SAFETY: Triangle from De La Riva targets the Carotid arteries and jugular veins. Tap early and often. Your safety is more important than any training round.

Defending the Triangle from De La Riva requires understanding the attack’s progression from open guard to closed triangle configuration. The defense operates across three distinct windows: pre-entry (while still in De La Riva guard), mid-transition (as the leg swims over your shoulder), and post-lock (once the triangle is secured). Each window demands different defensive priorities and techniques. The most effective defense occurs in the earliest window, preventing the attacker from ever achieving the leg-over-shoulder position. Once the triangle is fully locked with proper angle and arm control, defensive options narrow significantly and the risk of unconsciousness increases. Defenders must develop the sensitivity to recognize the attack’s setup cues and respond with immediate posture recovery or guard passing pressure rather than allowing the attacker to complete the multi-step entry sequence from De La Riva.

Opponent’s Starting Position: De La Riva Guard (Bottom)

How to Recognize This Submission

  • Opponent’s collar grip pulls your head down aggressively while their sleeve grip pushes your arm across your body from De La Riva guard
  • Opponent’s non-hooking leg releases from hip control and begins swinging upward toward your shoulder or neck
  • You feel increased forward pull from the De La Riva hook combined with downward collar pressure, breaking your posture significantly
  • Opponent’s hips begin rotating perpendicular to your body while maintaining the DLR hook as an anchor point
  • Your arm gets trapped between opponent’s legs as their shin crosses behind your neck and they begin closing the triangle figure-four

Key Defensive Principles

  • Maintain strong upright posture against the De La Riva hook to deny the broken posture needed for triangle entry
  • Keep both arms inside the guard framework - never allow one arm to be isolated across the centerline
  • Recognize the leg swim early and immediately posture up or stack before the triangle configuration can lock
  • Once caught, posture is your primary weapon - standing tall prevents the attacker from creating the perpendicular angle needed to finish
  • Address the trapped arm immediately by pulling it free or tucking it tight to your body to deny the cross-neck pressure
  • Use explosive posture recovery in combination with arm extraction rather than attempting one without the other
  • When stacking, drive forward and to the side to create a passing angle rather than pushing straight into the attacker

Defensive Options

1. Posture up and strip the De La Riva hook before the leg swim

  • When to use: Early stage - when you feel collar grip pulling your head down and their free leg begins to lift off your hip
  • Targets: De La Riva Guard
  • If successful: Return to standard De La Riva Guard top position with posture intact and ability to initiate passing
  • Risk: Low risk if executed early, but requires recognizing the setup before the leg clears your shoulder

2. Stack and drive forward to compress the triangle and create a guard passing angle

  • When to use: Mid-stage - when the triangle is partially locked but attacker has not yet achieved perpendicular angle or full arm control
  • Targets: Open Guard
  • If successful: Break free of the triangle by stacking and passing to side control or at minimum resetting to open guard top
  • Risk: Medium risk - if stacking fails and you remain bent forward, attacker can adjust angle and finish from underneath your stack

3. Extract trapped arm while maintaining strong posture to deny the cross-neck choke mechanism

  • When to use: Post-lock stage - when triangle is locked but you still have posture and the arm is not yet fully pulled across your centerline
  • Targets: De La Riva Guard
  • If successful: Denying the arm-across-neck position eliminates the primary choking mechanism and forces attacker to readjust or abandon
  • Risk: Medium risk - attempting to extract arm while posture is broken accelerates the choke rather than defending it

4. Stand up explosively and use height to remove attacker’s angle and hip connection

  • When to use: Any stage before full angle and head control are established - particularly effective when attacker’s grips behind your head are not yet secure
  • Targets: Open Guard
  • If successful: Standing removes the attacker’s ability to create perpendicular angle and can lead to slam-pass or stack-pass opportunities to escape
  • Risk: High risk in competition if attacker maintains locked triangle during standing - potential slam penalties and gravity assists the choke if you fall

Escape Paths

  • Stack pass escape: Drive forward and to the side while standing up, compress attacker’s guard, walk around their body to break the triangle angle and pass to side control
  • Arm extraction to posture: Grip your own wrist with the trapped hand, pull the arm straight back toward your hip while simultaneously posturing up, breaking the cross-neck pressure mechanism
  • Hitchhiker escape: Turn away from the trapped arm side, extend the trapped arm straight while rotating your body, slide your shoulder free of the triangle by moving perpendicular to attacker’s legs

Best-Case Outcomes for Defender

De La Riva Guard

Maintain strong posture throughout the exchange, strip the DLR hook early, and prevent the leg from clearing your shoulder by keeping elbows tight and posture upright

Open Guard

If caught in the triangle, use explosive standing combined with stacking pressure to break the attacker’s angle and pass their guard during the escape sequence

Common Defensive Mistakes

1. Allowing posture to break without immediate recovery when collar grip pulls head down

  • Consequence: Broken posture is the prerequisite for every triangle entry - once your head is pulled below their hips, the leg swim becomes trivially easy and you enter a losing defensive position
  • Correction: The moment you feel collar grip pulling your posture, immediately drive your hips back and extend your spine upward. Grip their collar or lapel and push their chest away to create distance. Address the posture break before anything else.

2. Pushing the attacking leg away with hands instead of posturing up

  • Consequence: Pushing the leg with your hands leaves your arms extended and vulnerable to arm isolation, actually accelerating the triangle setup rather than defending it
  • Correction: Keep hands attached to your grips and focus on posture recovery through spine extension and hip position. The leg swim is defeated by posture, not by hand fighting against their leg.

3. Trying to muscle out of a fully locked triangle by pulling straight backward

  • Consequence: Pulling backward against a locked figure-four triangle actually tightens the choke mechanism and burns enormous energy with zero defensive benefit
  • Correction: Once locked, work laterally - either stack to the side, extract the trapped arm, or use the hitchhiker escape by turning away. Never pull straight back against the lock.

4. Neglecting to address the trapped arm position while focusing only on posture

  • Consequence: Even with good posture, a trapped arm across your own neck provides the choking mechanism. The attacker can finish from below if the arm stays trapped regardless of your posture
  • Correction: Address posture AND arm position simultaneously. Grip your trapped wrist with your free hand and work the arm back to your centerline while posturing. Both elements must be corrected together.

5. Staying on knees instead of standing when caught in the triangle

  • Consequence: Remaining on knees gives the attacker maximum leverage to control your posture and create the perpendicular angle, limiting your defensive options to arm-only defenses
  • Correction: Stand up explosively when caught in a triangle. Standing gives you structural advantage through gravity and height, making it much harder for the attacker to maintain the perpendicular angle needed to finish.

Training Progressions

Phase 1: Recognition and Posture Recovery Drilling - Learning to recognize triangle setup cues from De La Riva and developing automatic posture recovery responses Partner telegraphs triangle entry from DLR at slow speed. Defender practices recognizing collar pull, arm isolation, and leg swim cues. Focus solely on immediate posture recovery - spine extension, hip retraction, and grip fighting. No resistance from partner. Build the neurological connection between recognizing the setup and firing the posture recovery response.

Phase 2: Stack and Arm Extraction Under Light Resistance - Developing stack passing and arm extraction mechanics when caught in a partially locked triangle Partner locks a loose triangle and allows defender to practice stack escapes and arm extraction techniques. Partner provides 30-50% resistance to simulate realistic defensive scenarios. Focus on combining posture recovery with arm extraction, proper stacking direction (to the side not straight forward), and transitioning from defense to guard pass.

Phase 3: Live Positional Defense Rounds - Applying defensive techniques against full-speed triangle attacks from DLR with progressive resistance Positional sparring starting from De La Riva guard. Attacker attempts triangle while defender works all defensive windows. Full resistance but tap-and-continue format. Defender develops timing for early prevention, mid-transition defense, and post-lock escape. Track which defensive window you’re using most to identify whether early recognition needs improvement.

Phase 4: Competition Simulation with Multiple Threats - Defending triangle within the full DLR attack chain including sweeps, omoplata, and back takes Open sparring rounds starting from DLR where attacker can use any technique. Defender must address triangle threat while also defending sweeps and other submissions. Develops the ability to defend the triangle without creating openings for other attacks. Full competition intensity with focus on maintaining composure and defensive structure across multiple threat vectors.

Test Your Knowledge

Q1: What is the earliest defensive window against Triangle from De La Riva and why is it the most important? A: The earliest window is during the De La Riva guard phase before the leg swim begins, when you feel the collar grip pulling your posture down and the sleeve grip pushing your arm across. This window is most important because maintaining posture at this stage completely prevents the triangle entry. Once the leg clears your shoulder, defensive difficulty increases exponentially. Immediate posture recovery and grip fighting at this stage eliminates the threat entirely.

Q2: Why is standing up one of the most effective defensive responses once caught in a triangle? A: Standing removes the attacker’s ability to create the perpendicular angle needed for effective choking pressure. It changes the mechanical relationship by using gravity and your height advantage to stretch their leg configuration. Standing also gives you structural base through your legs rather than relying on upper body strength alone. However, you must be aware of competition rules regarding lifting and slamming, and the attacker may still finish if you fall back down with the triangle locked.

Q3: What should you do if you feel yourself losing consciousness while caught in a triangle? [SAFETY-CRITICAL] A: Tap immediately using any available method - hand tap, foot tap, or verbal signal. Never attempt to tough out a blood choke, as unconsciousness can occur within 8-12 seconds of full arterial compression and there is no reliable way to predict when you will lose consciousness. If you feel lightheaded, experience visual changes, or sense cognitive impairment, tap instantly. Your training partner’s safety and your own depend on early recognition and honest tapping behavior.

Q4: How does the hitchhiker escape work mechanically against the triangle? A: The hitchhiker escape exploits the triangle’s directional weakness by turning your body away from the trapped arm side and extending the trapped arm straight behind you, as if hitchhiking. This rotation slides your shoulder perpendicular to the attacker’s leg configuration, creating space that allows your head and arm to slip free. The key mechanical principle is that the triangle compresses bilaterally but cannot effectively prevent rotational escape when the defender turns the correct direction with proper arm extension.

Q5: What makes the stack pass escape effective and what is the primary risk? A: The stack pass works by driving your weight forward and to one side, compressing the attacker’s body and preventing them from maintaining the perpendicular angle needed for the choke. Walking around their body while maintaining forward pressure breaks the triangle’s geometry. The primary risk is that if you stack straight forward without lateral movement, a skilled attacker can still maintain their angle underneath the stack and finish the choke while you carry their weight. Always stack to the side, never straight forward.