SAFETY: Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control targets the Carotid arteries and trachea. Tap early and often. Your safety is more important than any training round.

Defending the Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control requires early recognition and immediate action because the interlocked ten finger grip is exceptionally difficult to peel or strip once fully established. The defender’s window for effective escape narrows rapidly as the attacker transitions from standard guillotine control to the ten finger configuration—this grip change is the critical moment where defensive intervention has the highest success rate. Once the fingers interlace and the squeeze engages, the defender’s options shift from proactive escape to survival and damage mitigation. Understanding the sequential nature of this submission—depth establishment, grip transition, squeeze initiation—allows the defender to identify the optimal intervention point and execute the correct defensive response before the choke becomes inescapable.

Opponent’s Starting Position: Guillotine Control (Top)

How to Recognize This Submission

How do you know when someone is attempting Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control?

  • Attacker’s non-choking hand begins reaching underneath your torso to meet the choking hand—signals imminent grip transition
  • Attacker adjusts forearm position by walking the choking arm deeper around your neck, repositioning the blade of the forearm across your throat centerline
  • Attacker’s shoulders shrug upward and you feel lat-driven compression beginning to close the ring around your neck
  • Attacker breaks your posture by pulling your head firmly against their chest while simultaneously closing space with hips or guard

Key Defensive Principles

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

  • Defend the grip transition before the fingers interlace—this is the highest-percentage window for escape
  • Maintain posture at all costs by driving the chin up and creating upward shoulder pressure through the attacker’s grip
  • Use two-handed grip fighting to prevent the non-choking hand from reaching the choking hand during transition
  • Turn your chin toward the choking arm to reduce direct throat exposure and create space for the jaw
  • Create distance between your neck and the attacker’s chest to reduce compression effectiveness
  • If caught in the choke, tap early—the ten finger grip tightens rapidly and leaves very little margin for late escapes

Defensive Options

What can you do to defend against Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control?

1. Posture up and hand fight before ten finger grip locks

  • When to use: As soon as you feel the attacker’s non-choking hand moving to meet the choking hand—this is the primary escape window
  • Targets: Guillotine Control
  • If successful: You break the guillotine control and return to neutral position or top position with the opponent’s grip broken
  • Risk: If you posture late and the grip locks, you’ve wasted energy and the attacker may use your upward momentum to tighten the choke

2. Drive forward aggressively to stack and pass to side control

  • When to use: When the attacker is on their back in guard and you still have enough posture to generate forward pressure through your legs
  • Targets: Closed Guard
  • If successful: You pass to side control and the choke angle becomes ineffective, potentially setting up Von Flue counter-choke
  • Risk: Driving forward into a fully locked ten finger guillotine in closed guard amplifies the choke pressure—only commit if you can maintain posture throughout

3. Turn chin toward choking arm and swim inside arm through to create frame

  • When to use: When the grip has already locked but the squeeze has not fully engaged—use the transition between grip lock and full compression
  • Targets: Guillotine Control
  • If successful: Your chin and arm create enough space to relieve carotid compression and you can begin working head extraction
  • Risk: Arm inside the guillotine can become trapped, but the arm-in position is generally less dangerous than clean no-arm guillotine

4. Tap immediately if the choke locks in and you feel blood flow restriction

  • When to use: When the ten finger grip is locked, squeeze is engaged, and you feel lightheadedness or tunnel vision beginning
  • Targets: Guillotine Control
  • If successful: You avoid injury and unconsciousness
  • Risk: No risk—this is the correct and safe response when the choke is fully locked

Escape Paths

How do you escape Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control?

  • Posture up and strip the non-choking hand before it reaches the choking hand, breaking the guillotine control entirely
  • Drive forward to pass guard and establish side control, making the choke angle ineffective
  • Turn chin into the choking arm and swim the near-side arm inside the grip to create a frame and relieve pressure
  • Circle walk to the choking arm side while posturing to reduce the choke angle and create extraction space

Best-Case Outcomes for Defender

What is the best outcome when defending Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control?

Guillotine Control

Strip the non-choking hand during grip transition phase, then posture up forcefully and hand fight to break the choking arm control entirely. Once posture is recovered, use head positioning and shoulder pressure to extract your head from the remaining arm wrap.

Closed Guard

Drive forward aggressively while maintaining posture to pass the opponent’s guard. As you establish side control, the guillotine angle becomes ineffective. This creates opportunity for Von Flue counter-choke if they maintain the grip, or forces them to release and play guard.

Common Defensive Mistakes

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

1. Waiting until the ten finger grip is fully locked before beginning defensive action

  • Consequence: The interlocked fingers create a grip that is nearly impossible to peel or strip once established, leaving only low-percentage survival options and dramatically increasing the likelihood of being submitted
  • Correction: React immediately when you feel the non-choking hand moving to meet the choking hand. The grip transition phase is your primary escape window—use it by posturing up, hand fighting, or driving forward before the fingers interlace.

2. Pulling head straight backward against the direction of the choke

  • Consequence: Pulling backward actually tightens the noose around your neck because it increases the distance between your throat and the attacker’s body, amplifying the compression angle of the forearm blade
  • Correction: Move your head toward the choking arm side while simultaneously pushing your chin forward into the crook of the attacker’s elbow. This reduces the choke angle and creates a pocket of space. Never pull straight back—always angle toward the choking arm.

3. Ignoring posture control and focusing only on hand fighting against the grip

  • Consequence: Even if you temporarily disrupt the grip, without recovering posture the attacker simply re-establishes the interlace and you’ve wasted energy without gaining positional advantage. The broken posture keeps you in the danger zone.
  • Correction: Prioritize posture recovery over grip fighting. Use your legs to drive upward, straighten your spine, and create distance between your neck and the attacker’s chest. Once posture is recovered, the choke loses its primary compression mechanism regardless of grip configuration.

4. Refusing to tap when the choke is fully locked due to ego or competition mindset in training

  • Consequence: Loss of consciousness can occur within 4-6 seconds of full carotid compression. Repeated unconsciousness episodes carry cumulative neurological risk. The ten finger grip leaves almost no margin for late escapes once the squeeze engages.
  • Correction: Tap early and often in training. The ten finger guillotine from guillotine control is one of the highest-percentage finishes in the guillotine family—recognize when the position is lost and preserve your health for the next round.

Training Progressions

How do you train defense against Ten Finger Guillotine from Guillotine Control?

Phase 1: Recognition Drilling - Identifying the grip transition window and early warning cues Partner establishes guillotine control and slowly transitions to ten finger grip at 25% speed. Defender practices recognizing each phase of the transition: arm depth adjustment, non-choking hand movement, and interlacing initiation. Defender calls out each cue verbally without attempting escape. Build awareness of timing windows before adding defensive responses.

Phase 2: Escape Timing - Executing defensive responses at the correct moment during the grip transition Partner transitions to ten finger grip at 50% speed. Defender practices posturing up, hand fighting, and driving forward at the moment they feel the non-choking hand move. Success measured by whether defender escapes before fingers interlace. Work 10 repetitions per defensive option with partner feedback on timing accuracy.

Phase 3: Survival and Late Defense - Managing the position when the grip is already locked and squeeze is beginning Start with ten finger grip already established but squeeze not yet engaged. Defender practices chin positioning, arm swimming, and posture recovery against progressive resistance. Partner increases squeeze slowly—defender must either escape or tap. Develops judgment for when escape is still possible versus when tapping is the correct response. Work 3-minute rounds.

Phase 4: Live Positional Defense - Defending the complete submission sequence under realistic conditions Partner begins in Guillotine Control with intent to finish via ten finger guillotine at full speed and resistance. Defender must escape or survive for 30 seconds. Track escape success rate across multiple rounds and identify which defensive option produces the best results. Develop personalized defensive strategy based on body type and grappling style.