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How To Do a Kimura Takedown in BJJ

If you watched UFC Fight Night: Ladd vs Dumont, you might have caught Ramazan Emeev taking Danny Roberts to the mat with a Kimura takedown. At the time it was called creative by the commenting team but like Jim said “as we all know, the one thing that thousand-year-old martial arts do all the time is change.” This video from 2009 has Nick Diaz showing how he does the kimura takedown.

The kimura takedown uses the kimura arm submission that we all know and love (if you don’t know and love the kimura, check out How To Do a Kimura From Guard in BJJ – Forced Variation, How To Do A Kimura From Side Control Bottom in BJJ.

Start: Standing, opponent has back with double under hooks

Step 1: Target which we of opponent’s hands is on top, this will be the side you attack. Grab that wrist with your other side hand

Step 2: Push down on opponent’s wrist with both of your hands while you base down.

Step 3: Use the space created by basing down to weave your attacking side hand over opponent’s arm and through to grab your other wrist.

Step 4: Push down and base to break opponent’s grip

Step 5: Turn towards attacking side and push opponent’s arm up, causing them to follow the motion and go off balance

Finish: Side control via kimura takedown

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How To Do A Ten Finger Guillotine In BJJ

The guillotine is one of the safest submission to attempt in all of BJJ. Going to a guillotine submission in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu doesn’t sacrifice your position or run the risk of leaving you in a weak position if your opponent is able to escape like the triangle from guard or other common submissions. Instead, a missed guillotine leaves you face to face with your opponent, almost exactly the same position you were in when you started. For that reason, the guillotine can be an easy submission to attempt even if you’re unsure of your ability with it.

The ten finger guillotine is one of the variations of the guillotine choke. The ten finger guillotine has the advantage of not requiring one of your opponent’s arms to be trapped, which also means that your opponent can’t use the trapped arm to escape if they’re strong or crafty.

Start: Front headlock position 

Step 1: Grip under opponent’s chin and secure your chest over their head

Step 2: Grip free hand underneath choking hand like a cup and saucer (props to Still Rolling for that delightfully southern way of describing it)

Step 3: Rotate both hands towards your body and into opponent’s neck so that the base of your choking hand thumb pushes up and towards opponent’s chin, keeping your chest and shoulder over opponent’s head

Finish: Submission via ten finger guillotine

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How To Do a Flying Triangle in BJJ

The triangle choke is one of the most easily recognizable choke submissions in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, and for good reason. The triangle takes what looks like a bad position from the outside (being on the bottom in a fight), ties your body in knots, and the other guy ends up choking.

There’s just one problem with the triangle choke: you have to be on the bottom to do it.

UNLESS you jump and wrap your legs around your opponent’s head and choke them while they’re standing.

When that happens, you really are doing ninja stuff and it’s not only fast and effective but really cool.

Start: Standing with mutual neck tie controls

Step 1: Jump and pull opponent’s neck down

Step 2: Slide the same-side leg as your neck tie perpendicular over opponent’s head, replacing the grip

Step 3: Cross legs

Step 4: Grip behind opponent’s leg with hand that was gripping behind opponent’s neck to prevent a slam

Step 5: Figure-four free leg over choking leg

Step 6: Pull opponent’s head down and turn body towards arm that has leg grip

End: Submission via flying triangle

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How To Do a Standing Guillotine in BJJ

The guillotine is one of the best chokes in BJJ. The simple and quick, the guillotine choke is also versatile; it can be applied in gi BJJ or no-gi BJJ, MMA, street fights, and really anytime you need to submit someone with a choke.

The standing guillotine is a great Brazilian Jiu Jitsu move because it is an attack that you can use at the beginning if your opponent is a better wrestler than you and you can’t take them down. The standing guillotine can end a BJJ match as soon as it starts and what’s even better is that it doesn’t sacrifice position for the submission (like a flying triangle would).

In this video, Stasis Jiu Jitsu breaks down the standing guillotine with common mistakes, tips, and a painful variation at the end.

Start: Standing

Step 1: Get collar tie by grabbing the back of opponent’s neck where their head meets the neck, locking elbow in tight

Step 2: Pull opponent’s head down and toward your armpit, giving up collar tie

Step 3: Hook armpit over opponent’s head

Step 4: Slide hand all the way through past opponent’s chin with your palm towards opponent’s chin

Step 5: Grip the back of your choking hand with your free hand, collapse your elbows in toward the choke, and block opponent’s escape with your chin on their back.

Step 6: Step in and pull hands up towards neck

Finish: Submission via guillotine choke