In combat sports, the northâÂÂsouth position (also known as north/south or four quarter) is a ground grappling position where one combatant is supine, with the other combatant invertedly lying prone on top, normally with their head over the bottom combatant's chest. The northâÂÂsouth position is a dominant position, where the top combatant can apply effective strikes such as knee strikes to the head, or easily transition into various grappling holds or more dominant positions. Transitioning into side control can be done by first switching into a particular hold known as ushiro-kesa-gatame (å¾Âè¢Âè£Âåº) or reverse scarf hold, where the chest points to the side, and the opponent's arm is controlled similarly to kesa-gatame. The northâÂÂsouth choke is employed exclusively from this position.
Kami shiho gatame (ä¸ÂÃ¥ÂÂæÂ¹åº, "upper four quarter hold down"), and its variations kuzure kami shiho gatame (å´©ä¸ÂÃ¥ÂÂæÂ¹åº, "broken upper four quarter hold down"), are the most common pinning holds applied from the northâÂÂsouth position in combat sports using a gi. Kami shiho gatame involves pinning the opponent's arms to his or her side, typically by grabbing the opponent's belt and using the arms to press the arms of the opponent inwards. Kuzure-kami-shiho-gatame is similar, except that one or both arms of the opponent aren't pinned to the side, but can be controlled by for instance pinning them in between an upper arm and a knee.
Kami shiho gatame is one of the seven mat holds, Osaekomi-waza, of Kodokan Judo. In grappling terms, it is categorized as a northâÂÂsouth hold.
Shiho gatame is also one of the 25 techniques of Danzan Ryu's constriction arts, Shimete, list.
Graphic from http://judoinfo.com/techdrw.htm
A straight over throw naturally leads to kami shiho gatame.
Exemplar Videos: Demonstrated from https://web.archive.org/web/20060913144731/http://www.abbotsfordjudo.com/techniques/5thkyu.htm Instructional Video
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