SAFETY: Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control targets the Carotid arteries and trachea. Risk: Trachea damage from excessive crushing pressure. Release immediately upon tap.

Attacking with the Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control requires a systematic approach that prioritizes grip depth and alignment before committing to the interlocked finger configuration. Because Guillotine Control is already established, the attacker’s primary task shifts from catching the neck to optimizing the choking angle and sealing the finish. The interlaced ten finger grip creates a unified compression ring around the neck that is extremely resistant to hand fighting and peeling defenses. The attacker must coordinate upper body squeeze with lower body control—whether through closed guard, sprawl pressure, or hip positioning—to prevent the opponent from creating the space needed to posture out or extract their head. Timing the grip transition from initial guillotine control to the ten finger configuration is the critical skill that separates successful finishes from lost positions.

From Position: Guillotine Control (Top)

Key Attacking Principles

What are the key principles for executing Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control?

  • Establish maximum choking arm depth before transitioning to ten finger grip—the forearm blade must cross the centerline of the throat
  • Keep elbows pinned to your ribcage throughout the finish to eliminate any gap between your arm and the opponent’s neck
  • Use lat engagement and shoulder shrug rather than bicep strength to generate primary choking compression
  • Maintain heavy hip pressure or closed guard connection to prevent opponent from creating posture or extraction space
  • Adjust the angle of compression based on opponent’s chin position—attack below the chin, never across it
  • Transition smoothly between ten finger grip and alternative guillotine variations when opponent’s defense creates openings

Prerequisites

What do you need before attempting Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control?

  • Guillotine Control already established with choking arm wrapped around opponent’s neck and posture broken
  • Opponent’s head positioned below their hips with limited ability to posture up or create space
  • Choking arm deep enough that the blade of the forearm crosses the front of the throat, not resting on chin or shoulder
  • Non-choking hand free and available to transition to ten finger interlocking configuration
  • Lower body control established through guard, sprawl, or hip pressure to prevent opponent backing out

Execution Steps

How do you execute Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control step by step?

  1. Verify choking arm depth: Before transitioning to the ten finger grip, confirm your choking arm is positioned deep around the opponent’s neck with the blade of your forearm crossing the trachea and carotid arteries. Your armpit should be tight over the crown of their head. If the arm is shallow, use hip movement and shoulder pressure to walk it deeper before proceeding. (Timing: 2-3 seconds)
  2. Break opponent’s posture completely: Pull the opponent’s head down toward your chest using the existing guillotine control grip while simultaneously closing any remaining space with your hips. From top position, sprawl your hips forward and drive your chest weight onto their upper back. From guard, elevate your hips and pull their head into your sternum. Their forehead should be pressed against your chest. (Timing: 1-2 seconds)
  3. Thread non-choking hand to meet choking hand: Reach your non-choking hand underneath the opponent’s torso to meet your choking hand. Route the hand along the path of least resistance—typically underneath their far armpit or along their chest. Maintain constant downward pressure with your choking arm throughout this transition to prevent any posture recovery during the grip change. (Timing: 1-2 seconds)
  4. Interlace all ten fingers: Weave all ten fingers together in a palm-to-palm prayer-style configuration with maximum finger engagement. The fingers should be tightly interlaced with no gaps between them. Position the locked grip so your choking forearm remains centered on the throat structures, not displaced to either side. This grip is significantly stronger than gable or S-grip alternatives and resists peeling attempts. (Timing: 1 second)
  5. Engage lats and shrug shoulders: Initiate the choking squeeze by shrugging your shoulders upward toward your ears while simultaneously pulling your elbows down and back toward your own hips. This creates a powerful constriction that closes the ring around the opponent’s neck. The primary force should come from your latissimus dorsi muscles, not your biceps. Think of trying to touch your elbows together behind your back while the hands stay stationary. (Timing: 2-3 seconds progressive squeeze)
  6. Arch back and expand chest: Add final compression by arching your upper back and expanding your chest outward. This increases the distance between your shoulders and your interlocked hands, further tightening the noose. From guard, simultaneously elevate your hips and pull with your legs to create a two-directional compression. Maintain the squeeze progressively—do not jerk or spike—giving your partner time to tap. (Timing: 2-4 seconds until tap)
  7. Follow opponent’s movement and maintain pressure: As the opponent begins to react to the choke—attempting to posture, turn, or hand fight—follow their movement with your hips and adjust your angle to maintain optimal compression. If they turn to one side, angle your body to keep the forearm centered. If they attempt to stand, close guard or hook a leg to prevent them from creating upward distance. Persistent, patient pressure is more effective than explosive squeezing. (Timing: Continuous until finish or transition)

Possible Outcomes

ResultPositionProbability
Successgame-over62%
FailureGuillotine Control25%
CounterClosed Guard13%

Opponent Defenses

How might your opponent defend against Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control?

  • Opponent postures up forcefully and hand fights to peel interlocked fingers (Effectiveness: High) - Your Response: Immediately close guard or drive hips forward to collapse their posture before the grip breaks. If fingers begin separating, transition to gable grip guillotine rather than fighting to maintain the interlace. → Leads to Guillotine Control
  • Opponent tucks chin tightly and turns head to relieve direct throat pressure (Effectiveness: Medium) - Your Response: Redirect choking pressure behind the jaw line by driving your wrist deeper and angling the squeeze toward the back of the neck. The ten finger grip allows you to adjust angle without losing compression. Alternatively transition to high elbow guillotine which attacks behind the chin. → Leads to Guillotine Control
  • Opponent drives forward aggressively to stack and pass guard while ignoring choke (Effectiveness: Medium) - Your Response: Use their forward momentum for a hip bump sweep to mount while maintaining the choke grip. Alternatively, sprawl your hips back and redirect their drive to one side using your legs, keeping them off-balance and unable to establish passing pressure. → Leads to Closed Guard
  • Opponent traps their arm inside the guillotine to create a frame and reduce pressure (Effectiveness: Low) - Your Response: The trapped arm actually increases your compression surface. Maintain the ten finger grip and squeeze across both the arm and neck—the arm-in configuration still attacks the carotid effectively. Alternatively, use the arm as a lever by driving their elbow across their own face to increase neck pressure. → Leads to Guillotine Control

Common Attacking Mistakes

What mistakes should you avoid when executing Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control?

1. Transitioning to ten finger grip before establishing sufficient choking arm depth

  • Consequence: The interlocked fingers lock in a shallow position across the chin or face rather than the throat, producing discomfort but no actual choke, and the rigid grip makes readjustment difficult
  • Correction: Always verify forearm blade position across the centerline of the throat before interlacing fingers. Use hip movement and shoulder pressure to walk the arm deeper first. Once fingers are locked, depth cannot be easily adjusted.

2. Releasing hip pressure or guard control during the grip transition phase

  • Consequence: Opponent uses the momentary lapse to posture up, extract their head, or advance position to side control while the attacker is focused on hand configuration
  • Correction: Maintain constant downward head control with the choking arm throughout the entire grip change. Use legs actively to prevent any posture recovery. The grip transition should take one second maximum.

3. Squeezing with biceps and forearms instead of engaging lats and shoulder structure

  • Consequence: Arms fatigue rapidly within 10-15 seconds, grip weakens progressively, and the choke becomes a war of endurance that the attacker typically loses
  • Correction: Initiate squeeze with a shoulder shrug and lat pull motion. Keep elbows pinned to ribs and let skeletal structure transfer force. The lats are much larger and more fatigue-resistant than the biceps.

4. Jerking or spiking the choke with explosive force to get a quick finish

  • Consequence: High risk of trachea damage and cervical spine injury to training partner. Also mechanically less effective than progressive squeeze because explosive motion creates gaps in compression.
  • Correction: Apply pressure progressively over 3-5 seconds. Steady, increasing compression is both safer and mechanically superior to explosive application. The choke should tighten like a vice, not a strike.

5. Maintaining static body position while squeezing instead of making micro-adjustments

  • Consequence: Opponent settles into a defensive position where they can breathe and manage the pressure indefinitely, leading to a stalling situation where the attacker burns energy without finishing
  • Correction: Continuously adjust hip angle, shoulder pressure, and squeeze direction in small increments. Each micro-adjustment disrupts the opponent’s defensive equilibrium and creates new choking angles they must address.

6. Refusing to transition when opponent successfully defends the ten finger grip

  • Consequence: Extended commitment to a defended submission burns energy, allows opponent to improve position, and wastes the offensive initiative that Guillotine Control provides
  • Correction: Recognize defensive success within 10-15 seconds and smoothly transition to high elbow guillotine, arm-in variation, positional advancement to mount, or anaconda/darce if opponent turns. Use the threat to create movement, not stalling.

Training Progressions

How do you train Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control (Attacker)?

Phase 1: Grip Mechanics - Ten finger interlocking grip configuration and choking pressure generation Practice interlacing all ten fingers from various guillotine control positions without resistance. Focus on speed of grip transition, proper forearm alignment across the throat, and lat-driven squeeze mechanics. Partner provides no resistance—emphasis is purely on hand positioning and muscle engagement patterns. Drill 20 repetitions from each position (standing, guard, top).

Phase 2: Finishing Sequence Integration - Combining grip mechanics with hip positioning and body movement for the complete finish From established Guillotine Control, execute the full finishing sequence against a partner who maintains position but does not actively defend. Focus on coordinating the shoulder shrug, lat engagement, back arch, and hip elevation into one fluid motion. Partner provides feedback on choking pressure quality. Work 5-minute rounds alternating roles.

Phase 3: Counter-Response Drilling - Maintaining finish through common defensive reactions Partner defends with specific counters one at a time: posture attempts, chin tuck, hand fighting, driving forward. Practice the prescribed response for each counter while maintaining choking pressure. Gradually combine multiple defenses. Partner at 50-70% resistance. Work 3-minute rounds with specific counter assignments per round.

Phase 4: Live Positional Sparring - Applying the submission under realistic resistance with transition awareness Start each round with Guillotine Control established. Attacker must finish or transition within 30 seconds. Defender uses full resistance. Attacker practices recognizing when to commit to the ten finger finish versus when to transition to alternative submissions or positional advancement. Track finish rate over multiple rounds to measure improvement.