PAPER CUTTER CHOKE
Estrangulamento Paper Cutter
Also known as: Side Control Paper Cutter, Cortador de Papel
The paper cutter choke is the canonical gi-specific blood choke from side control, in which the attacker uses the opponent's far-side lapel as the structural choking surface while the attacker's near-side forearm presses against the opposite side of the opponent's neck, producing a scissor-like compression that closes both carotids. The 'paper cutter' name describes the scissoring action between the lapel and the forearm — like the blade and base of an office paper cutter closing.
The mechanics begin from established side control with the attacker's chest pressing the opponent's chest. The attacker reaches across the opponent's body with the far-side hand and grips the opponent's far-side lapel deep behind the opponent's neck, palm facing the opponent's body. The attacker's near-side forearm is positioned across the opposite side of the opponent's neck (typically the cross-face position). The finish comes from pulling the far-side lapel grip toward the attacker while simultaneously driving the cross-face forearm down across the neck. The combined motion produces the scissor compression around the neck that closes both carotids.
The paper cutter is foundational pedagogically and is taught at every academy with a gi competitive focus. Notable practitioners include Lucas Lepri, Bernardo Faria, and Roger Gracie. The technique pairs particularly well as a side-control attack chain — it threatens immediately when the opponent's far arm exposes the lapel for grip, and forces defensive reactions that frequently open subsequent attacks (mount transition, kimura, armbar). Defensively the paper cutter is escaped by maintaining strong cross-face frame to prevent the lapel grip from consolidating, by tucking the chin to deny carotid access during the compression, or by bridging laterally to create space and disrupt the scissor geometry.
KEY POINTS
- 01Establish chest-to-chest side control.
- 02Reach the far-side hand across to grip the opponent's far lapel deep behind the neck.
- 03Position the near-side forearm across the opposite side of the neck (cross-face).
- 04Pull the lapel grip toward you while pressing the cross-face forearm down.
- 05Produce the scissor compression that closes both carotids.
COMMON MISTAKES
- ✕Lapel grip too shallow — must be deep behind the neck.
- ✕Failing to establish the cross-face forearm position before pulling.
- ✕Pulling without simultaneously pressing the cross-face.
- ✕Losing the chest-to-chest pressure during the setup.
- ✕Choosing this choke when the body alignment doesn't support the scissor geometry.
TRAINING DRILLS
- →Lapel-grip setup drill from side control.
- →Cross-face forearm position drill.
- →Slow paper cutter reps with cooperative partner (50 each side).
- →Choke against progressive resistance.
- →Live rolling from side control with paper cutter as primary submission.