BJJ Rubber Guard: Eddie Bravo System Explained

Rubber guard is a highly technical guard system developed by Eddie Bravo. It is controversial in traditional BJJ circles but undeniably effective in submission grappling and MMA. This guide breaks down the rubber guard system for practitioners curious about this unique approach.

What Is Rubber Guard?

Rubber guard is a high guard position where you control your opponent is posture using your legs, particularly by breaking their posture down and controlling their head with your legs. It requires significant flexibility and technical knowledge.

Key Positions in Rubber Guard

Stage 1: Mission Control

The entry position. One leg over opponent is shoulder, foot hooked under their armpit. Opponent is posture is already broken.

Stage 2: Zombie

Your foot moves from armpit to behind their neck. You are controlling their head with your leg.

Stage 3: New York

Your leg is deep behind their neck, controlling their posture completely. From here, multiple attacks open up.

Stage 4: Chill Dog

High level position. Your leg is controlling their head while you isolate an arm for submissions.

Submissions from Rubber Guard

Gogoplata

Using your shin across opponent is throat while pulling their head down. A signature rubber guard submission.

Omoplata

Transitioning to the omoplata shoulder lock from rubber guard control.

Triangles

Various triangle setups from the broken posture positions.

Armbars

Isolating arms when opponent defends the choke threats.

Why Rubber Guard Works

Posture Control

Traditional BJJ emphasizes posture. Rubber guard makes good posture nearly impossible.

Unfamiliarity

Most BJJ practitioners do not train rubber guard defenses regularly. The positions are confusing.

MMA Effectiveness

In MMA, rubber guard neutralizes ground and pound while setting up submissions.

Requirements for Rubber Guard

Flexibility

You need flexible hips and hamstrings. Most people cannot immediately get into the positions.

Strength

Holding your legs in position requires core and leg strength.

Technical Knowledge

The system has specific paths and transitions. You cannot improvise effectively.

Training Rubber Guard

Solo Drills

  • Stretching routines for hips and hamstrings
  • Mission control position holds
  • Transitions between stages

Partner Drills

  • Entry from closed guard
  • Maintaining control as opponent moves
  • Submission chains

Defending Rubber Guard

Prevent Entry

Maintain posture. Do not let them break you down.

Strip the Leg

Two-on-one grip on the controlling leg, strip it off.

Stack Pass

Drive forward, stack them, collapse the guard.

Stand Up

If possible, stand and open the guard completely.

Controversy in BJJ

Traditionalists argue rubber guard:

  • Relies too much on flexibility over technique
  • Is not effective against elite competition
  • Is a gimmick system

Supporters counter:

  • Works at highest levels (MMA)
  • Eddie Bravo students prove effectiveness
  • Adds necessary diversity to BJJ

Is Rubber Guard for You?

Try It If:

  • You are naturally flexible
  • You train 10th Planet or open-minded gym
  • You compete in submission grappling
  • You train for MMA

Avoid It If:

  • You have limited flexibility
  • Your gym does not allow it
  • You are focused on IBJJF competition
  • You want fundamentals first

Bottom Line

Rubber guard is a legitimate system that works when trained properly. It is not for everyone – the flexibility requirement eliminates many practitioners. But for those who put in the work, it offers unique control and submission options unavailable in traditional guards.

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