guard

BUTTERFLY HALF POSITION

Posição Butterfly Half

Butterfly half is the hybrid bottom-game configuration combining butterfly hook on one side with half-guard leg trap on the other side. The position is one of the most versatile modern bottom-game configurations and has become standard pedagogy at academies that emphasize hybrid open-guard systems. The configuration provides offensive and defensive options that neither pure butterfly nor pure half-guard accesses alone.

The mechanics involve the bottom player with one foot hooked under the opponent's same-side thigh (butterfly hook) and the opponent's far-side leg trapped between the bottom player's legs (half-guard). The bottom player's hands typically engage with the opponent's far-side arm or upper body. From butterfly half the bottom player can: elevate the butterfly hook to sweep (when the underhook supports the elevation); transition to deep half by burrowing; convert to full butterfly by retrieving the trapped leg; or work the half-guard underhook sweep system.

Butterfly half has been refined by Bernardo Faria, Tom DeBlass, and various modern half-guard specialists. The configuration is particularly effective as a transitional position during open-guard scrambles. Defensively the position is countered by maintaining wide base, by establishing whizzer to neutralize underhook attacks, or by passing on the half-guard side rather than the butterfly side.

KEY PRINCIPLES

  • 01One butterfly hook under opponent's same-side thigh.
  • 02Other leg trapping opponent's far-side leg in half-guard.
  • 03Engage opponent's far-side arm or upper body with hands.
  • 04Choose sweep direction based on opponent's defensive reaction.
  • 05Use as transition hub between butterfly, half, and deep half.

COMMON ATTACKS

  • Butterfly elevation sweep with underhook
  • Half-guard underhook sweep
  • Transition to deep half-guard
  • Transition to full butterfly when leg released
  • Submission setups from hybrid geometry

COMMON DEFENSES

  • Maintain wide base with knees apart.
  • Establish whizzer to neutralize underhook attacks.
  • Pass on the half-guard side rather than butterfly side.
  • Apply downward pressure to disrupt hybrid setup.
  • Force commitment to single guard variant.

NOTABLE PRACTITIONERS

Bernardo Faria · Tom DeBlass · Modern half-guard specialists