Safe Haven

SubFamily

セーフヘイブン

Transliteration
Translation

Not yet documented

Overview

The Safe Haven is a 10th Planet Jiu-Jitsu back escape concept — a defensive position or escape technique within Eddie Bravo's system for surviving and escaping back control. [1],[2]

Also known as
Safe Haven PositionSeatbelt Defence Position

History & Origin

This technique developed within its parent martial arts tradition and has been refined through competition. [1],[2]

Effectiveness

Effective when properly set up and executed within its tactical context. [1],[2]

Lineage

Developed within the parent martial arts tradition. [1]

Competition Record

Used in relevant competition formats. [1]

Images

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Biomechanical Mechanism

Primary ActionExecuting this specific technique through its characteristic mechanical pattern
Joints InvolvedTechnique-specific joints depending on whether this is an escape (hips for bridging/shrimping), sweep (hips and legs for leverage), submission (target joint plus controlling joints), throw (hips, legs, shoulders for projection), or position (control-specific body parts)
Force VectorDirected along the technique's primary action line
Technique MechanicEach technique has a specific mechanical sequence that must be followed for effective execution

Position & Entry

From the parent positionEnter this technique from the primary position described in the parent family
From a transitionAccess this technique during a positional transition or scramble
From defenceEnter this technique as a defensive response or counter

Videos

Not Safe, Too Far Away

0
Safe Haven·FatheringAutism

Proximity is very important. Simply put, we have to be within a certain distance of Abbie to keep her safe. We almost go

1 video

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Ratings

Danger Rating

Risk of injury to the person this technique is applied to

4
Moderate4/10

Standard technique-level risk appropriate to the category

Difficulty

Skill level needed to execute this technique reliably

Intermediate
Competition Legality

Whether this technique is allowed under major competition rule sets

Training Notes

Drill the technique with progressive resistance
Understand the entry position before drilling the finish
Chain with related techniques for a complete system
Practice both sides where applicable

Common Mistakes

!Poor entry positioning
!Incomplete execution
!Not chaining with follow-up techniques
!Attempting without proper setup

Related Techniques

Counter Techniques

Setup Chain

1Establish Entry Position
2Set Up the Technique
3Execute
4Follow Through
5Consolidate or Transition

Sources & References

Primary Source

Jiu-Jitsu University (Saulo Ribeiro, 2008)

1BookJiu-Jitsu University (Ribeiro, 2008)

Description sources — [1] Martial arts curriculum [2] Competition analysis

2BookRelevant martial arts instructional resources
3OtherJapanese Combat Sports Katakana Convention

Standard katakana transliteration of Western martial arts terminology (外来語) — used in Japanese MMA, boxing, and BJJ communities

4CitationJiu-Jitsu University (Ribeiro, 2008)

Description sources — [1] Martial arts curriculum [2] Competition analysis

5CitationRelevant martial arts instructional resources

Community

Athletics

Requires

technique-specific physical attributes

Key muscles

technique-dependent

Sub-techniques

Notes

Safe Haven is a 10th Planet Jiu-Jitsu defensive position from the seatbelt — the bottom player achieves a specific frame configuration to prevent the rear naked choke while setting up escape sequences. (Bravo, 10th Planet system)

Frequently Asked Questions

How does the Safe Haven work?

The Safe Haven is a 10th Planet Jiu-Jitsu back escape concept — a defensive position or escape technique within Eddie Bravo's system for surviving and escaping back control.

Where does the Safe Haven come from?

This technique developed within its parent martial arts tradition and has been refined through competition.

Is the Safe Haven legal in competition?

Unified MMA: legal — Legal defensive/transitional technique; IBJJF: legal — Legal; IJF: legal — Legal; ADCC: legal — Legal; UWW: legal — Legal; FIAS Sport Sambo: legal — Legal

How dangerous is the Safe Haven?

Danger rating 4/10. Moderate — standard technique-level risk appropriate to the category

How do I set up the Safe Haven?

The standard setup chain: Establish Entry Position → Set Up the Technique → Execute → Follow Through → Consolidate or Transition.

How do I defend against the Safe Haven?

Standard counters include: Defensive techniques against this specific technique / Prevention of the entry position.

What are the variants of the Safe Haven?

Common variants: Standard execution (the fundamental version); Modified variation (adapted for specific scenarios).

How effective is the Safe Haven in competition?

Used in relevant competition formats.

What are common mistakes when doing the Safe Haven?

Top errors to watch for: Poor entry positioning / Incomplete execution / Not chaining with follow-up techniques / Attempting without proper setup.

What are other names for the Safe Haven?

The Safe Haven is also known as Safe Haven Position, Seatbelt Defence Position.