Foot sweep
The foot sweep is a move in many different styles of martial arts. It refers to the use of any part of the foot or leg to trip an opponent or cause them to lose balance. Foot sweeps as an act of human aggression have likely existed worldwide since prehistory, which explains why it is prevalent in many martial arts across the world. However, the earliest documentation of foot sweeps used in self-defense, sport fighting and combat is seen in Chinese Martial arts, Judo, Jujutsu as well as Karate and Muay Thai.
Judo
Foot sweeps are part of Judo's ashi waza. Examples of foot sweeps in judo include:- De ashi barai
- Okuri ashi barai
- Harai tsurikomi ashi
- Ko uchi gari
Other types
Drop sweep
Commonly thought of when someone hears “foot sweep,” the drop sweep involves spinning and sweeping one or two legs from a crouched position. This move is also known as the back sweep in many styles of Kung-fu.Single-leg sweep
When the opponent has one foot off the ground and the defender moves past this kick and sweeps out the standing leg.Trap sweep
A variant of the single-leg sweep, this involves catching the opponent's kick with one hand and sweeping the back leg. The advantage is closer proximity and less chance of failure, but it leaves the defender open to hand attacks to the head.File:Kanibasami.jpg|thumb|Scissor sweep, known as kani basami in jujutsu and judo. This move is also seen in Chinese Dog Pugilism.