Canonical entry: The Hip Controls the Line of the Leg

Invariant of the week · Dec 28 – January 3, 2027

The Hip Controls the Line of the Leg

Leg Entanglements

The hip controls the line of the leg. Whoever controls the hip controls where the leg can go and therefore what attacks are available from that leg.

Hip control determines leg control in entanglements. Controlling the opponent's hip determines what submissions are available; controlling your own hip…

What This Means

The hip is the structural root of the leg. The leg’s orientation, position, and range of movement are all downstream of where the hip is. A leg removed from its hip position cannot function normally — it cannot push, pull, or rotate effectively. This means that in leg entanglements, the hip is the real contest, not the foot or the ankle. Whoever controls the hip controls everything below it.

For the attacker, controlling the opponent’s hip determines which attacks are available. The hip position determines leg configuration. Leg configuration determines heel exposure (INV-LE02). Heel exposure determines the available submission. The causal chain runs from hip to heel to submission — not the other way around. Practitioners who try to set up the submission from the heel backwards are working against the mechanical order.

For the defender, controlling their own hip determines their escape options. The hip must be repositioned before the leg can be extracted. A defender who tries to pull their leg out without first re-establishing hip position is trying to escape from the downstream end of the chain. The leg is controlled by the hip. Moving the hip first is the escape.

How This Applies in Practice

Across the system, this principle expresses most cleanly in the following techniques:

Ashi garami: The attacker’s control over the defender’s hip determines what the trapped leg can do. As long as the hip is pinned by the entanglement, the leg cannot rotate to hide the heel or step out. When the defender wins the hip — by escaping the angle, by sitting up — the leg follows and the position dissolves.

50/50: Both players hold partial hip control. The race is to be the first to gain the dominant hip — usually by rotating off-line, sitting up, or driving across the centerline. Whoever wins the hip controls where their own leg goes (heel hidden) and where the opponent’s leg can be taken (heel exposed).

Cross ashi: The diagonal hip control determines that the defender’s leg is going to be turned across the body for the inside heel hook. Hip control here is doubled — the attacker’s hips are inside and the legs are wrapped — which is what makes the leg unable to rotate even slightly out of the line of attack.

Berimbolo: The bottom player wins the standing opponent’s hip by inverting and rotating the opponent’s pelvis under them. Once the hip rotates, the legs follow, which is what delivers the back take. The attack is targeted at the hip, not at the legs — the legs are downstream.

Imanari roll: The roll attacks the standing opponent’s hip line by spinning underneath it. As soon as the rolling player’s hip lands inside the opponent’s hip, the opponent’s leg is committed to the entanglement that follows. The hip catch is the takedown; the leg attack is the consequence.

Where This Appears

The 50/50 position is the clearest expression of this invariant as a competition. Both players are in a mutual entanglement. Neither has clear hip control. The position is mechanically even — neither player has a dominant submission angle — because neither player controls the other’s hip position. Whoever achieves hip control first — by angling out, by pushing through to cross ashi, by elevating their own hip into a dominant position — determines the submission landscape. The leg is just the consequence of that hip competition.

Cross ashi garami is so dangerous specifically because of bilateral hip control. The attacker has addressed both of the defender’s hips — the inside space crosses both hip positions. The defender’s two hips are both controlled. Neither hip can reposition to create escape options. The leg is now fully determined by the attacker’s entanglement because both hips that would normally allow re-positioning are addressed simultaneously. The inside heel hook is available from cross ashi because the hip position forces the leg into the configuration that exposes it.

Hip position connects to heel exposure: from standard ashi, the hip alignment places the outside heel toward the attacker; from cross ashi, the hip alignment places the inside heel toward the attacker. The connection from this invariant to INV-LE02 is direct — hip position is why the heel exposure is what it is. The hip position determines leg line; the leg line determines heel exposure.

How It Fails

Attackers who focus on the heel before establishing hip control build the position from the wrong end. The heel grip is a grip on a limb that is still partially connected to the body’s defensive resources through the hip. Without hip control, the defender can use their hip to change the leg line, which changes the heel exposure, which makes the grip on the heel either ineffective or attacking the wrong structure. Establishing hip control first — inside space control per INV-LE01 — resolves this.

Defenders fail this invariant when they focus on the attacker’s grip on their heel rather than on their own hip position. Trying to pull the heel free, grip it with their own hand, or rotate the ankle are all distal responses. The hip is the structural root. Repositioning the hip — creating space at the hip level, not the foot level — is the escape. A defender who understands this will prioritise hip movement over foot movement every time.

The Test

In standard ashi garami, fix the attacker’s hip in place and have the defender try to change which heel is exposed by manipulating only their foot and lower leg. They cannot do it reliably — the hip is fixed, so the leg line is fixed, so the heel exposure is fixed. Now allow the defender to move their hip freely. The heel exposure changes immediately as the hip repositions. The hip controls the leg line. The leg line controls the heel. The heel controls the submission availability.

Drill Prescription

The hip-first escape drill runs from standard ashi garami with the defender given the instruction to escape using foot and ankle manipulation only — no hip movement permitted. The defender works for thirty seconds attempting to free the leg by rotating the foot, pulling the ankle, or gripping their own toes. Then the instruction changes: foot and ankle movement is forbidden, but hip movement is unrestricted. The contrast in escape success rate between the two conditions establishes the hip as the operative escape mechanism.

The drill reveals a common defensive failure: practitioners who understand the hip-first principle intellectually but default to foot-level responses under pressure. In the foot-only block, experienced grapplers will often still attempt distal movements reflexively even when instructed not to, because those movements are habituated. Identifying this reflex pattern in training allows deliberate correction. The hip-only block that follows should produce noticeably higher escape success — if it does not, the defender’s hip movement is being blocked by the attacker’s inside space control, which is a separate training conversation.

The complementary drill is 50/50 hip-control race: both players start in 50/50 with no heel grips and race to achieve a clear hip control advantage — either pushing through to cross ashi or establishing a clean single-leg ashi with proper hip separation. No submissions are attempted until one player calls “hip control.” This trains the 50/50 position as a hip competition rather than a heel-grip competition, which is the mechanically correct framing of the position.

Techniques that express this invariant 23

Related belief corrections

These pages correct common misconceptions that relate to this invariant.

Drills that develop this invariant

Drill pages are coming. The drill collection will surface closed-loop motor primitives — timed, partner, or solo — that isolate and develop this invariant specifically.

Further reading