Leg tripping techniques () are where the wins the match by tripping or grabbing their opponent's leg out of the ring. ====== is a where the grabs one of their opponent's leg, resulting in a loss of balance, enabling the to force them out of the ring. ====== is a where the trips their opponent through one of their heel by using their own heel, thereby resulting in a loss of balance and forcing their opponent to fall down back-first. ====== is a where the wraps their leg around the opponent's leg of the opposite side and trips him backwards while grasping onto his upper body. ====== is a which involves kicking the inside of the opponent's foot. This is usually accompanied by a quick pull that causes the opponent to lose balance and fall. ====== is a in which, directly after the , the attacker kicks the opponent's legs to the outside and thrusts or twists him down to the . ====== is a in which the attacker places his leg behind the knee of the opponent, and while twisting the opponent sideways and backwards, sweeps him over the attacker's leg and throws him down. ====== is a in which an opponent responds to being thrown and puts his leg out forward to balance himself, grabbing the underside of the thigh and lifting it up, throwing the opponent down. ====== is a in which an attacker lifts the opponent's ankle from the front, causing them to fall. ====== is a triple attack. Wrapping one leg around the opponent's (
inside leg trip), grabbing the other leg behind the thigh, and thrusting the head into the opponent's chest, the attacker pushes him up and off the surface, then throwing him down on his back. This is a very rare technique, first used in the modern era by
Mainoumi Shūhei, who used it two or three times in the early 1990s (officially twice, on a third occasion his win was judged by most observers to be a , but was officially judged an ).
Ishiura successfully used it against
Nishikigi on Day 8 of the November 2019 tournament, for the first time in since Mainoumi in 1993. ====== is a in which the attacker kicks an off-balance opponent on the outside of their standing leg's foot, then throws him to the surface. ====== is a in which, when the opponent escapes from a by extending the other foot, the attacker switches to lift the opponent's other off-balance foot and throws him down. ====== is a in which the attacker wraps his calf around the opponent's calf from the outside and drives him over backwards.
Lyoto Machida, with a sumo background, has successfully used this multiple times in the course of his
mixed martial arts career. ====== is a in which, directly after a is avoided by the opponent, the attacker grabs the opponent's thigh from the outside, lifting it, and throwing them down on their back. ====== is a in which, directly after a is avoided by the opponent, an attacker drives the knee under the opponent's thigh and pulls them down to the surface. ====== is a in which, directly after a is avoided by the opponent, an attacker grabs the ankle of the opponent and pulls them down to the surface. ====== is a in which, as the opponent is losing their balance to the front (or is moving forward), the attacker grabs the leg and pulls it back, thereby ensuring the opponent falls to the surface. ====== is performed by wrapping the calf around the opponent's calf from the inside and forcing him down on his back. ====== is performed by grabbing the underside of the opponent's thigh or knee with one hand and pushing with the other arm, thereby forcing the opponent out or down. ==Throwing==