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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) KSW 8: November 10, 2007: 1 2:50 Warsaw, Poland Won the KSW 8 Openweight Tournament. Win 20–3 Karol Bedorf Submission (triangle choke) 1 1:03 KSW 8 Openweight Tournament Semifinal. Win 19–3 Łukasz Woś Submission (rear-naked choke) 1 0:50 KSW 8 Openweight Tournament Quarterfinal. Win 18–3 Shamil Nurmagomedov
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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A submission, also called a "tap out" is a combat sports term for yielding to the opponent, resulting in an immediate defeat. A submission is often performed by visibly tapping the floor or opponent with the hand or foot, or by verbalizing to the opponent or referee of the competition.
Submission (Ezekiel choke) 2 4:37 Flyweight Manel Kape: def. Felipe dos Santos Decision (unanimous) (30–27, 29–28, 29–28) 3 5:00 Heavyweight Justin Tafa: def. Austen Lane: KO (punches) 1 1:22 Light Heavyweight Tyson Pedro: def. Anton Turkalj KO (punches) 1 2:12 Preliminary card (ESPN / ESPN+) Light Heavyweight Carlos Ulberg: def. Jung Da-un
Bulldog choke – The bulldog choke is a catch wrestling strangulation. The bulldog choke works the same as a rear naked choke, except it occurs on the side of the opponent, not behind. The attacker's biceps will block one side of the neck and the forearm will block the other. For loss of consciousness to occur, the structure need to be compressed.
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 ...