SAFETY: Arm Triangle from Hindulotine targets the Carotid arteries (compressed by opponent’s own shoulder and your arm). Risk: Loss of consciousness from blood choke. Release immediately upon tap.
The Arm Triangle from Hindulotine exploits the natural defensive reaction to guillotine pressure. When an opponent frames with their near arm to defend the Hindulotine grip, their own arm becomes trapped against their neck, creating the head-and-arm configuration needed for kata-gatame. The attacker transitions from guillotine mechanics to arm triangle compression, using the opponent’s own shoulder as one blade of the choke while their forearm provides the opposing pressure on the other carotid artery.
This technique represents an advanced chain within the Hindulotine system that specifically punishes one of the most common defensive responses. Rather than forcing the guillotine against a strong frame, the practitioner recognizes when the opponent’s arm position creates the arm triangle opportunity and flows into it seamlessly. The transition demands precise timing and constant head control to prevent the opponent from recovering posture or extracting their trapped arm during the grip switch.
The strategic value lies in the dilemma this creates within the Hindulotine attack system. Opponents who frame to defend the guillotine inadvertently set up the arm triangle. Those who keep their arms tight to prevent the arm triangle remain vulnerable to the original guillotine. This binary choice where both defensive responses feed the attacker’s chain exemplifies modern submission grappling’s emphasis on interconnected threat systems that force defensive errors.
Category: Choke Type: Blood Choke Target Area: Carotid arteries (compressed by opponent’s own shoulder and your arm) Starting Position: Hindulotine From Position: Hindulotine (Top) Success Rate: 62%
Safety Guide
Injury Risks:
| Injury | Severity | Recovery Time |
|---|---|---|
| Loss of consciousness from blood choke | High | Immediate recovery if released promptly; potential stroke risk if held too long |
| Neck strain from improper pressure angle | Medium | 3-7 days with rest |
| Shoulder compression injury to trapped arm | Medium | 5-14 days depending on severity |
Application Speed: SLOW and progressive - 3-5 seconds minimum from lock to tap. Blood chokes can cause unconsciousness in 6-8 seconds.
Tap Signals:
- Verbal tap (say ‘tap’ clearly)
- Physical hand tap (multiple taps on opponent or mat)
- Physical foot tap (multiple taps with foot)
- Any distress signal or loss of resistance
- Immediately release if opponent goes limp
Release Protocol:
- Immediately release arm squeeze and remove head pressure
- Step back from opponent’s head and shoulders
- Allow opponent to breathe and recover (30-60 seconds)
- Check for consciousness and normal breathing
- If unconscious: position on side, elevate legs, monitor breathing until conscious
Training Restrictions:
- Never spike or jerk the submission - apply smooth progressive pressure only
- Never hold after tap signal - release immediately upon any tap
- Always allow tap access - do not trap both arms in training
- Never use competition speed in training - practice control first
- Stop immediately if opponent’s face changes color (purple/red indicates excessive pressure)
Outcomes
| Result | Position | Probability |
|---|---|---|
| Success | game-over | 62% |
| Failure | Hindulotine | 25% |
| Counter | Closed Guard | 13% |
Attacker vs Defender
| Attacker | Defender | |
|---|---|---|
| Focus | Execute and finish | Escape and survive |
| Key Principles | Recognize the frame defense as the trigger to transition fro… | Defend the arm position first - keep your near arm either fu… |
| Options | 7 execution steps | 4 defensive options |
Playing as Attacker
Key Principles
-
Recognize the frame defense as the trigger to transition from guillotine to arm triangle rather than fighting the defense
-
Maintain constant head control throughout the grip switch to prevent posture recovery during the vulnerable transition moment
-
Drive the opponent’s trapped arm tight against their own neck using chest pressure before attempting the squeeze
-
Walk your hips perpendicular to the opponent’s body toward their trapped-arm side to create the optimal finishing angle
-
Use progressive chest-to-chest compression rather than arm squeezing to generate the choking pressure
-
Keep your head low and glued to the mat on the far side of opponent’s head to seal the choke and prevent frame escapes
Execution Steps
-
Recognize the frame defense: From your Hindulotine grip, feel the opponent push their near-side arm across their own neck to crea…
-
Pin the trapped arm with chest pressure: Before releasing any part of your guillotine grip, drive your chest forward and down onto the oppone…
-
Swim to head-and-arm control: Release your guillotine grip and immediately thread your choking arm over the opponent’s trapped arm…
-
Lock the figure-four or gable grip: Connect your hands by gripping your own bicep with the choking hand while your free hand cups behind…
-
Walk to the finishing angle: Disengage your legs from the Hindulotine configuration and walk your hips around toward the opponent…
-
Drop hip and seal the position: Drop your hip closest to their trapped arm to the mat, sprawling your weight onto the opponent. Your…
-
Apply progressive squeeze: Expand your chest while pulling your elbows together toward your own centerline. The opponent’s trap…
Common Mistakes
-
Releasing guillotine grip too early before chest pressure secures the trapped arm
- Consequence: Opponent pulls their arm free during the transition, escaping both the guillotine and the arm triangle attempt, returning to a neutral position
- Correction: Pin the opponent’s framing arm with your chest weight before releasing any part of the guillotine grip. The arm must be immobilized by body pressure before you initiate the grip switch.
-
Squeezing with arms instead of using chest compression and body angle
- Consequence: Arms fatigue rapidly, the choke becomes ineffective, and the opponent can endure the pressure long enough to work an escape or wait for you to gas out
- Correction: Walk to a perpendicular angle and use your dropping hip and expanding chest to generate pressure. Your arms lock the configuration in place while your body creates the compressive force.
-
Leaving space between your chest and the opponent’s trapped shoulder
- Consequence: The opponent can breathe through the choke and create incremental space to extract their arm or work defensive frames
- Correction: Drop your weight directly onto the opponent’s face and trapped shoulder. Your chest must be flush against their body with zero gap. Think about melting your weight through them rather than hovering above.
Playing as Defender
Key Principles
-
Defend the arm position first - keep your near arm either fully retracted against your body or fully extended away, never crossing your own neck
-
Recognize the transition moment when the attacker releases the guillotine grip as the highest-percentage escape window
-
Create distance by turning into the attacker rather than away to prevent the perpendicular finishing angle
-
Frame against the attacker’s hips and shoulders to prevent them from walking to the finishing angle
-
If caught, fight the angle by turning toward the attacker to relieve shoulder-on-carotid pressure
-
Tap early and clearly when the choke is locked - arm triangles restrict blood flow rapidly with minimal warning before unconsciousness
Recognition Cues
-
The attacker drives their chest forward and down onto your framing arm, pinning it against your own neck with unusual deliberateness
-
The attacker releases their guillotine grip and begins threading their arm over your near arm and behind your neck
-
You feel the attacker’s hips disengage from the Hindulotine leg configuration and begin walking toward your side
-
The attacker’s head drops low to the mat on the far side of your head as they settle into the finishing position
Escape Paths
-
Retract the near arm during the grip transition window and return to defending the Hindulotine guillotine
-
Turn into the attacker and get to knees to prevent the perpendicular finishing angle
-
Bridge and shrimp toward the trapped arm side to create space and recover guard
-
Lock hands together and straighten the trapped arm to prevent the shoulder from compressing the carotid
From Which Positions?
Match Outcome
Successful execution of Arm Triangle from Hindulotine leads to → Game Over
All submissions in BJJ ultimately converge to the same terminal state: the match ends when your opponent taps.