time.
4.
Walk them back — continue chest-to-chest until their back hits the mat. No rushing. The pressure pass is a slow grind.
Common Mistake
Rising up and losing chest contact. When you stand to escape a frame, you've already lost the pressure pass. Keep your chest glued to theirs and break frames from your hips, not your shoulders.
Section 4 — Drill Prescription
Knee Slice Pass — Progressive Resistance Drill
- Part 1 (10 reps): Partner plays passive guard — no frames, no grips. Drill the cut and leg clear at full speed with good technique.
- Part 2 (10 reps): Partner establishes frames but no grips. Drill the cut with resistance to your cross-face. Partner taps the mat to signal frame.
- Part 3 (8 reps): Partner at 50% resistance — frames and light hip movement. Focus on maintaining angle while opponent attempts to recover guard.
- Part 4 (5 reps): Live pass. Partner at full resistance. Goal: execute knee slice from grip sequence to side control against a resisting opponent.
What the Full Guide Covers (8 Passes)
The Complete Guard Passing System
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Knee Slice — Angle cut, leg clear, far-side collar control, chain to double underhook if they recover.
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Pressure Pass — Chest-to-chest walk, frame breaking sequence, slow grind to side control.
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Over-Under — One arm over, one arm under. Devastating against spider and rubber guard.
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Double Underhook — Run them to their back. Chain directly into mount or north-south.
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Leg Drag — Control far-side thigh, drag them flat. Modern competition standard.
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Toreando — Pummel and switch hips away. Best against open guards with limited grip fighting.
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Stack Pass — Lift the hips high and walk them over. Underutilized and extremely effective.
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Head-and-Arm Choke Counter — When they grab the head-and-arm, step over and pass. Turn their defense into your opportunity.
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