SAFETY: Armbar from High Mount targets the Elbow joint (hyperextension) and shoulder girdle. Tap early and often. Your safety is more important than any training round.
Defending the Armbar from High Mount requires a layered approach that begins with prevention and ends with emergency escape. The ideal defense prevents the attacker from ever isolating your arm in the first place—keeping elbows tight, hands protecting your neck, and maintaining defensive frames that prevent the attacker from establishing the two-on-one grip needed to begin the submission sequence. Once arm isolation begins, defense shifts to grip fighting, arm retraction, and exploiting the attacker’s weight shifts during their transition from mount to armbar position. The defender must recognize that every phase of the armbar setup creates a momentary positional weakness in the attacker’s base, and these windows are the escape opportunities. Understanding which defensive action matches each phase of the attack is the foundation of high-level armbar defense from high mount.
Opponent’s Starting Position: High Mount (Top)
How to Recognize This Submission
How do you know when someone is attempting Armbar from High Mount?
- Attacker secures two-on-one grip on your wrist or forearm from high mount position
- Attacker begins shifting weight to one side and planting a foot near your head
- Attacker’s far hand posts on the mat near your opposite ear indicating preparation for leg swing
- Attacker’s knee lifts from beside your ribs as they prepare to rotate their body perpendicular to yours
- You feel your arm being pulled across the attacker’s centerline away from your body
Key Defensive Principles
What are the key principles for defending Armbar from High Mount?
- Keep elbows connected to your torso at all times—extended arms become immediate armbar targets
- Grip your own collar or clasp hands together the instant you feel arm isolation beginning
- Use the attacker’s transition movement as your escape window—they are most vulnerable during the leg swing
- Turn your body toward the trapped arm to prevent full extension rather than pulling away
- Control the attacker’s leg with your free hand to prevent them from completing the step-over
- Maintain defensive composure—panic creates arm extension which accelerates the submission
Defensive Options
What can you do to defend against Armbar from High Mount?
1. Clasp hands and grip-fight to prevent arm extension
- When to use: As soon as you feel the attacker isolating your arm with a two-on-one grip before they begin rotation
- Targets: High Mount
- If successful: Attacker cannot complete the armbar and must either break grips or abandon the attack, returning to high mount
- Risk: If you focus only on gripping, you may neglect hip escape opportunities and remain stuck in high mount
2. Bridge explosively during the attacker’s leg swing transition
- When to use: The moment the attacker lifts their leg to swing over your head—their base is weakest during this phase
- Targets: Closed Guard
- If successful: Bridge displaces the attacker’s base, preventing them from completing the armbar and allowing guard recovery
- Risk: Mistimed bridge wastes energy and may extend your arm further into the submission
3. Hip escape toward the attacker’s legs during their rotation
- When to use: During the attacker’s sit-back phase when their weight shifts away from your hips
- Targets: Half Guard
- If successful: Creates enough space to insert your knee and recover half guard, nullifying the armbar threat
- Risk: If you escape hips without protecting the arm, you may give up the armbar from a worse angle
4. Turn into the attacker and follow their rotation to prevent extension
- When to use: When the attacker has completed the leg swing and is sitting back—turning toward them prevents full arm extension
- Targets: High Mount
- If successful: Prevents the armbar finish and may allow you to stack the attacker or recover top position
- Risk: Turning exposes your back momentarily and the attacker may transition to back control
Escape Paths
How do you escape Armbar from High Mount?
- Bridge during leg swing to displace attacker and recover closed guard
- Hip escape during sit-back phase to insert knee and recover half guard
- Stack the attacker by turning into them and driving forward when they attempt to finish
- Extract the trapped arm during grip transition moments and immediately re-establish defensive posture
Best-Case Outcomes for Defender
What is the best outcome when defending Armbar from High Mount?
→ Closed Guard
Time an explosive bridge during the attacker’s leg swing transition when their base is compromised, displacing them and recovering guard before they can re-establish mount
→ Half Guard
Hip escape during the attacker’s sit-back phase, using the weight shift to create space for knee insertion and half guard recovery