SAFETY: Flying Armbar from Closed Guard targets the Elbow joint and shoulder. Tap early and often. Your safety is more important than any training round.
Defending the Flying Armbar requires a combination of pre-emptive awareness and reactive technical skill. Because the technique relies on explosive commitment from the attacker, the defender’s best opportunities occur before the jump is initiated or during the brief transitional window as the attacker becomes airborne. Once the flying armbar is fully locked in with proper leg configuration on the ground, defensive options narrow significantly and the position becomes nearly identical to defending a standard armbar.
The critical defensive principle is denying the preconditions for the attack. The Flying Armbar requires an extended arm, compromised base, and sufficient space for the attacker’s rotation. By maintaining retracted elbows, strong posture, and awareness of your opponent’s grip patterns, you can eliminate most flying armbar opportunities before they develop. When facing guard players known for aerial attacks, your stance and arm positioning must account for the possibility of dynamic entries at all times.
If the attacker does initiate the jump, your response depends on timing. During the aerial phase, posture and base adjustments can prevent the attacker from establishing proper position. After landing, the defense shifts to standard armbar escapes with the added urgency created by the momentum and body weight the attacker has generated. Understanding both the pre-jump prevention and post-landing escape sequences is essential for complete defensive competency against this high-risk submission.
Opponent’s Starting Position: Closed Guard (Bottom)
How to Recognize This Submission
How do you know when someone is attempting Flying Armbar from Closed Guard?
- Opponent secures a strong two-on-one grip on your arm, pulling your wrist and sleeve toward their centerline while their legs push against your hips to create distance
- Opponent’s hips begin elevating off the mat while they maintain sleeve control, indicating they are loading their body for the swinging jump motion
- Sudden explosive hip movement upward and toward your arm combined with their legs leaving your body entirely, signaling the aerial rotation has begun
- Opponent shifts their angle to be perpendicular to your standing position while maintaining arm control, creating the alignment needed for the armbar rotation
- Feet leave your hips or biceps simultaneously rather than sequentially, which distinguishes a flying submission entry from a standard guard transition
Key Defensive Principles
What are the key principles for defending Flying Armbar from Closed Guard?
- Prevention over reaction: Deny the conditions for the flying armbar by keeping elbows retracted and maintaining strong upright posture at all times when standing in opponent’s guard
- Grip awareness is paramount: Recognize and immediately address two-on-one grip control on your arm, as this is the primary setup indicator for aerial submissions
- Base and posture defeat aerial attacks: A wide, stable stance with hips back makes it extremely difficult for the attacker to generate the leverage needed for the jumping entry
- Timing determines your response: Defend the grip before the jump, defend the rotation during the jump, or defend the arm position after landing - each window requires different technical responses
- Never allow arm isolation while standing: Keep elbows connected to your torso and never reach forward with extended arms when in your opponent’s guard range
- Stack immediately if caught mid-flight: Driving forward and stacking the attacker during their rotation is the highest-percentage defense once the jump has been initiated
- Protect yourself during chaotic landings: If you cannot prevent the technique, prioritize protecting your arm by tucking your elbow and turning into the attacker rather than away
Defensive Options
What can you do to defend against Flying Armbar from Closed Guard?
1. Retract arm and step back immediately upon feeling two-on-one grip establishment
- When to use: As soon as you feel opponent securing strong two-on-one control on your arm before any jumping motion begins. This is the highest-percentage defense because it eliminates the precondition for the technique.
- Targets: Closed Guard
- If successful: Opponent falls back to guard without establishing any submission position. You maintain standing position and can resume guard passing.
- Risk: Low risk. If you over-retract, opponent may transition to different guard attacks, but this is far preferable to being caught in an aerial submission.
2. Sprawl hips back and drive shoulder pressure forward as opponent initiates the jump
- When to use: The moment you feel the opponent’s hips elevating and their weight shifting upward for the aerial entry. Your sprawl must be immediate and decisive to prevent their rotation from completing.
- Targets: Side Control
- If successful: Attacker’s jump is stuffed and they land underneath you in a compromised position. You can immediately transition to passing or establish side control from their failed attempt.
- Risk: Medium risk. If your timing is late and they’ve already committed to the rotation, your sprawl may not fully prevent the armbar but will compromise their position. If you sprawl too early, they may not have committed and can adjust.
3. Stack forward and drive weight onto attacker during their mid-air rotation
- When to use: When the attacker has already left the ground and is rotating into armbar position. Drive your hips and chest forward, stacking their body onto their neck and shoulders to prevent them from establishing a flat armbar position.
- Targets: Side Control
- If successful: Attacker is compressed and cannot extend their hips for the armbar finish. You can work to extract your arm and pass to side control.
- Risk: Medium risk. Requires sufficient balance to drive forward without falling into the submission. If the attacker has already secured proper leg position, stacking alone may not be sufficient and you must combine with arm extraction.
4. Clasp hands together and turn into attacker after landing to prevent arm isolation
- When to use: After the attacker has landed and is attempting to isolate your arm for the finish. Immediately lock your hands together in a Gable grip or RNC grip configuration and rotate your body toward the attacker to close the space between you.
- Targets: Closed Guard
- If successful: Prevents arm extension and creates time to work a proper armbar escape. Turning into the attacker eliminates the perpendicular angle they need for the finish.
- Risk: Medium-high risk. This is a reactive defense that only buys time - you must follow up with an actual escape. If you only grip without turning, the attacker can eventually break your grip with hip pressure.
Escape Paths
How do you escape Flying Armbar from Closed Guard?
- Stack and drive forward: Once the attacker has landed, drive your weight forward onto their chest and shoulders while keeping your trapped arm bent. Walk your feet toward their head to increase stacking pressure. As they compress, extract your elbow by pulling it toward your own hip while maintaining forward pressure.
- Hitchhiker escape: If the attacker has secured a strong armbar position, rotate your body by turning your thumb toward the ceiling and rolling over your trapped shoulder toward the attacker’s legs. This rotation relieves the hyperextension pressure and allows you to extract your arm as you come to a kneeling position on the far side.
- Turn and stack to guard: Rotate your body 90 degrees toward the attacker while clasping your hands together. Drive your weight forward to stack them, then use the stacking pressure to free your elbow and drive it to the mat beside their hip. Once your arm clears their hip line, immediately pass to side control or re-establish guard top position.
Best-Case Outcomes for Defender
What is the best outcome when defending Flying Armbar from Closed Guard?
→ Closed Guard
Prevent the flying armbar by retracting your arm and maintaining strong posture as soon as you recognize the two-on-one grip setup. Step back out of range and allow the attacker to fall back to guard without completing any aerial attack. Resume guard passing from a neutral position.
→ Side Control
Successfully sprawl on the attacker’s jump or stack them during their aerial rotation. Use their failed flying attempt to immediately advance position while they are compromised on their back. Drive through the stack and pass directly to side control as they struggle to recover guard from the awkward landing position.