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Immobilisations

Overview

Immobilizations are dominant control positions where you've passed the guard and established superior positioning. These positions allow you to:

  • Control your opponent's movement
  • Exhaust their defensive energy
  • Set up finishing submissions
  • Prevent escapes and reversals

The Three Main Immobilizations

🎯 Front Mount

Sitting on the opponent's torso with full control. The most versatile dominant position.

Variations:

  • Low Mount (control focus)
  • Medium Mount (balanced)
  • High Mount (offensive)
  • S-Mount (transitional)

Key principle: Control the hips first, then advance to shoulders


🔒 Back Mount

The most dominant position in BJJ, controlling opponent from behind like a "backpack".

Focus: Seatbelt grip, hooks vs body triangle, chest-to-back connection

Primary submissions:


Contrôle latéral

Perpendicular chest-to-chest control using Table Theory and dynamic pressure.

Focus: Weight distribution, preventing escapes, transitioning to mount or submissions

Primary submissions:


Core Principles Across All Immobilizations

Weight Distribution

  • Use gravity and body positioning to make escape difficult
  • Distribute pressure strategically (not just raw strength)
  • Maintain multiple points of contact (Table Theory)

Space Management

  • Fill space to prevent opponent's movement
  • Control the central line (torso)
  • Block the flanks (sides)

Progressive Control

Pass through the body lines:

feet → legs → hips → shoulders/head

Each immobilization represents conquering these lines in sequence.


Training Focus

From Top Position

  1. Establish positional dominance first
  2. Maintain control through transitions
  3. Only attack submissions from stable positions
  4. If losing position, transition to another immobilization

From Bottom Position

Understanding immobilizations helps you:

  • Recognize escape windows
  • Protect critical hip and shoulder lines
  • Time your defensive movements
  • Recover guard systematically