SAFETY: Toe Hold from Outside Ashi targets the Foot and ankle joint complex. Tap early and often. Your safety is more important than any training round.
Defending the toe hold from Outside Ashi-Garami requires immediate recognition of the opponent’s grip change and rapid defensive response to prevent rotational damage to the ankle and knee. When controlling a leg entanglement from the bottom position, your feet are inherently vulnerable to counter-attacks from the top player, particularly when your hands are committed to your own offensive attacks. The defender must balance maintaining their offensive leg entanglement while protecting their feet from figure-four toe hold grips. Successful defense relies on early recognition—identifying the opponent’s hand movement toward your foot before the figure-four is established—combined with systematic grip stripping and foot extraction techniques. At the highest level, skilled defenders transform the opponent’s toe hold attempt into a positional advancement opportunity by exploiting the window created when the top player removes their hands from defensive positioning to reach for the foot.
Opponent’s Starting Position: Outside Ashi-Garami (Top)
How to Recognize This Submission
How do you know when someone is attempting Toe Hold from Outside Ashi?
- Opponent redirects their hands away from defending their trapped leg and reaches toward your feet near their body
- Opponent’s near-side hand cups the ball of your foot or wraps around your toes, establishing initial grip contact
- Opponent threads their far arm underneath your ankle joint, indicating figure-four configuration is being established
- You feel compression or squeezing around your ankle as the figure-four grip locks into place around the joint
- Opponent pulls your foot toward their chest, reducing your ability to retract it and establishing the finishing fulcrum point
Key Defensive Principles
What are the key principles for defending Toe Hold from Outside Ashi?
- Early recognition is paramount—identify the opponent’s reach for your foot before the figure-four grip is established, as preventing the grip is far easier than escaping a locked submission
- Maintain active foot movement and positioning within the entanglement to prevent the opponent from securing a static grip on your toes and metatarsal heads
- Rotate your hips in the direction of the toe hold twist to immediately relieve rotational pressure on your ankle and knee structures
- Strip the figure-four grip systematically by attacking the cupping hand first, as removing this grip breaks the rigid mechanical frame that generates rotational force
- Never sacrifice your leg entanglement position unless the toe hold is fully locked with rotation initiated—maintaining offensive pressure often forces the opponent to abandon the toe hold attempt
- Use the opponent’s commitment to the toe hold as an advancement opportunity, since their hands leaving defensive position creates openings to deepen your leg entanglement
Defensive Options
What can you do to defend against Toe Hold from Outside Ashi?
1. Strip the figure-four grip before rotation begins using two-on-one hand fighting
- When to use: Immediately upon recognizing the opponent’s hand moving toward your foot or feeling initial grip contact on your toes
- Targets: Outside Ashi-Garami
- If successful: Position resets completely and you maintain your offensive leg entanglement with both hands free to resume attacks
- Risk: Low—if the initial grip strip fails, you still have time for secondary defenses before rotation begins
2. Rotate hips in the direction of the twist to collapse rotational angle and relieve ankle pressure
- When to use: When the figure-four is established but rotational pressure has not yet reached dangerous angles and you need immediate pressure relief
- Targets: Outside Ashi-Garami
- If successful: Neutralizes rotational force on ankle and knee, creates window to retract foot or strip grip while pressure is relieved
- Risk: Medium—excessive rolling may compromise your leg entanglement position and hooks
3. Advance to Inside Ashi-Garami by threading your inside leg deeper while opponent’s hands are occupied on the toe hold
- When to use: When opponent commits both hands to the toe hold grip, removing their hands from defensive hip positioning and creating space for advancement
- Targets: Inside Ashi-Garami
- If successful: You advance to a more dominant entanglement position while opponent is forced to abandon their counter-attack to address the worsening positional threat
- Risk: Medium—requires precise timing and may briefly expose your foot further during the transition
4. Retract foot explosively by straightening leg before the figure-four grip fully locks
- When to use: In the brief window between initial grip contact and figure-four completion, when the grip structure is not yet rigid
- Targets: Outside Ashi-Garami
- If successful: Foot extraction breaks the toe hold setup completely before it becomes mechanically threatening
- Risk: Medium—if the grip holds, your now-extended leg may be more vulnerable to the rotational force
Escape Paths
How do you escape Toe Hold from Outside Ashi?
- Strip the figure-four grip through aggressive two-on-one hand fighting targeting the cupping hand first, retract your foot behind the opponent’s body out of reach, and re-establish your leg entanglement hooks for continued offensive control
- Roll with the rotational direction of the toe hold twist to collapse the pressure angle, extract your foot during the momentum shift when rotational tension is relieved, and re-engage from a neutral or improved leg entanglement position
- Advance your entanglement to Inside Ashi-Garami or Saddle while the opponent’s hands are committed to the toe hold, forcing them to abandon the submission attempt to address the worsening positional disadvantage
Best-Case Outcomes for Defender
What is the best outcome when defending Toe Hold from Outside Ashi?
→ Outside Ashi-Garami
Strip the toe hold grip early through two-on-one hand fighting and foot retraction, maintaining your offensive leg entanglement position with no positional loss
→ Inside Ashi-Garami
Capitalize on the opponent’s commitment to the toe hold by advancing your entanglement through the inside space while their hands are occupied, transforming their counter-attack into your positional improvement