SAFETY: Kimura from Modified Scarf Hold targets the Shoulder and elbow joint. Tap early and often. Your safety is more important than any training round.

Defending the Kimura from Modified Scarf Hold demands early recognition and immediate preventive action. The defender’s primary challenge is that the modified scarf hold already compromises the near arm, making the transition to kimura grip dangerously seamless for the attacker. Successful defense requires keeping the elbow glued to the ribs, preventing the figure-four grip from being established, and exploiting the attacker’s positional adjustments during the submission attempt to create escape opportunities. The window for effective defense narrows rapidly once the attacker secures the figure-four grip—early intervention is far more effective than late-stage escape attempts. Understanding the progression from pin to submission allows the defender to identify and shut down each phase before it develops into the next.

Opponent’s Starting Position: Modified Scarf Hold (Top)

How to Recognize This Submission

How do you know when someone is attempting Kimura from Modified Scarf Hold?

  • Opponent releases their head wrap or arm control around your head and begins threading their arm underneath your near-side tricep
  • You feel the attacker’s hand sliding between your upper arm and your ribcage, seeking to emerge on the wrist side of your near arm
  • Opponent shifts their weight slightly and frees both hands simultaneously, indicating transition from pinning grips to submission grips
  • Sudden increase in downward pressure on your near arm as the attacker begins prying your elbow away from your body

Key Defensive Principles

What are the key principles for defending Kimura from Modified Scarf Hold?

  • Keep your near-side elbow glued to your ribs at all times—this single habit defeats the majority of kimura attempts before they begin
  • Recognize the submission threat early by feeling for the attacker’s arm threading under your tricep
  • Anchor your near arm by gripping your own belt, lapel, or far-side hip to create structural resistance against arm isolation
  • Exploit the attacker’s transition from pin control to submission grip—this is when their chest pressure is lightest and escape windows open
  • Time your bridge and escape attempts for the moment the attacker commits both hands to the figure-four, temporarily reducing their base
  • If the figure-four is locked, prioritize preventing elbow separation from your ribs over attempting to break the grip directly

Defensive Options

What can you do to defend against Kimura from Modified Scarf Hold?

1. Clasp both hands together immediately to prevent figure-four isolation

  • When to use: As soon as you feel the opponent threading their arm under your near-side tricep, before the figure-four grip is fully established
  • Targets: Modified Scarf Hold
  • If successful: Prevents the kimura grip from being secured, forcing the attacker to re-attempt arm isolation or abandon the submission
  • Risk: If the attacker breaks your grip, your arm is further from your body and more vulnerable to immediate re-attack

2. Anchor near arm to body by gripping own lapel, belt, or far-side hip

  • When to use: Preemptive defense when you sense the opponent transitioning from control to submission, before they begin threading
  • Targets: Modified Scarf Hold
  • If successful: Opponent cannot isolate your arm for the figure-four, and your defensive anchor provides structural resistance they must overcome
  • Risk: Limits your own offensive and escape options while your arm is committed to the anchor position

3. Bridge and turn into the attacker during their grip transition

  • When to use: When the opponent releases head control to establish the kimura grip, creating a brief window where chest pressure and base are reduced
  • Targets: Half Guard
  • If successful: Recover half guard or create enough hip space to insert your knee and begin systematic guard recovery
  • Risk: If timed poorly or the attacker maintains the figure-four during your bridge, you may give them a better angle to finish

Escape Paths

How do you escape Kimura from Modified Scarf Hold?

  • Bridge toward the attacker during the grip transition phase and insert your knee to recover half guard before the figure-four is consolidated
  • Straighten your arm forcefully and retract your elbow back to your ribs before the attacker can establish rotational control
  • Roll away from the attacker explosively if the figure-four is locked but elbow is not yet pinned, pulling your arm free during the roll
  • Turn into the attacker and get chest-to-chest, using the proximity to neutralize the rotational angle needed for the finish

Best-Case Outcomes for Defender

What is the best outcome when defending Kimura from Modified Scarf Hold?

Half Guard

Time a bridge during the attacker’s transition from pin control to kimura grip, exploit the momentary reduction in chest pressure to create hip space and insert your knee for half guard recovery

Common Defensive Mistakes

What mistakes should you avoid when defending Kimura from Modified Scarf Hold?

1. Extending the near arm away from the body while trying to push the opponent off

  • Consequence: Gifts the attacker perfect arm isolation, making the figure-four grip acquisition trivial and removing the primary defensive barrier
  • Correction: Keep the near-side elbow welded to your ribs at all times—push with your far hand or use frames, never extend the near arm

2. Panicking and explosive bridging without timing or setup once the figure-four is locked

  • Consequence: The attacker rides the bridge using the figure-four as a control handle, and the post-bridge landing often gives them a better finishing angle
  • Correction: Bridge only when the attacker’s base is compromised—typically during their transition or when they shift weight to begin the rotation

3. Waiting too long to defend, allowing the figure-four to be fully established and the elbow cleared from the ribs

  • Consequence: Defense becomes exponentially more difficult once the elbow is cleared—the submission is nearly inevitable from this stage
  • Correction: React at the first recognition cue (arm threading). Every second of delay reduces your defensive options dramatically

4. Trying to break the figure-four grip by pulling hands apart rather than addressing the elbow position

  • Consequence: Wasted energy fighting a two-on-one grip battle you will almost certainly lose while neglecting the structural defense of elbow-to-rib connection
  • Correction: Focus on driving your elbow back to your ribs rather than attacking the grip—if the elbow reconnects to the ribs, the grip becomes irrelevant

Training Progressions

How do you train defense against Kimura from Modified Scarf Hold?

Phase 1: Recognition and Prevention - Identifying kimura initiation cues and establishing preventive arm anchoring Partner slowly initiates the kimura sequence from Modified Scarf Hold while you practice recognizing each phase—the arm thread, the grip attempt, the elbow isolation. Focus on immediate hand clasping and elbow anchoring upon first tactile cue. No escapes yet, purely recognition and prevention drilling.

Phase 2: Grips Defense - Breaking or preventing the figure-four grip under moderate resistance Partner attempts to secure the kimura grip with increasing resistance. Practice grip prevention through hand clasping, lapel gripping, and body anchoring. Learn to identify the moment the figure-four becomes locked versus when it can still be disrupted. Develop the timing and technique to break grips before they consolidate.

Phase 3: Escape Mechanics - Executing escapes from established kimura positions at various stages Partner secures the kimura at different stages—grip only, elbow cleared, rotation begun—and you practice the appropriate escape for each stage. Bridge timing drills, roll escapes, and elbow retraction techniques. Emphasis on understanding which escapes work at which stage and when to abandon defense and tap.

Phase 4: Live Positional Defense - Full resistance defense against the complete kimura system from Modified Scarf Hold Full resistance positional sparring rounds starting in Modified Scarf Hold. Defender works to prevent and escape the kimura and its chain attacks while the attacker pursues the submission system. Develop composure under real pressure and the ability to chain defensive responses against a live attacker cycling between kimura, americana, and armbar threats.