Helena Crevar’s Kimura Trap to Black Hole Triangle | BJJ Breakdown

Helena Crevar uses the kimura trap as an attachment system to stay connected through the scramble and finish with the black hole triangle. In this no gi Jiu Jitsu match breakdown, Cadence and Keegan Glann analyze the full sequence from Helena’s top half guard control to the final choke. Kennedy Franklin first reaches her right arm underneath Helena’s leg while attempting to sweep. As the sequence develops, Kennedy frames with her left arm on Helena’s neck. Cadence breaks down how Helena uses crossface pressure and an elbow flare to weaken that framing arm, establish the kimura grip, and maintain control as Kennedy attempts to create space and roll toward turtle. The central lesson is that the kimura grip is not only a submission grip. It is an attachment system. Helena combines upper-body control with lower-body connection to follow the turtle reaction, stay attached to Kennedy’s back, and use Kennedy’s forward drive to open the space for the black hole triangle. Cadence also explains the final finishing detail: Helena does not simply squeeze harder. She clears her head underneath, changes the angle, brings her hip closer to the mat, and tightens the choke. Timestamps: 0:00 - Helena Crevar’s Submission Sequence 0:29 - Half Guard Sweep Attempt and Arm Isolation 1:07 - Breaking the Frame 1:52 - Underhook, Head Post, and Leg Reaction 2:19 - Threading the Framing Arm 2:54 - Establishing the Kimura Grip 3:09 - The Kimura as an Attachment System 4:06 - Kimura Trap to Back Exposure 4:44 - Locking the Black Hole Triangle 5:13 - Finishing Angle Mechanics 5:27 - Full Sequence Review Drop a comment with the next no gi Jiu Jitsu technique or match sequence you want Cadence and Keegan to break down. Full Technique & Match Breakdowns playlist:    • Technique Breakdowns & Match Analysis   #BJJBreakdown #KimuraTrap #BlackHoleTriangle