



At this point, you have now entered the Anaconda and can now start thinking of ways to submit the opponent. As you fall, the idea is to once again thread your arm under their neck and armpit to connect with your other arm.Īt this point, you will once again have a position similar to a darce choke where their shoulder is trapped, pushing into their carotid artery, whilst your forearm cuts off the blood from their other carotid artery. If you try a guillotine from here, sometimes they can come up and sweep you. With the chinstrap headlock, you can then fall to the side so you’re facing the opponent. The good thing with the Anaconda is that you just need to get a chinstrap from here and then you can attack. Whilst this is doable, sometimes it’s more of a crank as you can’t get under their neck fully. Imagine being in top half guard and diving in for a guillotine. However, due to being slightly different, the Anaconda starts with a headlock. Again, this has similarities with the darce as it is also entered from here when the opponent has the underhook on you from the bottom. The next entry we shall focus on is from the top half guard position. However, for now it’s important to remember to get a headlock from the turtle and thread your arm under the neck through to the armpit, then reach your bicep with this arm to make a rear naked grip. Because of this, you will need to finish the Anaconda very differently which we shall go into detail with later. However, it finishes differently due to the inverse grip. The choke is roughly the same as it acts like an arm triangle. Some people mistakenly think the two are the same and although they’re similar, there’s a big difference. The Anaconda is different due to starting at the neck and ending under the armpit. When attacking the darce, you have the same rear naked grip but it starts from going under the armpit of the opponent, through to their neck.
