ShopSign in

Hammerlock Doble

Salsa hammerlock entered or resolved with a double turn

SalsaLevel: Intermediate2 min read5 citations

The hammerlock is one of salsa's signature wrapped figures: a shape in which one of the follower's arms is folded gently behind her back while the joined hands remain connected, used both as a momentary destination and as a passing transition inside larger turn patterns.[1] Cataloged under the standard English name "hammerlock" across salsa turn-pattern references, it most often begins from a catch of the follower's hand — the leader lifting and rotating the joined hands so her arm spirals down toward the small of her back.[2] In the doble form a single spin becomes two: rather than resolving on one turn, the leader drives a continuous double rotation so the follower revolves twice as the lock settles, a layering documented as the hammerlock with double turn.[3]

A light hand flick commonly punctuates the instant the arm reaches the lock, both stylizing the shape and keeping the lead's connection alive through the spiral; instructional treatments single out clean hand-flick execution as the detail that separates a polished hammerlock from a rough one.[4] Danced On1, the figure breaks on counts 1 and 5, with the catch and turn preparation filling the first measure and the double rotation resolving across the second. Generally taught at an intermediate-to-advanced level — the catch-to-hammerlock entry sits in Level 3 syllabi — it is most established in slot-based On1 and On2 styles, where the On1 turn is also known informally as the pretzel.[5]

How it's danced

Lead and follow cues

CountOn1 — two measures; breaks on 1 and 5 (steps on 1-2-3 and 5-6-7, with 4 and 8 held). The catch and turn preparation sit on the first measure; the double rotation completes across 5-6-7 of the second.

Lead

On1. Break back on 1 onto the left foot; on 2-3 catch the follower's hand and raise it, beginning a clockwise (her right, outside) turn. Across the second measure (5-6-7) power a continuous double rotation, guiding the caught hand overhead and then down behind her back so it settles into the hammerlock wrap on 7. Stage the rotation as roughly ~360 degrees by count 6 and a second ~360 degrees by count 7 (~720 degrees total); keep compression light and the lock low so the arm never strains, and mark the settle with a small hand flick.

Follow

On1. Mirror the leader: break back on 1 onto the right foot (opposite foot, same backward direction relative to the body). On 2-3 begin a clockwise turn under the raised hand. Across 5-6-7 complete a continuous double rotation, letting the caught arm spiral down and fold gently behind the back into the wrap by 7. Spot the turn to control the ~720 degrees (two staged ~360-degree rotations) and keep the shoulder relaxed so the lock stays comfortable.

Song timingOn1 salsa across roughly 150-185 bpm; the double rotation wants beat space, so mid-tempo around 160-175 bpm suits it best, while 190+ bpm rushes the spin and the arm wrap.

Learn first

Prerequisites

  • cross-body lead
  • single hammerlock (basic wrap)
  • right / outside underarm turn
  • double spin with spotting
  • prepared and cushioned turns

Watch out

Common mistakes

  • Cranking the wrapped arm too high up the back instead of keeping the lock low and light, straining the follower's shoulder.
  • Under-rotating the double turn so the follower stops short and the wrap lands crooked.
  • Losing the hand connection during the spiral so the catch slips and the wrap collapses.
  • Initiating the double rotation before the break is settled, robbing the follower of balance for two turns.
  • Gripping too tightly, which prevents the follower from spotting and spinning freely.

Don't confuse with

Easily confused moves

  • Paso cruzado / cruzado — 'cross step' footwork, not this figure.
  • Plain hammerlock (single turn) — the foundation without the doble's double rotation.
  • Pretzel when used for a larger multi-arm tangle — overlaps with the hammerlock but can name a bigger pattern.
  • Sombrero (Cuban casino) — a separate circular wrapping figure, not a hammerlock.

Around the world

Other names

  • Los Angeles On1 / US slot salsa

    Hammerlock

    Standard English term for the wrapped arm-behind-the-back figure; 'doble' marks the double-turn form.

  • US salsa (informal)

    Pretzel

    Used for the hammerlock turn; can also denote a larger multi-arm tangle, so the terms overlap.

  • New York On2 (mambo)

    Hammerlock (English term used)

    Same figure danced on the 2; no distinct local name.

  • Spanish-language linear scenes (Puerto Rico, Miami, Latin America)

    Hammerlock (English term used as a loanword)

    The double-turn entry is described as 'doble'; no separately attested native coinage.

References

  1. 1.Hammer Lock in Salsa turn patternswww.salsaisgood.com
  2. 2.Catch to Hammerlock Salsa Level 3 Dance Video Lessonswww.quicksteps.com.au
  3. 3.Latin Dances: Salsa Hammerlock and Hammerlock with double turnheelsdance.blogspot.com
  4. 4.Basic Salsa Dance Hammerlock Hand Flickwww.addicted2salsa.com
  5. 5.Hammerlock Turn or Pretzel | Salsa On1 Video Lessondancepapi.com

How to cite this article

Choose a style and copy the citation.

APA

Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Hammerlock Doble. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved June 29, 2026, from https://bailar.site/biblioteca/move/hammerlock-doble

MLA

Bailar Editorial Team. “Hammerlock Doble.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, bailar.site/biblioteca/move/hammerlock-doble. Accessed 29 June 2026.

Chicago

Bailar Editorial Team. “Hammerlock Doble.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed June 29, 2026. https://bailar.site/biblioteca/move/hammerlock-doble.

BibTeX

@misc{bailar-move-hammerlock-doble, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Hammerlock Doble}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://bailar.site/biblioteca/move/hammerlock-doble}, note = {Accessed: 2026-06-29} }

Editor-in-Chief: Paul Thomas Plawin

How we research & review these articles