Master the armbar from guard, mount, and side control with setup, finish, and defense counters.
Why the Armbar is the Foundation Submission
The armbar (juji-gatame) is one of the first submissions taught and one of the last fully mastered. It appears in every position β guard, mount, side control, back, and standing. Understanding the armbar mechanics (hip pressure, elbow positioning, arm isolation) unlocks the concept behind all arm locks.
Armbar from Closed Guard
- Break posture, control collar and same-side wrist
- Open guard, hip escape to the wrist-controlled side
- Swing high leg across face, low leg hooks hip
- Both legs squeeze tight (pinch knees)
- Hips drive up while pulling arm thumb-up
The most common error: raising the hips before the legs are controlling the arm and body. Secure the arm first, THEN drive hips up.
Armbar from Mount
Control cross-side wrist + near collar (S-mount setup). Post foot on mat and swing leg over head. Key: make the transition fast β they feel the leg coming and may roll. The moment you commit, go completely. Hesitation lets them defend.
Armbar from Side Control
Near-side armbar: control near wrist, knee on shoulder, swing leg over head. Far-side armbar: the Kimura to armbar transition β from kimura grip, step over head and fall back to armbar. High percentage when kimura is defended by straightening the arm.
Finishing Mechanics
- Elbow positioning: Elbow crease must be at your hip crease β if the elbow is at your belly or chest, you have no leverage
- Thumb up: Pull arm thumb-side up to expose the elbow joint in the correct direction
- Hip drive: Drive hips up into the elbow β do not pull the arm down
- Leg control: Pinch knees together throughout to prevent arm extraction
Frequently Asked Questions
Why can people straighten their arm and escape my armbar?
Two reasons: your grip is wrong, or your legs are not controlling the shoulder. If they can pull their arm out straight, you need to pinch your knees tighter to prevent rotation, and your top leg (over the head) needs to be pressing DOWN to prevent them from sitting up.
How do I finish the armbar against someone much stronger?
Use the hip drive, not arm pulling. If you pull the arm toward you, they can resist with bicep strength. If you drive your hips UP against the elbow, you are using your hip extensors (strongest muscles in the body) against their elbow joint. This cannot be resisted with arm strength.
Should I prioritize triangle or armbar from guard?
They are a natural combination β set up one and finish the other when they defend. If opponent defends triangle by stacking and straightening, fall to armbar. If opponent defends armbar by bending their elbow and pulling, transition to triangle. Learn them as a system, not as separate techniques.