SAFETY: Loop Choke from Mount targets the Carotid arteries and jugular veins. Tap early and often. Your safety is more important than any training round.
Defending the Loop Choke from Mount requires immediate recognition and proactive collar defense, because once both grips are established and the diagonal vectors are applied, escape becomes extremely difficult. The defender faces a dual challenge: they must prevent the attacker from establishing deep collar penetration while simultaneously managing the fundamental threat of being mounted. Every defensive action against the collar exposes the arms to alternative attacks, creating a dilemma that skilled attackers exploit systematically. The key to survival lies in early intervention during the grip-setting phase rather than attempting to escape once the choke is locked. Defenders must prioritize collar protection with their near-side hand, maintain their chin tucked to block grip insertion, and use frames on the attacker’s hips to prevent them from settling into the optimal finishing posture. When prevention fails, the escape window narrows rapidly, and defenders must choose between bridging to disrupt the attacker’s base, stripping the lapel grip before the loop closes, or turning into the attacker to create scramble opportunities that trade mount for less dangerous positions.
Opponent’s Starting Position: Mount (Top)
How to Recognize This Submission
- Attacker controls or traps your near-side arm while reaching across toward your far collar - this is the setup phase
- You feel four fingers sliding deep inside your collar on one side, with the attacker’s thumb pressing against the side of your neck
- Attacker’s second hand grabs your near-side lapel or collar after the deep grip is established, creating tension across your neck
- Attacker lowers their chest toward your head while maintaining mount, shifting weight forward to set the finishing angle
- You feel crossing pressure on both sides of your neck simultaneously, with the collar tightening around your carotid arteries rather than across your throat
Key Defensive Principles
- Prevent the deep collar grip from being established - once four fingers are past the trachea, defensive options diminish dramatically
- Keep chin tucked and near-side hand actively defending the collar to block grip insertion attempts
- Strip the secondary lapel grip immediately if the deep collar grip is already established - the loop cannot form without both grips
- Use frames on attacker’s hips to prevent them from settling their weight and establishing the finishing posture
- Time bridge escapes to the moment when the attacker shifts weight to establish grips, exploiting their compromised base
- Never panic or waste energy on unfocused defensive movements - channel effort into specific grip stripping or bridge timing
- Accept that turning into the attacker may concede back exposure, but a scramble is preferable to a locked-in choke
Defensive Options
1. Strip the deep collar grip before the loop is established by two-on-one grip breaking on the attacker’s choking hand wrist
- When to use: As soon as you feel fingers entering your collar - this is the highest percentage defense because it prevents the choke from forming entirely
- Targets: Mount
- If successful: Attacker must restart their grip sequence, giving you time to re-establish defensive frames and collar protection
- Risk: Extending both arms to strip the grip exposes them to armbar or Americana attacks if the grip break fails
2. Bridge explosively toward the deep-grip side when attacker reaches for the secondary lapel grip, exploiting the momentary base compromise
- When to use: When the attacker releases one hand from base to grab the lapel - their posting hand is occupied, creating a structural weakness in their mount
- Targets: Closed Guard
- If successful: Bridge disrupts mount, potentially reversing to closed guard or creating enough space for guard recovery
- Risk: If bridge fails, you’ve expended significant energy and the attacker may use the bridging motion to tighten the collar grip deeper
3. Turn into the attacker and drive your near shoulder into their chest to collapse the space needed for diagonal pulling vectors
- When to use: When both grips are established but before full finishing pressure is applied - turning eliminates the angle required for the X-pattern finish
- Targets: Mount
- If successful: Collapses the choke angle, forcing attacker to readjust or abandon the loop configuration, returning to neutral mount battle
- Risk: Turning exposes your back and the attacker may transition to back control or technical mount with the collar grip still intact
4. Create maximum hip escape distance while simultaneously pulling the near-side lapel grip off with your free hand
- When to use: When you feel the loop beginning to tighten but the attacker has not yet committed their full weight forward for the finish
- Targets: Closed Guard
- If successful: Breaking the lapel grip prevents the loop mechanism while hip escape creates distance to recover guard
- Risk: Hip escape from mount is always risky and may not create enough distance before the choke tightens fully
Escape Paths
- Strip the secondary lapel grip and use the opening to execute a standard elbow escape, inserting your knee shield to recover half guard before the attacker can re-establish the loop configuration
- Bridge explosively when the attacker reaches for grips, timing the upa to the moment their posting hand leaves the mat, and follow through to closed guard or scramble to turtle
- Turn into the attacker to collapse the choke angle, then use the body-to-body contact to work toward turtle position and reset from a neutral scramble
Best-Case Outcomes for Defender
→ Closed Guard
Time an explosive bridge to the moment the attacker shifts weight to establish the second grip, trapping their arm and leg on the same side for a full upa reversal that lands you in closed guard
→ Mount
Strip the deep collar grip early using two-on-one grip breaking, then immediately re-establish defensive frames on the attacker’s hips to return to a standard mount defense where you can work systematic escapes
Test Your Knowledge
Q1: What is the single most effective moment to defend the loop choke from mount? A: The most effective moment is during the initial collar grip insertion, before the attacker establishes four fingers deep into the collar. At this stage, simply tucking the chin and using your near-side hand to block the collar opening can prevent the entire attack from developing. Once the deep grip is established, every subsequent defensive action becomes progressively more difficult because the attacker can use the existing grip as an anchor while establishing the second grip. Early prevention requires far less energy and carries far less risk than late-stage escape attempts.
Q2: When should you tap to the loop choke rather than continue attempting to escape? [SAFETY-CRITICAL] A: You should tap immediately when you feel bilateral compression on both carotid arteries with the attacker’s weight committed to the finish and both grips fully established in the diagonal configuration. Once the loop is locked with proper vectors and the attacker’s chest weight is driving the pressure, unconsciousness can occur within 8-12 seconds. There is no safe escape window once the choke is fully applied with correct mechanics. Continuing to resist a properly locked blood choke risks loss of consciousness, which is far more dangerous than tapping and resetting. In training, always err on the side of tapping early.
Q3: Why is stripping the lapel grip more effective than stripping the deep collar grip as a defensive strategy? A: The lapel grip is more accessible and requires less force to strip because it is typically a shallower grip on the near-side of your body where you have better hand positioning. The deep collar grip is buried behind your neck where you have poor mechanical leverage to remove it, and attempting to strip it requires extending your arms into vulnerable positions. More importantly, the loop choke requires both grips working in opposition to function - removing either grip breaks the mechanism, so targeting the easier grip achieves the same result with less risk. Stripping the lapel grip also keeps your arms closer to defensive position rather than reaching behind your own head.
Q4: What defensive body position best prevents the loop choke finishing mechanics from mount? A: The optimal defensive position combines a strongly tucked chin pressed toward your chest, your near-side hand actively protecting the collar opening, elbows tight to your ribs, and hips slightly angled rather than completely flat. This combination blocks collar grip insertion with the chin, provides active hand defense against grip attempts, protects your arms from isolation, and creates instability in the attacker’s mount through the hip angle. Additionally, keeping your shoulders slightly elevated off the mat by engaging your core prevents the attacker from using gravity to drive the collar deeper during grip insertion.
Q5: How does the attacker’s weight shift during the loop choke setup create escape opportunities for the defender? A: The attacker must shift their weight in predictable ways during the setup: they lean forward and to one side when feeding the deep collar grip, momentarily compromising their base. When they reach for the second lapel grip, one posting hand leaves the mat entirely. During the finish, they commit their chest weight forward toward your head. Each of these weight shifts creates a brief window where their mount base is compromised. The most exploitable moment is when they reach for the secondary grip, because both hands are occupied with collar work rather than posting for balance, making this the optimal time for an explosive bridge escape.