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Sode guruma jime is widely known as an Ezequiel choke (Portuguese: estrangulamento Ezequiel) in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. The choke became associated with the judoka Ezequiel Paraguassu from the time he spent at Carlson Gracie’s gym in Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro in 1988 while preparing for the 1988 Olympics in South Korea.
Submission (ezekiel choke) 1 0:46 2007 Perm MMA Middleweight Tournament Semifinal. Win 22–3 Adlan Amagov: Submission (ezekiel choke) 1 1:00 Return to Middleweight. 2007 Perm MMA Middleweight Tournament Quarterfinal. Win 21–3 Krzysztof Kułak Submission (ezekiel choke) KSW 8: November 10, 2007: 1 2:50 Warsaw, Poland Won the KSW 8 Openweight ...
Sankaku-jime (三角絞): Triangular strangle, triangle choke; Sode-guruma-jime (袖車絞): Sleeve wheel strangle (Eziquiel/Ezekiel choke) Tsukkomi-jime (突込絞): Thrust choke; Unrecognized techniques. Jigoku-jime (地獄絞): Hell strangle [4] The Kodokan officially also refers to this technique as Okuri-eri-jime.
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Technical Submission (arm-triangle choke) 1 4:45 Heavyweight Aleksei Oleinik: def. Júnior Albini: Submission (Ezekiel choke) 1 1:45 Lightweight Davi Ramos: def. Nick Hein: Submission (rear-naked choke) 1 4:15 Welterweight Elizeu Zaleski dos Santos: def. Sean Strickland: KO (spinning wheel kick and punches) 1 3:40 Preliminary Card (UFC Fight Pass)
Ezequiel Rodrigues Dutra Paraguassu (November 4, 1963) [1] is a Brazilian judoka.He competed at the 1988 Seoul and 1992 Summer Olympics. [1] He is particularly well-known for the use of the sode guruma jime (sleeve choke), widely known as the Ezequiel or Ezekiel choke (Portuguese: estrangulamento de Ezequiel), named after him by stylists of Brazilian jiu-jitsu.
An arm triangle choke where the practitioner is on the side of the opponent and presses a forearm into the opposite side of the neck of the opponent is known as a side choke, such as from the kata-gatame hold. The time it takes for the opponent to be rendered unconscious does vary depending on the configuration of the grip and position ...
This submission has been used as a "finishing" maneuver by a number of wrestlers over the years, including Sgt. Slaughter and Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, who called it the Anvilizer; Ted DiBiase Sr., Ted DiBiase Jr., and The Ringmaster, who called it the Million Dollar Dream; and Kazuchika Okada, who calls it the Money Clip.