How to survive the worst position in BJJ. Frame, bridge, and recover guard.
Mount is widely considered the worst position to be in during a BJJ roll. Your opponent sits on your torso with gravity, pressure, and submissions on their side. Escaping mount is a fundamental survival skill every white belt must learn.
The two main mount escapes are the upa (bridge and roll) and the elbow-knee (shrimp) escape. Both require correct framing, hip movement, and timing to work reliably.
Escaping mount is not about strength. A stronger opponent who knows mount escapes will still escape a weaker opponent who does not.
Follow these steps to execute the Mount Escape correctly. Every step matters — skipping one leads to a failed attempt.
First priority is defense. Keep your chin tucked, elbows tight, and hands ready to block submission attempts.
Place your forearms against the opponent's hips to create space. Frames are structural — use bone, not muscle.
Choose your escape. Upa bridges the opponent to the side. Elbow-knee creates space to insert a knee and recover guard.
Hip escape (shrimp) to create enough room for your legs to reinsert. This is where most mount escapes succeed or fail.
Slide your knees in and reestablish half guard or closed guard. Once you have a guard, the escape is complete.
These are the most common errors people make when attempting the Mount Escape. Recognize them in your own game and fix them systematically.
Flared elbows give the opponent the arm to set up armbars and keylocks.
Fix: Keep elbows glued to your sides. Think defensive first, escape second.
Trying to bench-press the opponent off you exhausts your arms and does nothing.
Fix: Use bone frames, not muscle pushes. Forearms on hips, not hands on chest.
Static escapes never work. You must shrimp, bridge, and move your hips actively.
Fix: Every mount escape starts with hip movement. Be a worm, not a log.
Trying to escape mount when the opponent is stable gives them the opportunity to counter.
Fix: Time your escapes when the opponent moves, reaches, or attacks.
The Mount Escape is a beginner-level technique that is tested and refined at different stages of belt progression. White belts learn the mechanics, blue belts refine the setups, and purple belts integrate it into complex chains.
Mastery of core techniques like the Mount Escape is one of the things professors evaluate when considering a promotion. Beyond time in grade, your practical application of fundamentals matters.
Open the BJJ belt calculator to see where you stand against IBJJF minimums.
Open CalculatorMount is the worst position in BJJ. Every practitioner will find themselves there at some point. Knowing how to escape is a core survival skill.
The upa (bridge and roll) is the most fundamental mount escape. Trap one arm and one leg, bridge hard, and roll to top.
From high mount, the upa becomes harder. Shrimp to create space, then use frames and timing to slide your knees back in.
Most failed mount escapes lack hip movement or correct framing. Escapes require technique plus consistent motion — not strength.
Yes. Mount is worth 4 points in IBJJF and gives the opponent the most submission options. Escaping mount quickly is a priority.