This literally works on everyone I tried it on. Even when I roll with 260lb +. I’m old so rolling slow and technical and using weight is key. Standing up takes a ton of energy and requires really fast movements. This is steady and near unstoppable as long as I frame up right in the start. Amazing tips!
What it is a " little " difficult for beginners and even more Advanced students is to understand the huge differences between, for example, Henry Atkins opening close guard, according to him,as he learned from Rickson Gracie and the totally distinct way that Andre Galvao shows,starting with the position of the foots and the knees. In short,the most important is to keep your Posture and try several ways to open the close guard until you find the one or more moves that works better for you.
For all of the new white belts who don't have super flexible toes understand that the "tiger feet" spoken of in 5:50 can literally break your feet. I saw the same advice when I started BJJ four years ago on another YT video and took the advice. I fractured my feet while rolling lol. Even though it was excruciatingly painful I trained through it and now my toes are flexible enough to bend that way. Just a heads up that most of the these pros don't think about when handing this advice out and the "tiger feet" do work well once you gain the flexibility.
Thanks for the heads up on this. I started BJJ at 40, and one of the first things I noticed being barefooted on the mats was that my toes were not flexible. Even doing a lunge without shoes was painful.
@@urbansamurai261 Someone did a hip bump sweep on me and with all of that weight on my toes, I am assuming that my feet took all the pressure, and crack!
I find Andre's advice on opening the guard by standing up and lifting the opponent more useful against stronger opponents. At the end of the day, that's what he does at competitions.
One of our professors teaches to never put the toes up to prevent them from getting injured in case the bottom players attempts to hip bump. What’s better?
People have to understand that getting out of closed guard is like getting out of mount. It all requires proper position, control and timing. You're at a disadvantage, there is no easy one size fits all way of doing it against a resisting opponent.
At 7:54 Roger Gracie would have to disagree with you there, again not me but Roger Gracie. In this video th-cam.com/video/P5SeCRensWQ/w-d-xo.html start watching at 3:30 (for that video). Roger talks about how he doesn't believe there is a person alive that can open his closed guard while on their knees. The reason being is that they would have to fight his legs which are going to be stronger than the person's upper body. And he even stipulates that it isn't anything special about him, he says that the same thing would happen to him if he were in someone else's closed guard and they used the same technique. If Bernardo used his righthand to get a cross collar grip on Andre and used his legs to pull him in, it would have broken Andre's posture. Again I am a nobody and I am not the one saying this, this is coming from someone who many believe to be the all time GOAT, Roger Gracie. I have the utmost respect for Andre Galvao as an instructor and competitor, this critique is not meant to attack him but the idea he has presented. Edit: Was to stipulate opening Roger's closed guard.
I am a fan of Roger Gracie, but the grip Galvao is using is slightly different, he doesnt have it to the middle of the chest, but nearer to Bernardos shoulder, as you can see it makes it more difficult to put your hand to grip the opposite collar, he also turns his body adding more distance, & pressuring the legs. There are many concept at work here, same as Rogers prefered approach, its conceptual. Just try it out, if it works for you keep it, if not then be aware of it. Your opponent might use it on you.
Andre places himself in a position where he negates the power of his opponents legs completely. There are micro adjustments in his positioning, rotation and grip placement that make all the difference. Trust me, you will feel like the only thing your legs want to do is to open up, like you can't even resist in the first place. The only way to stop this is to break Andres higher grip early before he gets the second grip on your pants. If both grips are in place, just get ready to play open guard. Better open your guard on purpose and get a few seconds ahead of your opponent.
@@flanker909 One year later and Andre has changed his mind lol. Here is a video of him explaining that you need to stand up to open the closed guard. th-cam.com/video/89xgepsEUOg/w-d-xo.html In reality the grand majority of closed guard breaks, on the adult black belt level, happen from standing positions. Show me an example of a closed guard break from sitting and I will show you a hundred from standing at the adult black belt level.
I like how much more technical Andres' teachings have become over the years. His rivalry with Danaher is great for the whole community.
Andre reminds me of a Brazilian Steve-O
He reminds me of fifty cent a bit
Stevo for sure!! Ha
Now that you said it lol
You mean Stevão
He reminds me of Thanos.
This literally works on everyone I tried it on. Even when I roll with 260lb +. I’m old so rolling slow and technical and using weight is key. Standing up takes a ton of energy and requires really fast movements. This is steady and near unstoppable as long as I frame up right in the start. Amazing tips!
Totally agree. I’m terrible with standing up. No one I’ve tried this on so far knows how to deal with it.
Where do you place your hands for no gi? Fist in the hips?
Bernardo your genuine enthusiasm and focus is infectious! Great videos!
Huge honor for him!
What it is a " little " difficult for beginners and even more Advanced students is to understand the huge differences between, for example, Henry Atkins opening close guard, according to him,as he learned from Rickson Gracie and the totally distinct way that Andre Galvao shows,starting with the position of the foots and the knees.
In short,the most important is to keep your Posture and try several ways to open the close guard until you find the one or more moves that works better for you.
I can't wait to try this. I am older, heavy, have iffy knees and am a new white belt. I hate standing up and lifting people to try and pass.
Pressure pass for the win!
He's awesome.
Yesssss!!!! Andre IS a street fighter character
For all of the new white belts who don't have super flexible toes understand that the "tiger feet" spoken of in 5:50 can literally break your feet. I saw the same advice when I started BJJ four years ago on another YT video and took the advice. I fractured my feet while rolling lol. Even though it was excruciatingly painful I trained through it and now my toes are flexible enough to bend that way. Just a heads up that most of the these pros don't think about when handing this advice out and the "tiger feet" do work well once you gain the flexibility.
I always stretched my toes when sitting seiza, can do "live toes" or "tiger feet" with no problems now.
How on earth did you fracture your foot
Thanks for the heads up on this. I started BJJ at 40, and one of the first things I noticed being barefooted on the mats was that my toes were not flexible. Even doing a lunge without shoes was painful.
@@urbansamurai261 Someone did a hip bump sweep on me and with all of that weight on my toes, I am assuming that my feet took all the pressure, and crack!
@@shrimuyopa8117 oh you landed like that. My toes curled hearing that
Please make a "huge honor for me" t-shirt
Omg yes please!!!
great details. I was fighting with this in class just a couple days ago. hopefully my brain will keep this long enough to help next time.....
Drill it. That’s the best way to retain a technique.
@@markoaurelius4426 pfff.. with this one, you need to live it :)
@@Vscustomprinting how long have you been doing BJJ?
@@markoaurelius4426 10 years.
great partner for video bernardo. oss
ok guys this is andre galvao, huge honor for me, i don't have to introduce him... but here we go i will introduce him anyway! much love ;)
love it
This is amazing for me because this fits my body.
Andre should be a movie star. He looks terrifying. But likeable and attractive at the same time.
I find Andre's advice on opening the guard by standing up and lifting the opponent more useful against stronger opponents. At the end of the day, that's what he does at competitions.
In the end, it's good to have alternatives
At the end of the day, you need more than one escape or guard break.
4:25
start 8:00
Great details! I'd just like to see if this technique is effective against Roger Gracie's closed guard... Lol
Top vidéo Big UP from France ✌️
Javier Gomez Ares Bjj taught the same
💯🐓💯
One of our professors teaches to never put the toes up to prevent them from getting injured in case the bottom players attempts to hip bump. What’s better?
so many basics with just little adjustments
Bernardo , you forgot to add andre also holds the record for the loudest bitch slap at the hands of Gordon Ryan ! .
Huge honor for me
People have to understand that getting out of closed guard is like getting out of mount. It all requires proper position, control and timing. You're at a disadvantage, there is no easy one size fits all way of doing it against a resisting opponent.
It always amazed me how MG would never get reversed while standing to open the guard.
"Your elbows are the knees of your arms."
Next time I do a knee bar I'm going to yell "Arm bar! The knees are the elbows of your legs!"
Active toes
Andres favorite way to open the guard is MOOORRRREE JUUUICE!!!
At 7:54 Roger Gracie would have to disagree with you there, again not me but Roger Gracie. In this video th-cam.com/video/P5SeCRensWQ/w-d-xo.html start watching at 3:30 (for that video). Roger talks about how he doesn't believe there is a person alive that can open his closed guard while on their knees. The reason being is that they would have to fight his legs which are going to be stronger than the person's upper body. And he even stipulates that it isn't anything special about him, he says that the same thing would happen to him if he were in someone else's closed guard and they used the same technique. If Bernardo used his righthand to get a cross collar grip on Andre and used his legs to pull him in, it would have broken Andre's posture. Again I am a nobody and I am not the one saying this, this is coming from someone who many believe to be the all time GOAT, Roger Gracie. I have the utmost respect for Andre Galvao as an instructor and competitor, this critique is not meant to attack him but the idea he has presented.
Edit: Was to stipulate opening Roger's closed guard.
I am a fan of Roger Gracie, but the grip Galvao is using is slightly different, he doesnt have it to the middle of the chest, but nearer to Bernardos shoulder, as you can see it makes it more difficult to put your hand to grip the opposite collar, he also turns his body adding more distance, & pressuring the legs. There are many concept at work here, same as Rogers prefered approach, its conceptual. Just try it out, if it works for you keep it, if not then be aware of it. Your opponent might use it on you.
Andre places himself in a position where he negates the power of his opponents legs completely. There are micro adjustments in his positioning, rotation and grip placement that make all the difference. Trust me, you will feel like the only thing your legs want to do is to open up, like you can't even resist in the first place.
The only way to stop this is to break Andres higher grip early before he gets the second grip on your pants. If both grips are in place, just get ready to play open guard. Better open your guard on purpose and get a few seconds ahead of your opponent.
@@flanker909 One year later and Andre has changed his mind lol. Here is a video of him explaining that you need to stand up to open the closed guard. th-cam.com/video/89xgepsEUOg/w-d-xo.html
In reality the grand majority of closed guard breaks, on the adult black belt level, happen from standing positions. Show me an example of a closed guard break from sitting and I will show you a hundred from standing at the adult black belt level.
Ground and pound will open his guard
Well imma go cry now for never seeing this 😢
Can't wait to bust out these microadjustments on the higher belts 😏
Chama o Roger então, quero ver o André abrir a dele com os joelhos no chão.
Para de viajar mano 🤣🤣🤣
Bernardo I appreciate all your great videos but you need to work on the audio, it's very low, it's bot enough on a lot of mobile devices 🥴
It's there really a "best way to open a closed guard"? .... Isn't there a good one for every situation? Depending on how the opponent behaves?
Yea but who’s gonna click the video when it’s just “Opening the guard”
@@Rollsatroyal well, or the other way around. Too many clickbait titles and users might unsubscribe.
Man, you have to work with the soud, very good contents but the sounds it's bad
Over 4 mins before the technique is shown. C'mon now.
That works If you take lots of steroids
This is completely against Henry akins and rickson gracie s concept.
How so?
@@mattgrosch6863 th-cam.com/video/730WVb-ffgY/w-d-xo.html
@@mattgrosch6863 you should study before ask how
@@hoyinlee6804 Asking "how?" is a cornerstone of studying, bro
@@KaninTuzi preliminary is ask "what", and you didn't even try to figure it out what is it, there is no "how"