Bridge

Last updated: May 27, 2026

Quick Definition

Bridging is a grappling movement performed face-up on the mat, where a fighter lifts their hips off the ground while bearing weight through the feet and the upper back or head. Fighters use it to escape pins or to reverse a top opponent from underneath.

What is bridging?

In grappling, bridging refers to the act of lifting the pelvis off the ground from a supine (face-up) position, with the body supported on the feet at one end and the shoulders or head at the other. According to Wikipedia’s entry on the bridge in grappling, the move appears across nearly every grappling art, including amateur wrestling, judo, Brazilian jiu-jitsu (BJJ), sambo, and mixed martial arts.

The purpose shifts slightly from art to art. In wrestling, the bridge is mainly defensive, since keeping the shoulders off the mat prevents a pin that would end the match. In BJJ, where pins do not end the match, the bridge is more often a tool for off-balancing and reversing a top opponent from positions like mount and side control. The basic mechanic, however, is the same in every context: drive the hips upward to disrupt the person on top.

In BJJ specifically, the bridge is also known as the “upa,” an exclamation that BJJ coaches use to call out the movement during drilling. The wrestler’s variation, where the athlete arches onto the top of the head and the feet, is sometimes called a “neck bridge” or “wrestler’s bridge” and is treated as a separate skill.

How the bridge works

From a face-up position with knees bent, the fighter drives upward through the legs, lifting the hips while the shoulders or head act as the second anchor point. The power comes from the legs and core, not the upper body.

A bridge on its own rarely finishes anything. It is almost always combined with another action, such as a roll to one side, a hip escape (shrimp), a sweep, or an arm trap, to actually escape or reverse position. The bridge creates the momentum; the follow-up converts it into a result.

BJJ bridge vs wrestling bridge

The most common point of confusion around bridging is the difference between the BJJ version and the wrestling version. They look similar, but they serve different goals and load the body differently.

Bridge typeAnchor pointsPrimary purposeMain risk
BJJ bridge (upa)Feet and one shoulderReverse or escape a top opponent, paired with a rollLower risk, since the neck stays neutral
Wrestler’s bridgeFeet and top of headKeep both shoulder blades off the mat to avoid a pinHigher risk, since it loads the cervical spine

The wrestling bridge exists because of the sport’s rules. NBC Olympics defines it as a defensive move where the wrestler, facing belly-up, supports themselves on the head and feet to keep the rest of their body from touching the mat. A wrestler who lets both shoulder blades touch the mat loses the match, so the head becomes a tool for staying off the back.

BJJ does not penalize shoulder contact, so loading the neck has no benefit and carries injury risk. According to BJJ black belt Stephan Kesting at Grapplearts, BJJ practitioners gain bridge height by coming up onto the balls of the feet rather than by going onto the head.

Common variations

VariationDescription
Hip bridge (shoulder bridge)The standard BJJ bridge, supported by feet and shoulders
Wrestler’s bridge (neck bridge)Supported by feet and the top of the head, used in wrestling and for neck conditioning
Upa (bridge and roll)A bridge combined with an arm-and-leg trap and a roll, used to reverse the mount
Hip bumpA short, sharp bridge from closed guard used to off-balance the top opponent
BuckA general grappling and MMA term for an explosive upward hip drive from the bottom

According to T.P. Grant at Bloody Elbow, the bridge goes by several names across grappling arts. In BJJ, it is the upa; in MMA and wrestling slang, it is sometimes called the bump or the buck. The core principle is the same in each case: use the hips to create momentum and space.

Common misconceptions

Three points of confusion show up often.

The grappling bridge is not the same as a gymnastics or yoga bridge. Those movements focus on spinal extension and flexibility, whereas the grappling bridge is about hip elevation against a weighted opponent.

Bridging is also misunderstood as being only about creating space. In some reversal scenarios, the goal is to off-balance the top fighter without giving them room to recover their base.

Matching the wrestling bridge style inside BJJ is generally a mistake. Without a pin rule, putting weight on the head adds risk without adding benefit, according to BJJ World.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is bridging in MMA?

Bridging in MMA is the same supine hip-lift movement used in wrestling and BJJ. From the bottom, a fighter uses it to escape positions like mount and side control and to set up sweeps against the cage.

What is an upa in BJJ?

The upa is the BJJ name for the bridge-and-roll escape from mount. It pairs an explosive bridge with a same-side arm and leg trap, forcing the top opponent over the shoulder onto their back.

Is bridging the same as a neck bridge?

No. A neck bridge is a specific variation that puts weight on the top of the head, mainly used in wrestling and for neck conditioning. Most grappling bridges keep the head neutral.

Why do wrestlers bridge with their head on the mat?

A pin in wrestling requires both shoulder blades on the ground. Loading the head gives a wrestler an extra contact point and an arc to roll out of pin attempts.

What is the difference between bridging and shrimping?

According to NAGA Fighter, a bridge pushes the opponent off by lifting the hips, while a shrimp (or hip escape) moves the hips sideways or away from the opponent. They are often used together in BJJ escapes.

Is bridging safe?

The standard hip or shoulder bridge is low risk for most healthy trainees. The wrestler’s neck bridge places a significant load on the cervical spine and is more controversial, with some coaches considering it useful for neck strength and others viewing it as injury-prone, according to Stephan Kesting at Grapplearts. Evolve MMA also notes that neck conditioning is one of the most useful traits a grappler can develop for choke and submission defense.


Sources

  1. Wikipedia. “Bridge (grappling).”
  2. NBC Olympics. “Olympic Wrestling Terms: Glossary.”
  3. NAGA Fighter. “What is bridging in BJJ?”
  4. BJJ World. “BJJ Bridge: The Fundamentals of a Fundamental Grappling Movement.”
  5. Grapplearts (Stephan Kesting). “A Simple Tweak to Develop a Powerful Bridge in BJJ.”
  6. Grant, T. P. Bloody Elbow. “Bloody Basics: The Bridge.”
  7. Evolve MMA. “Neck Strength in Grappling: Building Resilience Against Chokes.”

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