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Two soldiers in a "crude north–south position". A pinning hold (also known as a hold down and in Japanese as osaekomi-waza, 抑え込み技, "pinning technique") is a general grappling hold used in ground fighting that is aimed to subdue by exerting superior control over an opponent and pinning the opponent to the ground.
Ude-Hishigi-Ude-Gatame (腕挫腕固) is one of the official 29 grappling techniques of Kodokan Judo. It is one of the nine [1] joint techniques of the Kansetsu-waza list, one of the three grappling lists in Judo's Katame-waza [2] enumerating 29 grappling techniques. [3] All of Judo's competition legal joint techniques are arm locks.
Ude-Hishigi-Hara-Gatame (腕挫腹固) is one of the official 29 grappling techniques of Kodokan Judo. It is one of the nine joint techniques of the Kansetsu-waza list, one of the three grappling lists in Judo's Katame-waza [1] enumerating 29 grappling techniques. [2] All of Judo's competition legal joint techniques are arm locks.
Armpit arm-entanglement Ude-Hishigi-Waki-Gatame (Japanese: 腕挫腋固) is an armlock and one of the official 29 grappling techniques of Kodokan Judo . It is one of the nine joint techniques of the Kansetsu-waza list, one of the three grappling lists in Judo's Katame-waza enumerating 29 grappling techniques.
Ude-hishigi-hiza-gatame (腕挫膝固): Knee arm bar. Ude-hishigi-juji-gatame (腕挫十字固): Back-lying perpendicular arm bar. Ude-hishigi-sankaku-gatame (腕挫三角固): Triangular arm bar. Ude-hishigi-te-gatame (腕挫手固): Hand lock. Ude-hishigi-ude-gatame (腕挫腕固): Arm lock. Ude-hishigi-waki-gatame (腕挫腋固): Armpit arm ...
Armbar counter on the ground normally is a body roll towards the opponent in order to prevent overextension of the captured elbow bend. The jūji-gatame (十字固め, rendered as "Ude-Hishigi-Juji-Gatame"), which translates to "cross pin" or "cross hold down" also sometimes used interchangeably with the terms armbar, cross armbar or straight armbar, is a Jujutsu, and thus a Judo, technique ...
An anaconda choke is an arm triangle from the front headlock position. [2] The performer threads his or her arm under the opponent's neck and through the armpit, and grasps the biceps of the opposing arm. The performer then attempts to pin the opponent onto the trapped shoulder so as to better interrupt the flow of blood, all the while applying ...
With the other hand, the fighter grasps the first hand, ensuring that they have not reached around the enemy's arm, and pulls upward with both hands. They now sit down and place the enemy within their guard, and finish the choke by pulling with their arms and pushing with their legs.