Sunday, August 26, 2012

bjj events around US







rilion gracie

I am embarrassed and frankly disgusted at these Jiu Jitsu Black Belts that graduate themselves or accept stripes from others. This happens more here in US as I guess they think Americans are fools. Let me set the record straight: my Father Grand Master Carlos Gracie, established a system with rules and procedures over 80 years ago. Black belts are only to be awarded stripes by the Jiu Jitsu Federation and based on how long they have had their black belt and not on an individual's decision, friendship or business arrangement. We have set our art apart from the others because of this same reason that
due to the fact that we respect hierarchy within our art. This is the fact!!!!! Rilion Gracie

Sunday, August 19, 2012

womens grappling 2012

The Womens International Grappling Championship is an All Female tournament and will offer both Submission Grappling (No Gi) and Jiu Jitsu (Gi) Divisions for all ages and skill levels. Open to all styles. You do not have to be part of any club or organization to compete.
http://www.unitedgrapplingfederation.com/index.html#!Womens International Grappling Championship|c1hf8

Golden State So-Cal No-Gi Championships

2012 West Virginia State Championships

Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu & Submission Wrestling State Championships

Official WV State Championships

(Open To ALL competitors from any gym or state)

Adult, Masters, & Children’s Gi & No Gi Divisions

3 bjj events



Wednesday, August 8, 2012

GRACIE AT L A NEWSPAPER

Discovering the open spirit of Rio de Janeiro

Samba, hang-gliding, favelas and joyful Cariocas — four of the many facets of Rio that a martial artist experienced during a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu camp for women.

Congratulations to Kyra Gracie for being featured on the cover and main article of today's LA Times Travel Section.
The LA Times is one of the nations largest and most widely read newspaper. The article talks about Kyra's work to expand BJJ for women, her camp and her social program for underprivileged children. The article also mentions Professor Claudio Coelho's and his Academia Nobre Arte where he leads the way to take children from drugs to a healthy life through sports.
http://articles.latimes.com/2012/aug/05/travel/la-tr-brazil-20120805 

SAMURAI BJJ PRO

This SUNDAY! Samurai Jiu Jitsu Pro 2 | August 12th | $ 6,000 in prizes | Dominguez Hill | www.samuraijjpro.com

Monday, August 6, 2012

NEW MEXICO

When: Saturday, September 15th, 2012
Where: Santa Ana Star Center, 3001 Civic Center, Rio Rancho, NM 87144
Entry: Registration and Weigh-ins open at 7am, Kids matches begin at 10:30am. More information click HERE
Competitors: Introductory $50 Pre-Registration($60 day of tournament), extra divisions $20 each
Spectators: $15 each
Early Weigh-in:
When: Friday, September 14th, 2012 @ 6:00pm - 9:00pm

S7 OKLAHOMA SUBMISSION

When: Saturday, August 25th, 2012
Where: Cox Convention Center , 1 Myriad Gardens Oklahoma City, OK 73102
Entry: Registration and Weigh-ins open at 7am, Kids matches begin at 10:30am. More information click HERE
Competitors: Introductory $50 Pre-Registration($60 day of tournament), extra divisions $20 each
Spectators: $15 each

THE GOOD FIGHT - NJ Jiu-Jitsu Championships (Saturday, Septmeber 8th)

THE GOOD FIGHT - NJ Jiu-Jitsu Championships (Saturday, Septmeber 8th)
THE GOOD FIGHT: NJ Jiu-Jitsu Championships
Date: Saturday, September 8
Venue: Metuchen SportsPlex
Address: 215 Durham Ave. Metuchen, NJ 08840
Website: http://www.thegoodfight.tv/nj_jiu_jitsu_championships.html
BRAND NEW: "Pre-Register-Now; Pay-Cash-At-The-Door" Option! Please read the details on the website!
Custom Awards: Giant 4-inch, full-color, custom medals to placewinners
Special Team Prizes: 1st Place Team that earns the most CROWNED points, wins a special 2 ft. cup award plus the 3'x5' full-color tournament! 2nd & 3rd place teams also win special cup awards.
FREE T-Shirt: All competitors will receive a free tournament t-shirt.
Gi & No-Gi divisions, skill levels and weight classes available for kids, teens and adults. IBJJF-based rules for all divisions. Join us and experience the most professional and well-organized bjj tournament around!
100% Money Back Guarantee: "If we do not finish your division by the time listed on our website we will give you your money back, no questions asked!" We pride ourselves on getting things right. That doesn't mean we're perfect, but when we make mistakes we fix them. If you're not happy with your Good Fight tournament experience we'll either credit you a future Good Fight tournament or give you your money back. It's your choice.

Rest In Peace Oswaldo Paquetá

Rest In Peace Oswaldo Paquetá
Before Youtube and Facebook, even before OnTheMat, there was Oswaldo Paquetá. If you're not familiar with the Red Belt Grandmaster, chances are you are at least familiar with his work, as much if not all of the early footage of Jiu Jitsu from Brazil was shot and archived by the man and his video camera.
Paquetá easily has the largest collection of Jiu Jitsu video in the world and he is directly responsible for much of the growth of BJJ throughout the world. Many of the older generation will remember quite fondly watching a Paquetá video (on VHS sometimes so many generations old or worn out it was difficult to distinguish between competitors!)
Moreso, Oswaldo Paquetá was a friend of ours. He not only had a tremendous influence on OnTheMat, but he personally befriended and mentored Scotty, who will post a more personal reflection shortly.
R.I.P. to the Grandmaster Oswaldo Paquetá and thank you for everything.
onthemat.com

Kayla Harrison is the first American to win a Gold Medal in Judo at the Olympics

Kayla Harrison is the first American to win a Gold Medal in Judo at the Olympics
LONDON, England, United Kingdom — Kayla Harrison made history on Thursday by becoming just the first American (man or woman) to ever win a Gold Medal in Judo at the Olympic Games. She did so by running the gauntlet in an incredibly talented field of judoka in the Women's 78 kg (172 lbs) division.
The only other American women to win an Olympic medal in Judo is current Strikeforce bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey and Harrison's current USA Judo teammate Marti Malloy. Rousey won a bronze medal in 2008 and Malloy won a bronze medal on Monday. In 2008, Harrison traveled to the Olympics in China, as a training partner for Rousey and the two remain close friends.
Harrison, who just turned 22-years-old a month before the Olympics started is a native of Middletown, Ohio, entered her first Olympic Games as favorite to win at 78 kg, after winning the World title in 2010 and taking bronze at the World championship last year. Harrison has been training with USA Judo's national team coach Jimmy Pedro at his school in Wakefield, Massachusetts, since she was 16-years-old. Pedro is a two-time Olympic bronze medalist, former world champion, and 6th degree black belt in Judo.

Friday, July 27, 2012

100 things you should do before reaching black belt

100 things you should do before reaching black belt
http://www.graciemag.com/2010/08/100-things-you-should-do-before-reaching-black-belt/

1- Like Jiu-Jitsu.
2- Love Jiu-Jitsu.
3- Respect Jiu-Jitsu.
4- Learn to balance force and technique so as to fight as long as you can without tiring.
5- Understand that the belt is not the only objective, but the result of effort and learning. One whose only objective is to get a new belt limits his own potential, which is always enormous and unknown. Rather than focus on that, concern yourself with developing technical aspects of the fight.
6- Know the entire program of basic classes inside out and back to front.
7- Study self-defense techniques in depth. Or do you plan to be the kind of black belt that despairs at just having to get out of a basic choke?
8- Have a grueling training session with your own master.
9- Make a lot of close friends at the gym.
10- Enter a tournament – and return home with a gold medal.
11- Dispute the absolute division.
12- Realize that deep, deep down points and the clock do not exist, while nothing is more real than those three little taps.
13- Participate in a seminar conducted by your greatest idol.

14- Learn to speak English. The way the Jiu-Jitsu market is going, you’ll have to get around in other continents.
15- Learn to perform a flying armbar.
16- Compete at a World Championship.
17- Invent a hold or move.
18- Give the move a really creative name like “the flying butterfly,” “get-that-sucka” or “fireball,” for example.
19- Try out a variety of different diets until you find two or three that really work to stimulate your body, before, during and after competitions.
20- Do at least a year of judo – if intense throw training isn’t common in your gym.
21- Learn to lose.
22- Learn to win.
23- Find the brand of gi with the cut that best suits your body.
24- Brush up on your surfing, as you have yet to participate in a Black Belt Surf Championship.
25- If surfing isn’t your thing, work on another outdoor activity to invigorate you on those days you’re not in the gym.
26- Learn to teach. This includes knowing how to conduct an entire class, plan the warm-up for that day’s specific, pair up the students properly and cool the students off before heading home, among other things. “At brown, the promising athlete may teach a class under a black belt’s supervision, as though it were an internship, a test,” suggests instructor Raphael Abi-Rihan.
27- Read the IBJJF Jiu-Jitsu rule book.
28- As the black belt promotion approaches, participate in MMA simulation training, commonly known as “slap” sessions. A training session involving real-life fighting situations is extremely important to sharpen up your self-defense, by learning to time takedowns and brushing up on other aspects.
29- Shave your head, even if just once.
30- Try to take private classes – vital for refining your technique and learning tricks from your teacher.
31- Offer yourself as your master’s sparring partner, especially in private classes, as you, too, will learn a lot.
32- Put together your basic bibliography on the martial arts. The more books the better.
33- Fight with all your might to keep whatever that nickname they gave you from sticking.
34- If the nickname sticks, live with it.
35- Come up with a good nickname for a training partner.
36- Encourage a child to start learning Jiu-Jitsu. After all, they are the future of the sport.
37- Gain self-control.
38- Use your technical abilities and stamina to get out of a bind. Adventures are a part of every black belt’s story.
39- Don’t let your Jiu-Jitsu go to your head – keep yourself well grounded.
40- Learn to react. There’s no precise guide for reacting properly in every situation, but Professor Carlos Gracie Jr has a classic lesson for you. When someone’s bothering you, in the cinema, on the plane or anywhere, think before you react: what if this person is a Brock Lesnar, what will you do then? For hours you’ve felt the need to intervene, or just say something to the bugger. But do so politely – without going on the offensive. It doesn’t matter if the person is a little old woman, a bunch of teenagers or a UFC heavyweight champion.
41- Don’t forget to practice the basics, nor how to defend against basic moves.
42- Get yourself a physiotherapist buddy who after all the appointments gives you that discount when some new little injury crops up…
43- Have a favorite açaí recipe.
44- Find out when the best time of the day for you to train is, figuring out whether your body responds better to training hard at night, in the afternoon or early in the morning.
45- Send an email of praise GRACIEMAG.
46- Send an email lambasting GRACIEMAG– or at least suggesting an article you want written.
47- Study your sport’s basic history, and know who Jiu-Jitsu’s pioneers were and what they did.
48- Every white belt has seen them a hundred times, so don’t you be the one not to re-watch them: watch, every now and then, the primordial and glorious fights featuring Jiu-Jitsu in the ring – know of the achievements of Royce, Rickson, Renzo, Ralph and Minotauro, for example, and understand just how far Jiu-Jitsu has come.
49- After so many years of injury, find out one hold you will not tap out to by any means – a foot lock, a guillotine…
50- Be flexible; discover your favorite stretching routine.
51- Get your bottom game on par with your top game – or at least close to it.
52- Face off with athletes from other styles, like wrestlers in submission grappling tournaments, judoka friends and so on.
53- Have a lot of talks with higher ranked athletes and old masters.
54- Forget steroids.
55- Document the best shape you’ve ever been in in photos. Besides serving as a record, this will motivate you to not keep in shape, even as the years – and belts – go by. You will also have a beautiful photo to one day show your kids and grandkids…
56- Go on an unforgettable trip to compete or train Jiu-Jitsu with the team.
57- Represent well and divulge our Jiu-Jitsu’s flag abroad.
58- Test your knowledge of Jiu-Jitsu theory in written exams, like the ones held at Escola Leão Teixeira in Rio or at University of Jiu-Jitsu in San Diego, among other schools.
59 – Get used to discomfort. After all, as Wallid Ismail would say, “It’s stormy seas the whole time.”
60- Get turned down by women because of your ears.
61- Pick up women because of your ears.
62- Go through at least 17 gis before turning black belt. If you don’t, you haven’t gone through enough cloth…
63- Donate your old gis to the needy and social-benefit projects.

64- Understand how your body works, after all each body type adapts to Jiu-Jitsu differently. Your game should be in tune with the type of body you boast.
65- Respect the white belts. And the blues, purples…
66- Develop your mental flexibility. At any tournament anywhere in the world, it is not unusual for you to end up competing later, earlier, have arena changes before the battle… “In these cases, relax and accept it. Not being uptight allows you to get the most out of any experience and to evolve,” advises coach and trainer Martin Rooney.
67- Absorb whatever new technique you are taught, even if it doesn’t become your specialty. It very well could be your opponent’s.
68- At least once in life, decide to compete in some tournament at the last minute. Remember, there is no such thing as the “perfect” moment to compete, just get out there and do it – and who knows? It might just turn out to be the perfect moment.
69- Tap, tap, tap and tap, over and over again. And, who knows? Maybe even pass out from some choke. That’s part of the game, and it’s all a learning experience until you’ve been decorated with the highest honors. 70- Do a no-time limit fight (at least in training), to the finish.
71- If you have friends in other academies, visit new environments. “I would like to have trained more with other athletes to have tested my Jiu-Jitsu without the pressure of doing tournaments. I feel I missed something for not having trained with Amaury, Libório, Roleta, Cachorrão and Pé de Pano,” reveals six-time world champion Saulo Ribeiro.
72- Be somebody’s hero – even if it’s just your little brother.
73- Explain Jiu-Jitsu philosophy more than once to a number of friends, and don’t lose your patience when you hear, “But fighters are all kind of stupid, aren’t they?”
74- Get invited to help bounce at a friend’s party, even if you politely decline, despite proud feeling inside.
75- Have a favorite Gracie.
76- Lend a hand at a social-benefit project a black belt friend of yours is involved in in any way you can.
77- Make Jiu-Jitsu a lifestyle and make the most of it. In so doing, you should understand that the art is not just a sport.
78- Discover what persistence is first hand – after all, it’s almost a given you’ll have to spend some time on ice due to injury. Even so, don’t get discouraged.
79- Know that GRACIEMAG is the best Jiu-Jitsu magazine in the world, and always make sure your friend at the newsstand sets one aside for you.
80- Decipher what curious expressions in Portuguese like “nó-de-porco,” “creonte,” calçar a bota,” and “amassa pão” mean.
81- Every once in awhile, add a “bro” to the end of a sentence, and know that it never goes out of style.
82- Find out what motivates you before a training session and what makes you feel better after a bad day at the gym – be it music, reading or positive thinking.
83- Develop your own style as a fighter.
84- Develop your own style as a teacher.
85- Understand that a practitioner gains nothing from a scuffle or street fight, and that so doing represents a step back in Jiu-Jitsu’s struggle for recognition. As Saulo affirms, “I have never given a black belt to an unscrupulous person, or better yet, that person would never train with me because I wouldn’t have it in me to teach him.”
86- Find a way of deriving pleasure from the big and little things in Jiu-Jitsu, from warming up to even the bad days in the gym and the losses.
87- Learn CPR.
88- Learn to deal with the fear, insecurity and anxiety we all have in us, some more, some less than others. That is why competition is one of the best environments for us to get to know ourselves not just as athletes.
89- Understand your responsibility as an advanced athlete. “If the guy intends to be a teacher the responsibility is even greater, as you are the role model others will mirror. Jiu-Jitsu does not only serve the function of creating good fighters, but of making men who are capable, dignified and honorable to carry forth Jiu-Jitsu’s flag. That is the greatest responsibility a black belt can have,” teaches Robert Drysdale.
90- Reflect on your mistakes.
91- After growing from the mistakes, cast them from your thoughts.
92- See the black belt as the beginning, not the end of the road. “I improved my game a great deal after reaching black belt,” recalls Marcelinho Garcia.
93- At least from brown belt onwards, do no-gi competition as well.
94- Innovate when exercising.
95- Realize as quickly as you can that the gym is not a place to compete, but a place to practice positions. “Only by hitting and working on your weaknesses will you become a well-rounded fighter. This business of ‘winning a roll’ is silly and limits a student in learning,” Saulo Ribeiro reminds us.
96- Experiment with breathing techniques, Ginástica Natural and yoga to improve your performance as an athlete. Although shunned in the old days, these days these resources have been largely accepted by the greatest of – even in the UFC.
97- Prepare your speech for the ceremony when you receive your black belt.
98- Write up your own list of 50, 100 or 200 goals you WILL meet achieve reaching black belt.
99- Apply the principal law of Jiu-Jitsu (“Minimum effort for maximum efficiency”) to your own life. Face challenges in the simplest way possible, as this will certainly be the most efficient.
100- Get off the computer and go train!
*20 commandments before reaching black belt
1- Thou shalt not stall.
2- Thou shalt not wimp out.
3- Thou shalt not skip practice for silly reasons.
4- Thou shalt not drink alcohol excessively.
5- Thou shalt not partake in excessive slamming.
6- Thou shalt not wear stinky gis or neglect your higiene.
7- Thou shalt not whine about refereeing.
8- Thou shalt not be a “creonte” – respect your master and gym.
9- Thou shalt not heed orders that go against your values.
10- Thou shalt not be rude during training.
11- Thou shalt not make a trophy of your mangled ear.
12- Thou shalt not succumb to cupcakes, candy bars and the likes.
13- Thou shalt not show off – be discreet. After all, the more exposed you are, the greater the target.
14- Thou shalt not talk too much smack nor cause discord between training partners.
15- Thou shalt not take cheap shots.
16- Thou shalt not take Steven Segal films seriously.
17- Thou shalt not count advantage points.
18- Thou shalt not delay in letting go of your opponent when he taps.
19- Thou shalt not take the stress of life out on training partners.
20- Thou shalt not steal training partners’ flip-flops.