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BJJ & Grappling Performance

5 Reasons Your Game Falls Apart in the Final Rounds (And It Has Nothing to Do With Your Technique)

You had the triangle set up. You could feel it. Then your hand opened. Not because you didn't know what to do — but because your forearm had nothing left to give. This happens in round 4 or 5 to grapplers at every level. And the fix has nothing to do with cardio, drilling more, or rolling harder.

Marcus Holt
BJJ Brown Belt · Strength & Conditioning Coach · May 30, 2026 · 7 min read

Here's what nobody in your gym is telling you: The forearm pump you feel in the final rounds isn't a fitness problem. It's a structural imbalance that rolling more will never fix — and most grip training actively makes it worse.

At a glance

How the Most Common Grip Tools Hold Up for BJJ Athletes

Tool / Approach Trains Flexors Trains Extensors No Setup / Portable Elbow-Safe Verdict
Spring Grippers (CoC) ✓ ✗ ✓ ✗ ✗ 2 of 4
Wrist Roller (weighted) ✓ ✓ ✗ ~ ~ 2.5 of 4
Rubber Bands / TheraBand ✗ ✓ ✓ ✓ ~ 3 of 4 — caps out fast
Dead Hangs / Static Holds ✓ ✗ ~ ~ ✗ 1.5 of 4
Gripzilla Dynamo ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ 4 of 4

Every tool except the Dynamo trains one side of your forearm while ignoring the other — which is exactly how the imbalance that kills your grip in round 4 gets built in the first place.

Reason 01

✗ The Forearm Pump Spiral

1. Your Forearm Pump Isn't a Fitness Problem — It's a One-Way Spiral

Most grapplers think forearm pump is just part of training hard. They figure if they roll more, it'll improve like cardio does. It doesn't — because pump isn't fatigue. It's a specific physiological event where your flexor muscles flood with blood faster than it can clear, causing that familiar brick-like tightness that ends your game.

 

A 2017 study published in Sports Biomechanics measured grip strength across three 7-minute BJJ matches and found a statistically significant decrease across every match (p < 0.001). In other words: even trained athletes experience measurable grip failure over the course of a session — not as an anomaly, but as a predictable structural outcome.

 

The spiral is: gripping → flexor overload → pump → grip failure. Rolling more doesn't break the spiral. It just accelerates it. The only way out is to train the muscle group that stops it — which almost no one does.

"Once the burn hits that point of no return — that's it. The match is basically over for me. I had to start rationing my grip, only squeezing hard when absolutely necessary."

— Tony Ricci, BJJ practitioner & paramedic, Grapplearts.com

Reason 02

✗ The Death Grip Tax

2. Every Unnecessary Grip You Take Is Spending Fuel You Need in Round 5

In BJJ, grip fighting starts from the first second of the round. The collar, the sleeve, the wrist — you're gripping before you've done anything else. And most practitioners, especially in the gi, grip at near-maximum intensity all the time. Sports physiotherapists call this "death grip" — applying far more force than the position requires, which burns through your flexor reserves at a catastrophic rate.

 

Research confirms it. A study at Easton BJJ found that grip strength can determine the difference between maintaining control across multiple rounds — or fatiguing in the first two. The athletes who last aren't squeezing harder. They've built the structural endurance to sustain grip over time because their forearms can actually recover mid-match.

 

That recovery capacity lives in a part of your forearm that grip fighting never builds. Which brings us to the actual problem.

"If your grips fail, all your technique goes out of the window. It becomes hard to execute anything. Without a strong grip, all the rest of your upper body muscles become somewhat useless."

— BreakingMuscle.com, BJJ Grip Training Guide

Reason 03

✗ The Untrained Half

3. The Muscle Keeping Your Grip Alive Has Never Been Trained Once

Your forearm has two sides. The flexors — the underside muscles — close your fist and allow you to grip. You know these. You've trained these. Every time you grab a sleeve, pick up a barbell, or squeeze a gripper, these are the muscles doing the work.

 

The extensors — the topside muscles — open your hand, stabilise your wrist, and critically, provide the antagonist force that keeps your grip from breaking down under sustained load. EMG studies published by BuiltWithScience confirm that every extensor muscle in your forearm fires during gripping movements. They are not passive. They are active — and when they're weak, your entire grip fails faster under load.

 

Here is the uncomfortable truth: virtually every piece of grip training equipment on the market — grippers, spring-loaded devices, static holds — trains only the flexors. The extensors remain untrained, chronically underdeveloped, and completely unable to do their job when you need them

"Study after study has consistently shown weak extensor muscles in the forearm as the main culprit for elbow pain. EMG studies clearly show that every extensor muscle fires during gripping — yet no one trains them."

— BuiltWithScience, Strength Science Research

74%

of BJJ injuries involve the hand, fingers, or elbow — the direct outcome of grip-intensive training
(McDonald et al., Sports, 2017)

p<.001

Statistical significance of grip strength drop across 3 tournament matches in trained BJJ athletes
(Sports Biomechanics, 2017)

0

Commercial grip tools that train both flexors AND extensors in one movement — before the Dynamo

Reason 04

✗ The Graveyard of Gimmicks

4. Your Current Tools Are Building the Imbalance, Not Fixing It

Spring grippers (Captains of Crush and equivalents) are considered the gold standard for grip training. And they do build crush strength — but exclusively in the flexors. As FitBeast's documented research confirms, overdeveloping the flexors without training the opposing extensors is a direct pathway to the muscle imbalance that causes golfer's elbow, tennis elbow, and the recurring forearm tendonitis that every serious grappler knows too well.

 

Wrist rollers actually work bilaterally — they train both flexors and extensors in the same movement. The problem is that nobody uses them. The setup takes 10 minutes of loading plates onto a pin, holding your arms outstretched causes shoulder fatigue before the forearms even get a proper workout, and the resistance is impossible to micro-adjust mid-session. So they sit in the corner of the gym collecting dust.

 

Rubber bands and TheraBand tools are legitimate rehab devices — but the resistance is far too low for any serious athlete past the first month of use. They're not strength tools. They're recovery aids. The gap between every available option is significant

Reason 05 of 05

✓ The Fix Is 5 Minutes, Not a Fitness Overhaul

5. The Fix Exists — and It Takes 5 Minutes, Not Another Training Block

The Gripzilla Dynamo is a portable rotational forearm trainer built specifically to solve the problem that grippers create and wrist rollers can't solve conveniently. It uses an internal friction resistance engine — two independent twist knobs — that lets you dial resistance from featherlight rehabilitation level to elite-level strength in seconds. No plates. No rope. No setup.

 

The movement is a wringing motion — inward rotation (flexors) followed by outward rotation (extensors). Both sides of the forearm train simultaneously in a single 5-minute session. The arms can rest against your body during use, so your shoulders never fatigue before your forearms do. It's the wrist roller reimagined for someone who actually needs to use it consistently.

 

For BJJ athletes specifically: the rotational motion directly mimics the wrist wrestling and grip-fighting movements central to the sport. It's adjustable from injury-recovery level up through competition-prep level, with independent tension settings to correct bilateral imbalances. This is the tool that trains what rolling can't, solves what grippers broke, and takes less time than your warm-up.

"Don't let your grip decide your game. There's a version of you that lasts all 5 rounds with the same intensity you bring in round 1. The only thing between those two versions is training the half of your forearm you've always ignored."

— Marcus Holt, BJJ Brown Belt & S&C Coach

Gripzilla Dynamo — Portable Forearm Trainer

Don't Let Your Grip Decide Your Game.

Train both sides of your forearm. Fix the imbalance that causes pump and elbow pain. 5 minutes a day — no plates, no setup, no wasted rounds.

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