Most white belts make the same mistake: they try to learn everything. They watch highlight reels, memorize twenty submissions, and try to play a complicated guard before they can even hold a basic position for five seconds.
Here's the truth. Your goal as a white belt isn't to win — it's to survive and build a foundation. And that foundation comes from owning three positions above everything else.
Drill these until they're automatic. Everything else you learn will plug into this framework.
Mount escape, guard retention, and the bridge and roll are the positions you'll hit in literally every single roll. Own these and you stop being a liability. Ignore them and you'll get crushed by blue belts forever — even when you know more submissions.
Being mounted is one of the worst positions in BJJ. Your opponent is sitting on your chest, controlling your upper body, and threatening chokes and armbars from above. Your job is to get out — and there's one escape that works more reliably than anything else at the white belt level: the elbow-knee escape.
The core concept is simple: you create a frame with your arm, shrimp your hips out to make space, bring your knee in to block, and work to recover half guard or full guard. It sounds mechanical when you read it. That's because it is mechanical — and that's why it works.
You will be mounted in almost every single roll as a white belt. This isn't optional to learn — it's survival. Make this as automatic as breathing.
Ask a training partner to hold a light static mount while you practice shrimping out. Ten reps each side at the end of class. Two weeks of this and your hips will move instinctively.
When you're on your back with someone between your legs, you're playing guard. Guard is actually a position of control — from here you can sweep, submit, and control the pace of the roll. But none of that matters if you can't keep your guard closed when someone tries to pass it.
Guard retention is the skill of getting your legs back in front of your opponent when they try to go around you. The foundational movement is the hip circle — using your hips to follow your opponent's movement and get your legs back in the game.
Guard retention is one of the most overlooked skills for beginners. Most white belts lie flat when their guard gets passed. The ones who survive learn to move their hips constantly.
This is your first real weapon. The bridge and roll (also called the Upa or the hip escape sweep) is a mount escape that turns defense into a reversal. Done correctly, you go from being pinned on the bottom to being on top in one explosive movement.
It works because it uses full-body power — your hips, glutes, and legs — against your opponent's balance. No technique requirement, no flexibility needed. Just trap, plant, and explode.
The bridge and roll is your first taste of actually reversing someone. Getting it to work against a resisting opponent is the first technical milestone most white belts hit — and it feels great when it clicks.
Knowing the steps isn't enough. Here's how to actually build these into muscle memory:
You're going to get tapped a lot as a white belt. That's not failure — that's the process. Every time someone passes your guard or holds you in mount, that's a rep. Focus on the movement, not the result.
Now that you know what to drill, make sure you have the right gear to train consistently. Our guide to the best beginner gis will help you pick right.
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