SAFETY: Reverse Kimura from Standing Position targets the Shoulder joint and rotator cuff. Tap early and often. Your safety is more important than any training round.
Defending the Reverse Kimura requires understanding its unique grip mechanics and the specific dangers posed by the reversed figure-four configuration. Unlike the standard Kimura where the attacker’s forearm sits behind your arm, the Reverse Kimura places the forearm in front, which changes the direction of escape and the timing window for defensive reactions. The primary danger is that this grip can finish more abruptly than a standard Kimura because the reversed leverage angle accelerates internal rotation once the shoulder reaches its mechanical limit. Defense begins with early recognition—feeling the attacker thread their arm in front of yours and grip their own wrist is the critical moment where prevention is easiest. Once the grip is locked, your defensive priority shifts to preventing rotation by keeping your elbow tight to your body and fighting to straighten the arm or turn into the attacker. The reverse Kimura is most commonly encountered from standing, front headlock, and turtle positions, so familiarity with positional escapes from those contexts is essential. Successful defense often results in returning to a neutral standing position or recovering guard, but poorly timed escapes—particularly turning away from the attacker—can expose the back and create worse problems than the original submission threat.
Opponent’s Starting Position: Standing Position (Top)
How to Recognize This Submission
How do you know when someone is attempting Reverse Kimura from Standing Position?
- Feeling the attacker thread their arm through the space between your arm and torso from the front side rather than behind
- Attacker grips their own wrist with their forearm positioned in front of your trapped arm, creating the reverse figure-four
- Sudden increase in rotational pressure driving your shoulder into internal rotation while your elbow is controlled
- From standing or front headlock, attacker isolates your wrist and begins threading their controlling arm while maintaining head or body pressure
Key Defensive Principles
What are the key principles for defending Reverse Kimura from Standing Position?
- Recognize the reverse grip entry early and fight the grip before it locks—prevention is far easier than escape
- Keep your elbow pinned tight to your ribcage to deny the rotational space needed for the submission to progress
- Turn toward the attacker rather than away to relieve shoulder pressure without exposing your back
- Fight the controlling wrist grip with your free hand as the primary method of breaking the submission structure
- Maintain posture and stand up whenever possible—the reverse Kimura loses leverage when you achieve an upright position
- Never try to simply power out by pulling your arm straight back, as this plays into the attacker’s leverage angle
- Stay calm and systematic—panicked explosive movements from standing positions create fall and injury risk for both practitioners
Defensive Options
What can you do to defend against Reverse Kimura from Standing Position?
1. Turn into the attacker to relieve shoulder rotation pressure
- When to use: As soon as you feel rotational pressure beginning on your shoulder, before the grip tightens fully
- Targets: Front Headlock
- If successful: Relieves shoulder pressure and may create scramble opportunity, though attacker may follow rotation for back take
- Risk: If attacker reads the turn, they can follow your rotation to establish back control with hooks
2. Strip the wrist grip with your free hand and straighten your trapped arm
- When to use: When the reverse grip is not yet fully secured or the attacker has a shallow connection on their own wrist
- Targets: Standing Position
- If successful: Breaks the entire submission structure and returns to neutral grip fighting position
- Risk: Requires using your free hand which may compromise your base or head defense from front headlock
3. Drive forward explosively to stand up and posture while keeping elbow tight
- When to use: When attacker’s weight is relatively light or during a transition moment before they settle their base
- Targets: Standing Position
- If successful: Standing posture removes most of the attacker’s leverage and makes the reverse Kimura mechanically difficult to finish
- Risk: If attacker maintains the grip during standup, they may have submission control from a standing position which carries fall risk
4. Sit to guard by pulling attacker into your closed guard or half guard
- When to use: When standing defense is failing and you need to change the positional dynamics to remove their standing leverage
- Targets: Standing Position
- If successful: Changes the angle and removes their standing base advantage, creating guard recovery opportunities
- Risk: Attacker may maintain the grip and continue the submission from top position, though their leverage is reduced
Escape Paths
How do you escape Reverse Kimura from Standing Position?
- Strip the wrist grip with free hand, straighten arm, and circle away to re-establish neutral standing position
- Turn into the attacker to relieve rotation, fight for underhook, and recover to front headlock defense or standing clinch
- Drive forward to technical standup while keeping elbow pinned to ribs, using posture to eliminate their leverage angle
Best-Case Outcomes for Defender
What is the best outcome when defending Reverse Kimura from Standing Position?
→ Standing Position
Strip the reverse grip by attacking the wrist connection with your free hand, straighten your arm explosively, and circle away to neutral standing position before the attacker can re-establish control
→ Front Headlock
Turn into the attacker to relieve shoulder pressure, fight for an underhook on the near side, and use the scramble to recover to a front headlock defensive position where you can work standard front headlock escapes