Quick answer: The scissor sweep reverses an opponent from closed or open guard using a scissoring action of the legs: one shin across their torso like a blade, the other leg chopping their base leg at the knee. Combined with collar-and-sleeve control and a pull off balance, it scores 2 points under IBJJF-style rules and lands you in mount. It is usually the first sweep beginners learn because it teaches the two skills every sweep needs — kuzushi (off-balancing) and taking away the posts.
This guide is educational. Drill with qualified coaching, apply pressure gradually, tap early, and release immediately when a partner taps or cannot communicate clearly.
| Detail | Scissor sweep summary |
|---|---|
| Technique family | Guard sweep (closed/open guard) |
| Key grips (gi) | Cross-collar + same-side sleeve |
| Scoring | 2 points once reversed and stabilized (IBJJF-style) |
| Usual finish position | Mount |
What is the scissor sweep?
The scissor sweep is a fundamental reversal from guard, present in virtually every beginner curriculum for good reason. From closed guard, you open your legs and place one shin diagonally across the opponent’s torso — knee toward their far shoulder, foot hooked at their near hip — while your other leg drops to the mat against their kneeling leg. The two legs then work like scissor blades: top leg cuts them one way, bottom leg chops their base out the other way.
What makes it a great first sweep is that it fails informatively. If it does not work, the reason is always visible: you didn’t pull them onto you first, their posting arm was free, or your shin wasn’t across their body. Fixing those three problems teaches off-balancing better than any drill.
How the scissor sweep works, step by step
- Grips first: cross-collar grip (or head/neck tie in no-gi) and a sleeve or wrist grip on the same side you will sweep toward. The sleeve grip removes their post — without it the sweep dies on their palm.
- Load them onto you: pull with both grips as you shrimp slightly out to your gripping side, dragging their weight up over your shin. A braced, upright opponent does not get swept; a loaded one is already falling.
- Place the blades: top shin across the torso, bottom leg flat against their knee. The bottom leg blocks; it does not need to kick hard.
- Scissor and follow: pull the collar, cut the top knee toward the mat on your far side, chop the bottom leg into their knee — and follow them up into mount using the momentum you created.
When the moment appears
- Against a kneeling opponent working to open your closed guard — the classic timing, as their weight shifts forward to control your hips.
- Off your own collar pull: snap them forward, and sweep as they resist backward — their reaction supplies the direction.
- As a reaction to the knee-in-tailbone guard break: their posted knee gives your bottom leg a clean target.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it fails | Better cue |
|---|---|---|
| Sweeping a postured opponent | Their base is intact; you’re pushing a parked car | Pull them onto your shin first — no load, no sweep |
| No sleeve/wrist control | They post the free hand and walk away from it | The sweep-side arm must be captured before you commit |
| Shin flat and low across the hips | No leverage; they smash the knee down and pass | Knee up toward their far shoulder, foot hooked at the hip |
| Kicking instead of scissoring | One leg working alone moves them half as far | Both legs act together — cut and chop in one beat |



