No-Gi Baseball Choke from Knee on Belly
Apply a baseball choke without the gi by transitioning from side control to knee on belly, establishing a chain grip and forearms under the neck to finish the choke.
5 steps
· save to drill into each- 1Pop up from side control to knee on belly0:10
- 2Feed your opposite hand to create a chain grip0:17
- 3Tuck your elbow in and bring your forearms under his neck0:22
- 4Use your right knee to make a frame and tripod up0:25
- 5Slide through with your head down to finish the no-gi baseball choke0:28
Source video
Related techniques
- Submission·Knee on BellyTriangle from Knee-On-Belly
A counter to knee-on-belly pressure. When the opponent pushes your knee off, you slip your leg through their arm, lift their head, and roll onto your knee to f…
- Submission·Knee on BellyTriangle from Knee-on-Belly
From knee-on-belly, if the opponent tries to scoop your leg, lift their arm and step across to expose their elbow. This creates an arm lock threat that can tra…
- Submission·Knee on BellyArmbar from Knee on Belly
A controlled entry from knee-on-belly that traps the arm and uses body weight to straighten the limb. Useful when faster entries are not available or against r…
- Transition·Knee on BellyKnee on Belly — Side-to-Side Windshield Wiper
Used to reposition or escape when the opponent defends well or when you need to attack from the opposite side. The mechanism relies on offloading weight to the…
- Escape·Knee on BellyKnee-in-Belly Escape via Heel Control
Use this when the opponent fights the knee-in-belly pressure. Control their heel, extend your leg to guide their limb, and slide off the side to recover.
- Transition·Knee on BellyKnee on Belly — Pivot to Side Mount
Used when the opponent is actively pushing against your knee. By pivoting the base knee and stepping back, you transition to side mount or cross-face side cont…
Then the round started — and you forgot it.