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SPRAWL DRILL

Drill de Sprawl

Also known as: Takedown Defense Drill, Shot-Defense Drill

The sprawl drill is the foundational takedown-defense conditioning drill used to develop the reflexive sprawl response that all takedown defense relies on. The drill teaches the body to react instinctively to an opponent's shot with the legs-back, hips-down sprawl posture that neutralizes single-leg and double-leg takedown attempts. The drill is one of the most-repeated solo and partner drills in modern competitive grappling because the sprawl response cannot be intellectualized in real time — it must be conditioned to operate reflexively.

The mechanics of the solo version involve the practitioner standing upright, then on a verbal or visual cue, dropping into the sprawl posture: legs extending straight back, hips dropping toward the mat, chest leaning forward over the legs, hands posted on the mat for balance. The practitioner then explosively returns to the standing position and repeats. The drill is typically done in sets of 10-20 reps for conditioning purposes, with the body learning the muscle-memory pattern that produces the sprawl response automatically.

The partner version involves one practitioner shooting in (level change and forward drive simulating a takedown attempt) while the other practitioner sprawls. The partner version trains the timing and pressure of the sprawl response — the sprawl must happen before the shooter establishes leg control, and the chest pressure must drive the shooter's head down into the mat. The drill is foundational pedagogically and is part of virtually every elite no-gi practitioner's standing-game training. Common variations include the sprawl-and-spin (sprawl followed by spinning behind the partner for back control), sprawl-to-front-headlock (sprawl followed by front-headlock setup), and the conditioning sprawl (high-repetition for cardio).

KEY POINTS

  • 01Solo drill: stand upright, then drop legs straight back and hips down.
  • 02Lean chest forward over the legs.
  • 03Post hands on the mat for balance.
  • 04Partner drill: sprawl in response to the partner's shot.
  • 05Drive chest pressure down to deny leg control to the shooting partner.

COMMON MISTAKES

  • Bending at the waist rather than extending the legs back.
  • Failing to drive chest pressure down — the sprawl is structural, not just leg position.
  • Sprawling too late — the response must happen at the first sign of level change.
  • Standing back up too quickly — the sprawl must consolidate before returning to standing.
  • Practicing only the solo version — the partner version trains the actual reflex.

TRAINING DRILLS

  • Solo sprawl reps (sets of 10-20).
  • Partner shot-and-sprawl drill (50 reps).
  • Sprawl-and-spin to back control follow-up drill.
  • Sprawl-to-front-headlock chain drill.
  • Live standing rolling with sprawl-only takedown defense.