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Collar tie is a grappling clinch hold that is used to control the opponent. [1] It is performed from the front of the opponent by grabbing the opponent by the collar, behind the neck, or behind the trapezius muscle. [2] A collar tie using one hand is called a single collar tie, and a collar tie with both hands is called a double collar tie. [3]
The amateur wrestling analogue is the guillotine, also known as a "twister". Another version of this move sees the wrestler, straddles one of the opponent's legs, then reaches over the opponent's near arm with the arm close to the opponent's back and places both hands against the opponent's neck and pushes against it applying additional pressure.
A pinch grip tie, or an over-under bodylock, is a clinch hold and stand-up grappling position that is an extension of the over-under position, but having both hands locked behind the opponents back. [1] The hands are typically locked with a palm-to-palm grip, palm-to-wrist grip or fingers-to-fingers grip.
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A collar-and-elbow hold is a stand-up grappling position where both combatants have a collar tie, and hold the opponent's other arm at the elbow. [1] Generally the opening move in professional wrestling, the collar-and-elbow is generally a neutral position, but by pushing the hand on the elbow to the inside of the opponent's arms, and holding the biceps, more control can be obtained.
The number featured layered cups with a tie-dye pink pattern plus long straps that wrapped around her back and tied over her stomach. Hayek coordinated her top with matching cheeky bottoms.
The passing hand goes under the opponent's neck and around the far side to the top of the neck, where it is locked with the other hand around the neck at the wrist or using a palm-to-palm or interlacing fingers grip. The three-quarter nelson can be used in amateur wrestling to pin the opponent and is more secure than a half-nelson.