Lex Fridman Podcast - #328 – John Danaher: Submission Grappling, ADCC, Animal Combat, and Knives

Episode Date: October 10, 2022

John Danaher is one of the greatest coaches and minds in martial arts history. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Audible: https://audible.com/lex to get 30-day free trial - C...alm: https://calm.com/lex to get 40% off premium - Indeed: https://indeed.com/lex to get $75 credit - MasterClass: https://masterclass.com/lex to get 15% off - Eight Sleep: https://www.eightsleep.com/lex to get special savings EPISODE LINKS: John's Instagram: https://instagram.com/danaherjohn Watch full matches at FloGrappling: https://flograppling.com PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (07:51) - Road to ADCC (26:23) - Danaher Death Squad (35:07) - Mental preparation (59:52) - Gordon Ryan (1:56:50) - Giancarlo Bodoni (2:21:57) - Garry Tonon (2:35:54) - Nicholas Meregali (2:51:21) - Ruotolo brothers (3:01:00) - Takedowns (3:05:19) - GSP (3:13:48) - Renzo Gracie (3:18:24) - Boris (3:22:15) - Ali Abdelaziz (3:24:41) - Khabib Nurmagomedov (3:28:33) - Joe Rogan playing pool (3:31:47) - Advice for grapplers (3:41:43) - Day in the life (3:48:25) - Bear vs Gorilla vs Lion vs Anaconda (4:26:12) - Tom Hardy (4:37:46) - Emojis (4:40:15) - Love (4:45:38) - Fighting to the death (4:49:25) - Knives

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The following is a conversation with John Donahar, his third time on this podcast. He is widely considered to be one of the greatest minds in martial arts history. And now a quick two second mention of each sponsor. Check them out in the description as the best way to support this podcast. We got audible for audiobooks, calm for meditation, indeed for hiring, masterclass for learning and aid sleep for napping. Choose wise to my friends. And now, onto the full ad reads, as always no ads in the middle. I try to make this interesting, but if you skip them, please still check out our sponsors. I enjoy
Starting point is 00:00:37 their stuff. Maybe you will too. This episode is brought to you by Audible. An audiobook service that has given me thousands of hours of education, enlightenment, inspiration, wisdom. I can keep going. All of that, they're listening to audiobooks. It's becoming increasingly my favorite thing to do when I'm running. I listen to audiobooks. And given a lot of things that I'm doing in my life on the technical side, but also on the podcasting, the people I'm interviewing, I actually prefer not to listen to the audiobooks about the upcoming guests, or from the upcoming guests, or about the topic that's upcoming guests are covering because what happens is I get so full of ideas and I want to stop and write them down. I want to record our deal notes all that kind of stuff, but you know, they get in the way of running. So I try to listen to nonfiction books that are bigger picture relevant to my life. So I'm talking about history, I'm talking about
Starting point is 00:01:47 technical topics that are outside of my particular focus at this particular moment. That's where I listen to a few audiobooks on rocketry, for example. Anyway, all of that is available in Audible. I highly recommend it. New members can try it free for 30 days at audible.com or text Lex to 500-500. This show is brought to you by KOM, a meditation and mental wellness app, over 100 million people around the world use KOM to take care of their minds. Some folks tell me that KOM is the destination they arrive at when they listen to my particular voice. And it is true that the voice of the podcaster, no matter what it is, honestly, becomes a kind
Starting point is 00:02:35 of comforting blanket or maybe a comforting path towards calmness, so I'm definitely a big believer into the intimacy or whatever you want to call it of podcasting, long form podcast, what's not like over edited, what's just the rock human being before you in conversation or alone, I love all of it. Like Dan Carlin, that's alone, Or Joe Rogan, that's in conversation. I just draw a lot of contentment and peace from listening to those conversations. Anyway, if you want to do that kind of thing, but do it more systematically and rigorously, you should definitely be doing guided meditation. I'm a huge fan of that, and calm is a great
Starting point is 00:03:24 app for that. You can get a discount. I'm a huge fan of that and calm is a great app for that. You can get a discount on calms premium subscription, which includes hundreds of hours of programming. Check it out at calmslashlex. This show is also brought to you by indeed, a hiring website, even the thought of hiring excites me. Because it's like dating dating but way better. I don't even know what the connection to dating is except that it's really important
Starting point is 00:03:55 that you surround yourself with people that fill your day with joy, inspiration, that challenge you just in the right ways that help you grow. I'm a huge believer that the team you work on, especially if you work on stuff that you're passionate about, that team is instrumental to your mental wellbeing, to your success and happiness as a human being. So you should be using the best tools for the job of hiring. If you're a manager, if you're building a team, all that kind of stuff, and I have used indeed many times in the past, I'm currently using them.
Starting point is 00:04:31 I'm currently hiring. If you're interested, you can go to lexfremend.com slash hiring for the information on the jobs I'm hiring, or hopefully you'll find the posts I've made on indeed. Indeed has a special offer only available for a limited time. Check it out at Indeed.com slash Lex. This show is also brought to you by Masterclass. $180 a year gets you an all-lexes pass to watch courses from the best people in the world and their respective disciplines. I've been reading off names of the classes I love on here.
Starting point is 00:05:05 And one by one, I get to have a podcast conversation with them. And the master class is just an inspiration to me. In preparing for those conversations, I listen to the master class, I watch the master class, and it just blows me away. So recently I talked to Daniel and the grano and just the quality of his masterclass, I can't recommend it enough. It's just incredible.
Starting point is 00:05:31 I think for beginners, for intermediate people, even experts, that masterclass condenses the modern poker theory better than anything I've seen anywhere on the internet. And if poker's not your thing, there's a million other things that are likely your thing where the best people in the world can teach you about it. Like Martin Scorsese. Man, that's a good one. And I hope to talk to them with the podcast one day. I'm gonna will it into existence. Get unlimited access to every masterclass
Starting point is 00:06:04 and get 15% off an annual membership at masterclass.com slash lex. This episode is also brought to you by 8th sleep and it's new pod 3 mattress. Sleep, like diet and exercise, I think of like a musical instrument in a band. So sleep is like the guitarist, diet maybe is the lead singer, and the exercise is like the drummer, and all of those things you have to play with to create a beautiful hit song. I don't think there's one formula for how much sleep you should get when you should get the sleep, but just like we diet and exercise, you have to listen to your body, you have to understand your body, and you have to take that journey, that scientific of end of one study of your body very, very
Starting point is 00:06:59 seriously. And to me, you should have the right companion for that exploration on the diet, on the exercise, and on the sleep. That's why I'm going with 8-Sleep pot pro cover. It cools the bed, it warms the bed. Obviously for me or not obviously, but for me, I just use the cooling. It's a cool bed surface with a warm blanket that's heaven. Check it out and get special savings when you go to 8sleep.com slash Lex. This is Alex Friedman podcast, the supported, please check out our sponsors in the description and now dear friends, here's John Daraher. The ADCC is the premier submission grappling tournament in the world. We just had it a couple of weeks ago.
Starting point is 00:07:59 We saw many demonstrations of greatness from athletes you coached. But a year ago, the team and you were at a very low point, taking me through that journey, I was the lowest point. We had a very, very tight team for many years, which began in New York City during the peak of COVID training in New York became very difficult to sustain. So most of the team despised the city of New York. I was the only person in the group that liked living in New York. I think part of the problem was that I was the only one who actually lived in Manhattan.
Starting point is 00:08:39 The others had to commute to New York and there's a world of difference between living in New York and commuting to New York. So most of them had a very negative view of New York City. That was compounded by COVID when even the basic act of training became very, very difficult. And so everyone decided they want to leave. So there was a prospect of a complete break up between myself and the team, or I would have to leave New York. There was a difficult decision for me to make as I lived in New York for 30 years. I had built my life there and had most of my friends and associates that I know here in America, New Yorkers. So I thought, you know, these guys have been unstead incredibly loyal to me as students. So I should also be loyal to them, of course. So I decided that if they wanted to leave, I would go with them. We decided to go to Puerto Rico
Starting point is 00:09:37 because there was a private gym where we could train through the COVID period. I personally wanted to go to Texas. I thought that Texas was a better place for the team to go, but many of the students, including senior students like Gordon Ryan, Craig Jones, had been to Puerto Rico and stayed with one of the head officials of ADCC, Mojasum. So they loved their experience in Puerto Rico and
Starting point is 00:10:08 almost everyone wanted to go down there. So I tried to explain to them there's a little difference between going to a place for vacation versus living there, but that didn't have any effect. So the decision was made, the majority decision was made to go to Puerto Rico. the decision was made, a majority decision was made to go to Puerto Rico. In Puerto Rico, the conditions in which the team lived changed significantly. When you're in New York, New York is such a big city that if there's any tension between team members and inevitably there will be in a competitive sport where everyone's fighting each other You can kind of bury them in the size of the city because there's so many distractions in New York You know you come and you do you work out you go outside and it's New York City
Starting point is 00:10:54 in Puerto Rico we lived in a very small local town Dorado and Most of the athletes were living with each other. And so, unlike New York where there was always a break, you trained together, but when training was over, you went about your life in New York and New Jersey. With everyone living in very close proximity to each other, any tensions got magnified because there was no relief from them. You didn't get to get away from people.
Starting point is 00:11:24 If you had a problem with someone on the mat, got magnified because there was no relief from them. You didn't get to get away from people. If you had a problem with someone on the mat, or now you had to live with them for the rest of the day and the night, and this goes on for long periods of time. So I believe it had the effect of magnifying whatever tensions there were. In particular, there was a family tension between two brothers which magnified over time.
Starting point is 00:11:48 And you know, it's so often is the case you get two brothers growing up, one older, one younger, and the younger one wants to grow and feel somewhat like a young tree underneath a bigger tree. And sometimes people just need this space. So there was some unhappiness and... As a younger brother, I can understand. Yeah, yeah. As a little tree that had to grow up under a big tree.
Starting point is 00:12:18 Yeah, so... Fuck the big tree. Point point. There's a lot of aggression to work out. Unresolved families just coming out here. I'm just kidding. I love you. He doesn't. He's lying. So as time went by, these tensions started increasing. They came to a point where it was difficult for them even to be in the training room together. At that point, you're starting to, you know, once training takes a hit, then you've got to start
Starting point is 00:12:45 to address these. The attempts at reconciliation fell through and a decision was made to move to Texas. I wanted everyone to move as a team. What I wanted to do was keep the team together as long as the period leading up to ADCC so that everyone could train together. So I said, okay, there's problems, but let's just tough it out one year. We moved to Texas. Let's just go there and keep unity. If some people don't want to train with other people, that's fine. But I believe that the team would be weakened by breaking apart. I believe that they had an excellent rapport as training partners.
Starting point is 00:13:31 Their technical level was increasing dramatically. Many of the younger athletes are really starting to come into their own and really develop well. And so my take on it was, okay, if there's problems, so be it. But let's all just stay together until ADCC 2022 was a unified team, go out, prepare yourselves as best you can. And then after that, we can make a decision as to whether we break up or not. But that was rejected and the team split. And they moved to Austin. We'd made prior arrangements to go to a local gym.
Starting point is 00:14:13 And they took that gym. And we were left with no gym. And more or less homeless than in Austin. So I hear out from ADCC. Yes, this is one year out. So roughly three quarters of the competitive athletes left in one week. So at that point, that was probably the lowest point because at that point, not only do we not have a place to train, we had very few training partners for the few that had remained. And the main athlete in the team, Gordon Ryan, was going through a particularly bad spell with his
Starting point is 00:14:56 unresolved stomach issues. And there was doubt as the weather on, he could compete at all and was actively thinking about retiring from the sport. So maybe not competing ever again, but yeah. Yeah. So that was a time when it's like, man, the whole program seems to be dead in the water at this point. Most of the competitive athletes were gone. There were very few training partners for the few that remained and the main athlete around tune to the group had initially bonded was seemingly out of action,
Starting point is 00:15:26 possibly permanently. Where was your mind or are you mentally? My thinking is everything bad passes in time. I've had a lot of bad points in my life. So my life experiences, So my life experiences, whenever things seem dark, have patience, time will ultimately cure most ills, not all of them, but most of them. And I'm confident that if you give me a new crop of students, I can produce magic, but it's going to take time. So that conference was in part a source of strength. Yes, it's just like I wasn't confident that ADCC 2022 would go well because we had one year without a gym and with a team that was completely broken up to even attempt to
Starting point is 00:16:23 get into ADCC. So things looked a little grim, but I was confident, given enough time, I would get in a new group of students and work. As it turns out, one of the demonstration partners that I used during filming for instructional videos who listen Boston, John Culler, Badoni was interested in the idea of coming down and training, but he'd always felt like it would be difficult because there were people in his way class who were already
Starting point is 00:16:58 there and he felt it would be awkward. But now that they had left, that opened up an area for him. So he was the first one to come down. He moved from Boston to Austin, Texas. I began teaching at a local school. It was rather like going back into my earliest days in Judisu. I went from teaching at the Big Handsome Gracie Academy to a tiny school in Puerto Rico and now in even smaller school in Austin, Texas. And locals would come in and train and I would watch every day teaching there twice a day, seven days a week. And I would see people come in and train. And I would say this guy has some potential or this guy has some potential. And I would recruit people and bring them to another gym where they would train with the professionals.
Starting point is 00:17:41 And if they proved adept and hardworking and someone who can work well in a team, they would stay and build their skills. It's time went by more and more such people started coming in. And we had some remarkable people like a young South African purple belt, Luke Griffith came in. He had lost in the European trials for ADCC and he was down on his lucky came into Austin. He did a show against a local purple belt and lost again. So he was a feeling bad about his performance in his future. He came in and I thought it was a lovely guy who worked
Starting point is 00:18:19 hard and trained well. So he became one of the main training partners. He was similar size to Gordon, so I encouraged him to train with Gordon whenever he could. And more and more people started coming into the train under that kind of basis. One day I got a text from Gordon who was filming an instructional video on Boston. He said, hey, Nicholas Merrigally was training at this. He was shooting video at the same time as me and we just did some grappling. He's a really nice guy and he's literally never trained without a geek before. He's for those of you who don't know, Nicholas Merrigally is one of the outstanding geek due to his competitors of his generation. He has an amazing game and is a superstar with the the G side of the sport, but it never even trained without a G once in his life.
Starting point is 00:19:11 So his first ever no G training session is with Gordon Ryan, the best no G competitor of all time. And I remember Gordon texting me saying, he's really talented, he's a nice guy and he wants to come down to Texas and train. So it sounds great. So over time, just more and more people started coming in. And I told everyone, like, you guys are at a severe disadvantage. Like, you've got very little time to get ready for ADCC. Luke wasn't even at ADCC. He had to win trials. Same for Dan Manosoio, he failed at trials and needed to get a win, to even get into ADCC. So around this time, a doctor suggested by Mojazzam,
Starting point is 00:19:56 who had himself had stomach issues earlier in his life, began working with Gordon Ryan. And most the organizer of ADC. Yes, probably. He's the here organizer. He was able to get Gordon Ryan not cured, but significantly better than he was before. And to a level where Gordon could train up to five to six days a week. And that was a big improvement on what was going on during the end of the time in Puerto Rico.
Starting point is 00:20:31 So things started moving. We had a core group of athletes training at a local gym, which was very, very generously offered to us by which was very, very generously offered to us by the head manager of Rokasunglasses, a company here in Austin, Texas. They have a private corporate gym, which we were able to train in. And these talented youngsters from around the globe, essentially, came together and I said, you guys are going to have to train harder than you've ever trained in your lives because you've got less time to get ready for this than anyone and you're going to be going up against people potentially who know exactly what I teach because I've been teaching them a lot longer than been teaching you in addition to the other best people in the world. So it was an incredible challenge for them. And I must say all of
Starting point is 00:21:27 them gave literally everything they had. Everything I asked for, they gave twice as much. And we had a crazy training schedule as many as three classes per day. I know that sounds easy. You know, three classes a day, but try doing it sometime. These classes are not your average classes. These are preparation for ADCC. As they get... Mentally and physically, very, very hard. And we had many people come in and try to train alongside us. And they fell off by the side of the road within days.
Starting point is 00:22:03 Forget about weeks, months, or a full year of this. I gave a very abbreviated set of skills for the athletes. I chopped everything down to what I believe were the most essential skills. Anything that was essential to ADCC preparation was just pushed aside. And they had to focus almost essential to ADCC preparation was just pushed aside and they had to focus almost
Starting point is 00:22:27 entirely on ADCC with one exception. I'll come to that soon over the period of their training here in Austin. So it was compacted by time and also by the breadth of skill that I taught. Everything was just purely for ADCC preparation. In a very short period of time, Dan Manasoyo and Luke Griffith and Oliver Taza all won European trials and got into ADCC. Nicholas Miragalli was already a superstar, so he was invited, but he had to show himself. So we enrolled him in local shows here in Austin where he had his first three no-gees matches. And with each match, you could see progress being made. And so that convinced the ADCC people okay,
Starting point is 00:23:17 he's good enough to compete. He ended up winning decisively a match against one of the greatest American grapplers of all time, Rafael Lovato. And this was like a clear sign that his skill level and no key was sufficient to do, just to find invite. And by the way, Lovato and an incredible set of matches in this ADCC was actually very impressed and retired. Yeah. Which is really impressive and heartbreaking as well, but if you go out, that's a good way to go out. Indeed. So there was this long and tough preparation. It was
Starting point is 00:23:54 compounded by the fact that his Gordon felt better. He felt a need to build up his own competitive record prior to ADCC, because he'd been inactive for so long with this stomach issue. So he proposed one of the most ambitious fight camps that I've ever heard of in grappling, which was he would take on the current WNO champion, Pedro Marino, whose number one is WNO. And also I believe the current No.
Starting point is 00:24:27 No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No.
Starting point is 00:24:35 No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No.
Starting point is 00:24:43 No. No. No. No. No. No. defeated Gordon in an ADCC match in 2017 and then ADCC itself. So there was going to be three big high profile matches back to back and very different rulesets. So WNO was a 15 minute match. The fight with Felipe Pena was no time limit, which is a very different format to compete in and then ADCC. So we had to drag out a 14-week camp covering three matches with three different rule sets, which went in diametrically opposite directions. And the entire team had to go through all of this over this 14-week period. In addition to the previous year that they had been working hard. There was a further complication in the midst of all that's Nicholas Miragalli had to go
Starting point is 00:25:30 to the GEE World Championships and we had to throw an extra morning class for that to help him get ready. Nicholas went on to win the openweight gold medal in the GEE competition and then the next day had to come back to Texas and begin his ADCC preparation. It was a crazy, crazy time. But they all came through it so well. I'm immensely proud of what they did.
Starting point is 00:25:54 And shockingly, in the space of less than 12 months, we went from rock bottom to having a more successful ADCC team performance than we did the previous ADCC. It was in fact the most successful team performance of the event and it's testimony to how hard those young men worked in the course of less than a year to prepare themselves. If we could just linger on the low point, is it heartbreaking to you that the so-called Donhardt Death Squad split or the team as it was originally called split? You know, we live a short life on this earth and you put so much of your love and work into this team and everybody put in the work. Does it break your heart? It was a sad time, yeah. It was, you
Starting point is 00:26:52 know, I'm not a particularly emotional person, but it was an emotional time for everyone. It was, I had an element of tragedy in Sephora. It's not only was it a team breakup, but also a family breakup, which is much more serious. I do believe that in time, even the most intense family breakup skin be reconciled. And I also believe that once dialogue begins, people will remember just how easy it was for us to get along and how tight we were for many, many years. It's so easy to let a minute of anger destroy 10 years of friendship. But there's also the weight of those 10 years. When I ran into the old squad members at ADCC, we got along like a house on fire. We never had a problem. A house on fire is a good thing. Yes, sorry, that's a New Zealand expression. Yeah, definitely good. We at going the other way, right? So only in New Zealander would say that's a good thing.
Starting point is 00:28:08 Yeah. So there's this, I still believe in time things will be fine. But there was an element where, you know, youngsters need to grow. And sometimes, think about this way. From the S-Late perspective, there's definitely a generational problem. I'm much older than my students.
Starting point is 00:28:34 And the years and the viewpoint that I have is the reflection of the time in which I grew up. And from a completely different generation with a completely different world view. It's gotta be hard from the athlete's perspective when you're training seven days a week and you're getting very, very good. You're beating everyone that's getting put in front of you.
Starting point is 00:29:00 You're losing very, very rarely and it's always a tough competitive match when you do. Everyone around you is calling you a superstar and you look phenomenal. You check social media, everyone's saying you're a god on the mat and then you come into the gym and there's some old guy telling you, you're not good enough. And every day it's like, what does this guy want from me? How hard do I have to work? Like, you're not good enough. Like, I want you to be the best in the world.
Starting point is 00:29:31 I want you to be good. I want you to be great. And all of your friends are telling you what they're man, you're incredible. You submit me so easily. You do this to you. And then this old guy is a state nut. You've got to get better.
Starting point is 00:29:41 You've got to work more. You're not working hard enough. At some point, you're got to work more, you're not working hard enough. At some point, you're going to be like, you know what, fuck this old guy. Like it's tough. You know, meant that I get, you know, they left there. When I was 20 years old, I didn't get along with the authority figures at all. And to have someone telling you, you've always got to work that little bit harder. No, your skills, that's not complete.
Starting point is 00:30:06 You still need distance and this. When you're already doing very, very well and far better than all what a tiny, tiny percentage of people, and then you've got this guy constantly telling you no more has to be done. You're not there yet. Of course I understand. Let me just enjoy this more. It's always a choice in life. You can be the best you possibly can, or you can go around where you just get to enjoy life a little more. You do other things. There's more to life
Starting point is 00:30:41 than just the inside of a German learning how to do a better heel hook or a better double leg. So of course, you know, years go by, you want to try the things. You have to make this choice in life between extreme excellence versus being incredibly good, but maybe just enjoying my life a little more. It's so interesting that incredibly good is the hard thing to deal with. It's all like when Kayla Harrison won her first gold medal and at the Olympics, you know, to go back to the gym and to trust again, the maybe the old man, you're being, you do question yourself, but to trust the old man. So Jimmy Page on Jimmy Page, your senior in that case, to say, okay, we're going to go back to this grind. And there's still a path to improvement.
Starting point is 00:31:30 There's still a lot to grow and still have the humility, even though you've just demonstrated greatness. So really good is just the stepping stone to to to to to greatness. That's really tough for athletes. Like, you know, winning is actually very difficult. Yeah. That's really tough for athletes. Yeah. Winning is actually very difficult. Yeah. Gold medals are very difficult. Plus, there's the personal stuff of depression that comes with that, which is you give so much of yourself to try to win that. And once you do, there's a lot of personal stuff you have to deal with, which is like, what do I want from life to understand?
Starting point is 00:32:06 What is exactly what am I chasing? Is it just winning or is it some bigger picture of excellence? That's beyond just winning. So that's all that mixed up together. And then when you have to be as a team really close together, there's the personal relationships all of that gets exacerbated. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:23 Do you think the team ever gets back together? I think there's definitely a chance of that. Right now, I think they have an excellent team themselves, and they're doing very well. They had an excellent performance at ADCC, so there's not a need for them to come to us. It's not like they lack anything. They still remember everything I taught them. They still coach and teach with the same methodology that I taught them. So I don't think they have any need to do so. If they did, it would be because they wanted to. I still think
Starting point is 00:32:57 many of the same personality conflicts that originated the conflict would re-emerge currently if they started training together. By the way, to pile on the compliments, they have really nice merch to the T-shirts, they're just excellent. What have you learned from that process about how to have a team with personal conflicts? Do you have to deal with these giant egos as well? Yeah. The egos is in part of super power too. So you don't want to. Yeah. You don't want to
Starting point is 00:33:25 suppress egos. Like I always laugh when people say leave your ego at the door. What do you think drives competition? Like if you want to be good at anything in life, you got to have an ego. No, I don't believe it's good or even a healthy thing to suppress egos. I'm a realist and I understand that this is a sport where they make one gold medal per weight division. There's guys get better, they're gonna be looking at their training partners and thinking like, I'm gonna have to fight this guy one day
Starting point is 00:33:57 and they're training next to each other. Of course there's gonna be tension. There's always gonna be disagreements about what's the right way to act around certain people, certain issues, and people are going to come into conflict. Everyone's been programmed to be an alpha competitor, and you get a room full of people like that, there's going to be conflict. Now, your question was, well, is there a way to resolve this? Yeah, there was. And for eight to nine years, I was very successful with this. But there's also a tipping point where things can flare out of control. And there will be periodic breakups. You know,
Starting point is 00:34:36 not the first students I had that left. I've been coaching a lot longer than I've been coaching the squad. And I'm sure in the future there be other students who leave me. That's just nature of the beast. It's sad when it happens, but life goes on. Like Bukowski said, love is a fog that fades with the first daylight of reality or something like that. So even love is temporary. Let me ask you about leading up the preparation for the athletes. I mean, this is such, given the darkness from a year ago, from which you had to find glimmers of light and try to get greatness out of athletes, what was the mental preparation like? For Gordon, for Nicholas, for Giancarlo, for the other athletes, what was the mental side of things like? Is there some
Starting point is 00:35:33 key insights you can give to their mental preparation? I really think that people, when they talk about mental preparation, need to take a step back and realize it, almost every element of what people describe as mental preparation has physical underpinnings. Literally 95% of what I teach the athletes is physical skills. And it's my belief that every mental aspect of competition, the most important, which will be confidence on stage, is a direct result of the accumulation of physical skills. People tend to see things like confidence as a mental state. It is, but it comes out of the performance of physical skills.
Starting point is 00:36:29 All my life I've seen sports psychologists try to create confidence and athlete through non-physical means. And it always ends up being the same kind of cheesy motivational speeches, highlight video reels where they try to pump artificial confidence into people. And I've never been impressed by this, nor have I, you know, have any kind of positive effect on, on athlete performance. What I do see, build confidence is the sense that athletes are developing skills and using them successfully under conditions that closely mirror the event they're preparing for. Once they get this down, that's where true confidence comes from. Confidence
Starting point is 00:37:18 doesn't come from words, it comes from accumulated skills, which experience shows you have been responsible for successful performances in the past. And if you accumulate enough of these, your confidence rises. So when it comes through the mental aspects of competition, I created a program where everyone had was given a set of skills that they had to work on. Skills directly related to what I believe the most important elements of success in ADCC competition. In the gym, they accumulated those skills over time. I do it in two different ways depending on whether these are offensive skills or defensive skills. For the accumulation of offensive skills, I like to have my athletes work with athletes who are lesser than themselves in ability. So they start to gain confidence over time, just as you would never send a beginner into a weightlifting German, put 500 pounds on the bar and tell them to lift it,
Starting point is 00:38:17 rather you would start with a wooden bar, then the metal bar and then gradually accumulate weight over time, so you get a progression in weightlifting. So two and you don't take a brand new move and say, okay, do it on Gordon Ryan. Never gonna succeed. I have the athletes practice their offense on blue belts and work their way up. Defense on the other hand, you've got to start them in the deep end of the pool so that they start to see what are their vulnerabilities. Okay, so I put them with highly competitive athletes that they start so they can see, okay, there is a problem here and then even in defense they start off with lower belts and build up their confidence over time.
Starting point is 00:38:59 So just as the weight lift builds up, there's the ability to lift weight over time. So to a juditsu player does it by gradually increasing resistance. Now when juditsu resistance is not done by weight, it's done by skill level. And so over time they started to accumulate this experience. In time, we were able to switch off and have them go against very, very tough athletes each other. So, you know, Luke Griffith will do a full power match with Gordon Ryan. Now, they're fully aware that there's no one better in the world than Gordon Ryan. So if you have a competitive match with Gordon Ryan, that's a very, very healthy sign.
Starting point is 00:39:45 So they went from the start where they were being programmed going against relatively mild resistance and building up over time and then building up to the greatest resistance possible in the sport of Jiu-Jitsu. And their goal is not to win, obviously, but their goal is to provide a competitive match. Now Gordon doesn't have any confidence issues, so for him it's just good, hard competitive training against people that are in some ways better than those he'll be facing in competition. For the other guys it's getting a clear assessment of what their current skill level is, by going against the best there is. Then we add to this a competitive schedule where the
Starting point is 00:40:26 athletes have to go out into competitions so they get used to the idea of performing in front of strangers on stage, getting used to the strange elements of going out, being observed and judged by people you don't know in a performance atmosphere. And so they were all given matches in WNO competition leading up to the event, ADCC trials, local grappling events here in Austin and given a competitive schedule to fight and prepare them for ADCC. Obviously as ADCC got closer and closer, this was pulled back because of the danger of injury. So within about three weeks out was the last time we had a competition. And by this method, confidence starts to grow. And so the mental preparation came out of those physical underpinnings. The idea of progressive resistance increasing over time for both offense
Starting point is 00:41:20 and defense, building up to a peak where they go in against the best athlete in the world, so then get an accurate assessment of where they stand. Once you're given a competitive match to the best guy in the world, you know damn well that when you go out in ADCC you're ready to find anybody. And defense is broadly defined. So defense and in symmetrical positions like positions like guard and then defense also includes escaping from horrible positions. Yes. We're big believers in the idea of depth of defense, the idea that you should be able
Starting point is 00:41:53 to mount defense all the way through from early stages, based mostly around anticipation of identifying danger visually before it emerges and all the way through to the deepest levels of defense where you are 100% defensive and terrible positions and you have to claw your way out and over time and get back to a neutral position or even better back to an attacking position. You have an Instagram post on this topic. When you get ready to step out for the biggest moment of your life, ask yourself one question, how different is this really from what I do every day? If the answer is not very different at all,
Starting point is 00:42:32 then step forward with confidence. And do we do every day in the same manner and ignore the hype and distraction you're ready for action. By the way, for people who don't know, you need to follow John Donhard, Donhard John on Instagram is You have nuggets or large buckets of nuggets of wisdom Often which is quite profound even bigger than Jiu-Jitsu, but anyway, so there's some aspect where you want to mimic the conditions of your daily training
Starting point is 00:43:02 in intensity and in what for physical to that of the actual matches. You asked the question about mental training. For me, the central focus of whatever small amount of mental training I get in my students comes down to a very, very simple concept to understand. This is the idea of identifying competition in terms of its normalcy. Most people see training and competition
Starting point is 00:43:33 is two different things. Training is normal activity that you do every day. And competition is the exception. Okay, it's different. You're going out, there's people watching you. There's a big crowd, They're making lots of noise. In fact, the promoters of shows go out of their way to reinforce this. Look at, for example, ADCC, when Gordon Ryan went to fight Andre Galvon. Okay. Do they just come out on the mat and fight each other?
Starting point is 00:44:00 Absolutely not. There's fire. There's magic. There's pageantry. There's a pageantry. There's fireballs. They're literally shooting fireballs. Some dude in a tie sitting with Joe Rogan, I heard about that guy. He had a podcast or a comedian, whatever. Which one was the meat hit? Well played. John, I don't know how well played.
Starting point is 00:44:20 But you see what they're trying to do. They're trying to create theater and pageantry. When in fact, it's just a grappling match. It's just two athletes, a referee and a ruleset. That's the reality. Now, what they try to sell you is something which is not reality, which is this is somehow bigger and different. And they reinforce this with pageantry and theater so that it becomes not just a grappling match, but a grappling performance, the same way you have a theater performance. And my goal as a coach is to dispel that and say, when you go out there, there's only
Starting point is 00:44:55 one reality. You, him and the referee reinforcing a rules there. That's it. Everything else you see, the smoke, the fire, the music is an illusion. And it's put there intentionally to make you feel a certain kind of way. And your whole goal is to see this as an illusion and walk out and see only the reality, which is that this is the same damn thing you do every day in the gym. The only difference is you're going with a guy you've never grabbed before.
Starting point is 00:45:25 So the actual act of removing the illusion or realizing that it is an illusion. How do you practice that? So when you step on the mat once you're aware of it, I always have them. The you it it it's like when you when you see a magician and you have his tricks explained to you, you never see the magic again. The first time you see a good card trick from a good magician is on my god. Then when they explain it to you, I did this and that step one step to then you look at it like, it's not that special. And when you explain to people this idea
Starting point is 00:46:03 as the pageant tree is an illusion, then just as when you explain to people this idea of the pageantry is an illusion, then just as when you watch the magician and you learn the trick, all the magic flies out the window, so too with the nervous response. So that's for the pageantry, but what about the, um, maybe the physical intensity of competition? Isn't there an extra, no, it's the same in every competition. It's not like you know the twice as strong at NADCC as Aaron and the IBGF World Championships. The physical intensity is always pretty much the same. They experience it every day in the gym and
Starting point is 00:46:41 like you know if you go out and you grab a Gordon Ryan, it's not like the next guy, you grab a was going to be twice as strong as how much twice as fast. There's going to be a little stronger, a little faster, but not so much so that it completely changes your approach to the game. There's not that much difference between the human bodies out there on the stage. If you've felt intensity before, you're not going to be shocked by ADCC. But in terms of entraining, do you have to try to match the intensity of competition? No, that would be for should be every athlete in the gym would be injured.
Starting point is 00:47:12 You can do it for short periods of time, but the training has to be carefully monitored in terms of intensity levels. Maybe we're training seven days a, a minimum of twice a day. You've got to keep things under wraps. Every other workout, you can have one of the five rounds can be full power, but not seven days a week, three times a day. This is going to break bodies. And the full power is just the reminder of, it's more about skill development for us.
Starting point is 00:47:44 It always comes back to skill development, but what about matching the the feeling of the intensive competition? Yeah, periodically. Periodically. It can't be rarely in a single time. Not really. It's not rare, like meaning like, you know, one like like out of, you out of three hours of hard sparring per day, like 15 minutes might be like 100% full power.
Starting point is 00:48:09 That way you, that's more than enough to get psychologically ready for the intensity of conflict, but won't break your body over time. Intensity of conflict, that's what I'll put. There is competition, doesn't it have that extra level animosity? It's a little bit more conflict than it is. It can. Sometimes there's personality differences. Like, for example, like Gordon Ryan and Philippe A. Pena, they admire each other a lot. They respect each other's skills, but they certainly
Starting point is 00:48:38 don't like love each other, that's for sure. So there can be certain match-up with this more intensity. But then there's other match-ups where the two athletes come out and it's no more intense than a hot spiraling session. So first of all, because I would love to look at a couple of matches with you. And before that, let me say a big thank you to Flowgrappling for first of all helping the sport of grappling and jiu-jitsu in general by having organized footage and tournaments that sort of show this sport and its best light to the world. And they do an incredible job of that. So if you're interested in supporting grappling as a sport, helping it grow,
Starting point is 00:49:27 you should definitely support flow grappling, go to their website, sign out. Also flow wrestling, I'm a huge fan of wrestling. So maybe there'll be a flow judo at some point. They don't currently, I don't think, do any major judo stuff. So anyway, I'm a big supporter of theirs, and I do have criticism that they know about
Starting point is 00:49:49 which is I hope they continue to improve on the aspect of making the footage discoverable and accessible, making it easy for you to do search through Google and on their website to find matches, to get excited. Like if me and Joe Rogan are getting excited about particular match, we want to be able to pull it up super quickly. We want to be able to pull up Gordon Ryan's matches super quickly from ADCC, make it super easy to show and share if we have to pay for it fine, but make it easy. And when you sign up for flow, it should be one click, not five clicks. It should be one click. It should be easy. I think it's inexpensive. If you care about grappling, it's definitely worth it. You should sign up. Anyway, my love goes out to flow grappling. And also my love goes out to Mojacim, as we said,
Starting point is 00:50:39 he's the organizer of ADCC. The next one is in 2024. It should be 2024. Well, you should follow ADCC underscore official Instagram and just send as much love towards Mo and ADCC in general. It's the, like I said, the most prestigious, it's like where the best grapples in the world show up. And the magic happens. It's like some of the most historic matches in grappling and digits who ever happened on that stage Anyway, if I could talk about some of the interesting performances for the athletes you coach You post that Instagram. Let's start with Gordon Ryan Gordon Ryan ADCC
Starting point is 00:51:21 2022 the greatest event in grappling history is over new stars emerged Established stars shown bright again, but one man stood above all like a colossus Gordon Ryan You have a way with words John Donner I have seen many incredible feats of grappling, but I've never saw performance like this for many mr Ryan is a polarizing figure in the sport for many others this. For many Mr. Ryan is a polarizing figure in the sport, for many others an inspiration to look up to. But after this weekend there was no disagreement amongst haters and fans but his merit. He is the best ever. It was a long and difficult journey to ADCC 2022. Just one year ago and so on as you told the story. It was a virtue also performance of unmatched
Starting point is 00:52:04 technique, preparation, and confidence. No one else can claim credit for this achievement. This was his and his alone. No one else today brings together technical depth, tactical insight and confidence to use them on stage as he does. I had many students, but I only won Gordon Ryan. I think Gordon responded, all this is true besides the credit that sits with you. Thank you and a heart emoji. Very nice. So anyway, that's as a way of introduction to Gordon Ryan. He did take me through his set of performances. And maybe any matches to stand out. So he competed in his division, which is the plus 99 kilos, and in the Superfight against
Starting point is 00:52:47 Ajagava, that's correct. This was in fact the first time in history that this was allowed. For your listeners who don't follow grappling, we may have been very rude in just throwing a lot of stuff at you without explaining ourselves. First of all, ADCC is like the Olympics of grappling. It occurs every two years. You can either qualify for the event through winning matches in a qualification process or you can be invited. The only people who get invited are either former winners or people in the sport who are just widely recognized superstars
Starting point is 00:53:23 who bring some kind of brand value who have proven in the past that they have what it takes to compete at that level. In this format, there are two kinds of matches. There are weight division matches in which you compete against people, your own, roughly your own size and weight. There is an open weight where anyone of any size can enter, so you can have very small people fighting very large people. And there is a second category called a super fight where established champions who have won previous openweight tournaments fight each other in one-off battles, one athlete against another. So in most of the matches, you will fight repetitively over time towards a gold medal.
Starting point is 00:54:19 But in one category, you fight one fight, the so-called Superfight, which is usually the headline fight of the event. Traditionally, if you were in the Superfight, you could not compete in the weight categories. It was seen as too risky because you might get injured during the weight category, or you might have to fight for very tough fights in a row and get exhausted so that you're ineffective during the main event of the show, the Superfight. So throughout its history, ADCC has always resisted the idea of an athlete being allowed to do both weight category and a Superfight. It's never happened before. Gordon Ryan requested to be able to do this because of his extraordinary stature in the sport, the ADCC organization granted his request. That was the first time ever. In addition, Gordon
Starting point is 00:55:13 Ryan would be fighting to be the first person to win three gold medals in three different way categories. This has never been done before. So it was a huge event on Gordon's part. And Bear in mind also that prior to this event, he had fought just a month and a half earlier against a former ADCC Openweight Champion, Felipe Peña, who had defeated him in the past in a completely different ruleset, and then previous to that against the current World Champion. So they've been a build up to this. So he had been very active coming up to the event and then he went in to fight arguably the greatest ADCC champion of all time, Andre Galvan,
Starting point is 00:55:54 which would occur late on Sunday and would have to fight the toughest people, including the possibility of fighting his nemesis, Felipe Peña, in the weight division prior to getting to the super fight. So there was genuine concern here that he may have completely overstepped himself. The biggest concern I had is a coach, and I'm sure the organizers, Mojez and must have had the same concern, is that he would get injured or exhausted fighting in his weight division. There were two athletes in particular, Felipe Penna, who had given Gordon a very tough 40-minute
Starting point is 00:56:33 match and a no rules setting shortly before ADCC. And his former training partner, Nick Rodriguez, who were expected to give Gordon very, very tough matches if they came up against each other. So there was a genuine concern that Gordon may burn himself out before even got to fight. The guy who most people believe was the greatest ADCC champion of all time. So our concern was how do we manage this? So what we looked for is extremely efficient methods of reducing the time of the matches, making the matches as short as possible. Our favorite way to fight bigger stronger athletes, and I think Gordon was the lightest athlete in his weight division.
Starting point is 00:57:23 Everyone goes, oh, Gordon's so big and strong, it's actually quite light. I think he was outweighed by almost all his opponents. It's nice to see Gordon looking small relative to his opponents, which is absurd to say, but it is the open division plus 99 kilos. It was plus 99 kilos. Right, that's why I mean, sorry about open,
Starting point is 00:57:42 plus 99 kilos. Everyone looks at the incredible Hulk. Yeah. Yeah. So our big thing is when we find biggest, stronger opponents, we always go in two directions. You either go for the legs or you go for the back. And so we constructed strategies based around those two methods. We're going for submission. So we should also mention that ADCC rule set is for regular matches, I think it's five minutes and five minutes total is 10 minutes and then for finals matches, it's 20 minutes and half the time is spent with no points. So these can be very, very long matches. I mean, put this in a perspective, a modern judo matches, five minutes,
Starting point is 00:58:21 a modern wrestling match, I believe is six minutes in international freestyle. So these matches can be 40 minutes long. Now, that's a long, long grappling match. And depending on how you compete in it, that can have a huge tour. Absolutely. You can get to the finals and just be absolutely spent. So our whole thing is, okay, Gordon's got to not only get to the finals, then he's got to fight the toughest ADCC grappler of all time after that. So we were looking for quick and energy efficient matches, and that meant going to the back or going to the legs. And in the overwhelming majority of cases, that's exactly what he did. He was able to get some very, very quick matches, courtesy of leg lock finishes.
Starting point is 00:59:03 And in the few cases where he didn't finish on legs, then he would simply take his opponent's back. And that's a very low stress position to occupy. In one case, his opponent deliberately kept his back on the ground to prevent the back take, and he just chose mount a position instead. And so he was able to go through his weight division with extremely low energy expenditure, which set him up well to go into the finals. No injuries, very little energy expenditure. Now, it sounds easy to say that, you know, okay, the strategy worked. But in order to get that strategy to work, you have to have one hell of a set of skills. And we can see those now. Would you like to? Yeah, I would love to go through them. And I should also mention, for people just listening to this, I'll try to commentate on different things we'll look at. But the thing that was made clear is maybe you can speak to that. Maybe to you, it looks like efficiency,
Starting point is 01:00:07 but to me, it looked like a Gordon was not even trying. There's a relaxed aspect to the whole thing. So maybe you had to do with saving energy, but he made it look very easy. And he made the Pazzo submission look very easy. So here, the first match against an important that again looks bigger than him. Okay, I'll just give an initial comment here. First, you'll see that Gordon elected to sit to the bottom position. The hardest work in submission grappling is when two athletes take the standing position
Starting point is 01:00:43 and just for takedowns. That's where most of the energy gets burned up. So working on the idea of energy efficiency, let's go out and we chose to sit into guard position and then start looking to access our opponent's back. Because if our opponent's hit position a far side arm drag makes a lot of sense, Gordon's able to beat the arm and quickly get behind his opponent. Now the question is going to be getting into a scoring position. It's too early to score at this point, but we're just concerned at this stage of just energy expenditure and make the other guy work harder than us. So I'm going to the I'm dragged to the back and now I was working on the hooks. The hooks are not particularly important here. He'll use it just to get stability on his opponent, but interestingly, his opponent here had an interesting strategy too, which was to occupy bottom turtle position and look to get to the 5 minute demarcation point where points begin to get scored. His idea, I believe, I'm speculating here based on his actions, was to keep Gordon at bay in a defensive turtle position
Starting point is 01:01:45 until a five minute marker occurred in which case he would shake Gordon off, walk away, and force a takedown battle. How many people are comfortable in that? And what do you think about the defensive turtle position, versus always trying to come back to guard? Turtle position is the second bottom position of units. Many people only associate guard position with bottom position and you did see that's naive. There's two, there's guard position and tutorial position.
Starting point is 01:02:11 Now as a general rule, guard position offers a much, much greater variety of attacking options than tutorial position does, but that's not to say turtle position absolutely can be an effective bottom position. You can work effectively from there. So there's some case to be made that to wait out five minutes. It would turn on my beat. I mean, I personally think it it gets against Gordon Ryan. I mean, I admire the fellow's courage. It's not easy. But there was a logic to what he was doing. People think, oh, he just got his back taken so easily. But he did have a strategy. Now, did he pick the right person to use that strategy against? Probably not. So Gordon is able to
Starting point is 01:02:57 break the turtle down, get one hook in, at which point is this becoming an extremely controlling position with Gordon in the back? At which point is there, are you happy with where it is? At this point, it just started to dawn on me at this point. This guy actually had a strategy, which was to maintain a prone position that he's in now and then shake Gordon off after the five minute mark. So once that became obvious, then I was now starting to look at the clock and how close we are if you can take it up to five minutes.
Starting point is 01:03:38 Right now this guy's only intention is to stop Gordon from strangling him and finish. Okay, now the guy's trying to go up and vertical freeze it there. Now, do you see how he's taking his elbows off the mat and turtle position? And you did see there's only one reason you take your elbows off the mat from turtle position. It's the standup. So now it's clear at this point what his actual strategy is it's to get up for sustaining confrontation when it take down battle and be Gordon by points. So he did have a strategy. Now our counter strategy is always based around the power half Nelson. This is a common move in the sport of wrestling and it's a great way to break people down as they try to stand up. Gordon's so avvy Yeah. I mean, Gordon is a master of it.
Starting point is 01:04:25 And there's a power of half-meltz. And that Gordon has a name as the elbows are off the ground and knees are off the ground. He's going to return his opponent to the mat. And as you can see, he's successful in doing so. And now it's clear what demand strategy is. So I'm calling to Gordon to break him down to a hip. You put a man on a hip, he can't stand up. Gordon successfully does it, traps the shoulder using that that one on one grip with his right hand, puts him
Starting point is 01:04:48 down to a shoulder and a hip. That means standing up is no longer an option for his opponent. Now Gordon goes in, he's already scoring because of the total position that he's in. His shoulder is, his opponent stays down on his shoulder. Now Gordon's responsibility to start looking for the strangle hold. His opponent has basic defensive structure, is disciplined with his chin, keeps the chin down, but Gordon is a master of tying up defensive arms and penetrating under the chin to get to a strangle, and you'll see that shortly. There's the trapping of the arm. Notice it, no advanced grips were required, it was just a spontaneous trap, there's the penetration of the neck. So the arm was trapped with the leg. So now he's only got one defensive arm and he's just
Starting point is 01:05:31 taking that away with his left hand and he gets a one handed strangle for the finish. And it looks like not much energy was expanded during that battle. Yeah, so that's a, the tour we got off to a very smooth start, very easy expenditure, no injuries and a submission win. Does that, there's a kind of certain look to go on of that could be interpreted as nervousness. That was any incorrect interpretation? Yes.
Starting point is 01:06:01 Okay. So there's a, what do you interpret as new of a behavior? Well, this is a part of me is trolling, but sometimes on the surface, confident behavior can look like almost like anger. And there's Gordon's face had a vulnerability to it. Almost like when you go to judge confidence, don't look at the face. Look at the extremities of the body. Yeah. That's where the truth comes out. You see it in body language, and the further from the face and chest, the more honest the body becomes Look at the feet in the hands
Starting point is 01:06:53 Well, there were I mean that's when you see if people are nervous or not. He was very relaxed in the extremities that's true. See you look more confident in this This than anything. What what are you thinking about what I What's going through your head here? Is this the same stuff? Are you intimidated by the two-meet heads, one in a suit and tie? Or are you not thinking about that at all? No. For me, it's just about, okay, what's the most efficient path to victory against this particular opponent? It's just, okay, I've done my job. I've taken them through an extensive fight camp that prepared them for every conceivable situation that they're in. I've run an efficient
Starting point is 01:07:32 warm up. Their body temperature is perfect. The elasticity of the muscles is perfect. My main role when I corner is I avoid what most people do when they corner which is to be a cheerleader. Most cornermen, they're not cornermen, they're cheerleaders. They're there to express some kind of emotional support to their training partners or their student. Sometimes they're even worse than cheerleaders. They express their own emotional fears as the match goes on, I always believe that 99.5% of the job of the trainer is done. The coach is done when the athlete steps their foot on the mat. At that point, you shouldn't need me at all. Everything I needed to tell you should have been not just told you, but imprinted into you.
Starting point is 01:08:30 Remember there's 15,000 people in that crowd. For half of the match you're not going to hear a word that I can say. There's too much noise, but you'll hear my voice inside your head. Because you've heard it so many times over the last 14 weeks, you're sick of hearing it at that point. 14 weeks, you're sick of hearing at that point. And their program know what to do. So I'm usually pretty confident. I'm also very confident that even in worst case scenarios, they can have effective solutions because they train those worst case scenarios every single day in the gym. And so in part, you're there to have a front row seat to analyze what happened so that you can take that to the next match. The biggest danger in athlete faces
Starting point is 01:09:11 is tunnel vision. Sometimes they will hit upon a certain move or strategy and just say, I'm going to go with this when there's much easier alternatives. But because they're so focused on the alternative they've chosen, they get this tunnel vision and just focus only on that. The most constructive thing the corner man can do is alert them to the presence of time, which is very important in ADCC match because they're all the scoring is structured by time. And to alleviate problems associated with tunnel vision, that okay, you're doing this, but if you just did this, it would be so much easier. So that's the main goal. So here, this was one of several anticipated
Starting point is 01:09:53 matches against the second one against Victor Hugo, which is a very tough opponent. And, again, this was a situation where Gordon was considerably outweighed by his opponent. So the main thing here was efficiency. His opponent elected to avoid the standing position by jumping into guard. So now Gordon would be in top position this time. He has a very good close guard. But unfortunately, Gordon has very good guard passing. So he's an excellent god-play, very talented, but Gordon is renowned as the
Starting point is 01:10:28 imminent god-poster in the world today. So it's a tall order to hold Gordon off for a 10-minute match. Is there something you can say about this guard passing? Gordon is making it look very easy. It's middle-distance guard passing here. He eventually passes to mount, I believe, in a very way you run through the sequence where he gets mounted. I believe he gets mounted twice is I'm not just back just a little bit further. So he's trying to one arm under, yeah, this is a stacking position. Now, normally we always insist on the idea of getting advantageous angle first,
Starting point is 01:11:07 controlling the feet and getting angle. But there's a height advantage that Victor Hugo has here and the length of his legs means that he can play very, very wide with his legs. So getting an advantageous angle might be difficult. And these circumstances, it often makes sense to go right up the middle. Now Gordon could just go back for legs for the teacher's angle might be difficult. And these circumstances, it often makes sense to go right up the middle.
Starting point is 01:11:29 Now, Gordon could just go back for legs because the legs, Victor, you guys legs, it's so far apart at this point that you could easily isolate a leg and attack that, but Gordon wanted to show off his passing prowess. Very often he'll go into a match and say, okay, I'm gonna show this skill and he'll often into a match and say, okay, I'm going to show this skill and he'll often use it as a demonstration of techniques he teaches in instructional videos. So he
Starting point is 01:11:51 wanted to show that he could pass the mount readily on a world champion. Like this part here, this little step. Okay, just freeze it right there, go back one step. Okay, you can clearly see that all of his opponents' defensive frames are built on his opponents' left-hand side. Everything is defense on the left, but you can see this comes at a price, and that price is back exposure on the right-hand side. You can literally see his opponents back on that side. Gordon's whole game is to place sufficient pressure that the opponent overcompensates on the side
Starting point is 01:12:26 of pressure just to set up a quick switch across to the other side. There's the vulnerability, there's the back exposure, his opponent has to put his back on the ground, switches back. That's a world champion right there on bottom who does a good job of recovering from the first danger, but unfortunately Gordon has been here a thousand times and just produces heps and kicks out. A little, a little step. And so you see there's two changes in direction left, right, in a very short period of time that people find very, very hard to keep up with. Now as a opponent builds up to an elbow, he's looking to create more and more space from
Starting point is 01:12:59 here, but Gordon counters by just stepping over the hips. It's just when you feel like every move, he's doing the right things. The metal bottom is doing well. He's doing the right things. But the other guy's just being here too many times and it's just a half second ahead of every decision. So that going up in the elbow,
Starting point is 01:13:22 Gordon makes it look so easy here. Well, it almost seems like a victor is out, but this turning of the hips with arm over the opponent's back is able to bring them back down and get in Gordon takes mount. Notice our Gordon is never satisfied with the mounted position itself. He's only satisfied with an extended mounted position where the elbow comes up over the shoulder line. Yeah, only then does he show there's a there's a little bit of relief right there, right?
Starting point is 01:13:56 Right. There's a little bit of relief. No, that's the look of a man who's just proved a point. Yeah, this is very Michael Jordan likes. Six is tongue out. So yeah, I mean, there's no points at the stage. He really is going for submission. And then this, this happens again.
Starting point is 01:14:32 Is this the match that wasn't Gordon was the only match we got into finish his opponent by submission? Was this very frustrating for him? Was there actually interesting that when he came off the mat, he was visibly frustrated. He wanted to get a finish. And I think he was more upset about not finishing Victor Hugo than he was delighted by winning his two gold medals. So I think that says a lot about the perfectionism of Gordon Ryan. Most people would be thrilled to
Starting point is 01:15:07 beat one of the great grapplers of this generation decisively in this fashion, but he was He was not happy and So this is a Gordon's third match against Suza Was about Suza now this is another guy. Yeah, very different because now we're on to the second day Your listeners should be aware that the event occurs over a two-day period. So the previous two matches occurred on Saturday. Now we're into Sunday.
Starting point is 01:15:32 Now, this puts a different context on things. If we could just freeze it right there, maybe go back once there. Now we're on Sunday morning and the idea is that Gordon will be fighting the biggest fight of his life late that afternoon. So now we're into the idea of energy conservation. Okay, it's okay to have two hard matches on Saturday because you get to rest on Saturday night. But now Gordon has to beat two people back to back and save energy for the biggest fight of his life on Sunday, late Sunday afternoon. of energy for the biggest fight of his life on Sunday, late Sunday afternoon. So now the emphasis is on a quick win and you can see Gordon Ryan, certainly the libous on this. Now,
Starting point is 01:16:13 when you go to entangle your opponent's legs, the basic choice you have is between straight ashygarami and cross ashygarami. In the last five years, cross-Ashigurami has proven to be statistically the more important of the two. And as a result, many people have forgotten the value of straight-Ashigurami, based leg logs, and undervalued them. Gordon has outstanding heel hooks from both straight and cross positions and his opponent was probably more concerned about the danger of a cross ashygurami left the right leg. Undefended for far too long and as a result Gordon goes into a very classical ashygurami you would normally expect to see from five or six years ago and gets a very, very quick finish.
Starting point is 01:17:07 So lifts as opponent, there's the Ashe Garamie, the entanglement of one of his opponent's legs were two of his. Now he's got a turn and exposes opponents heel. So there's an initial off balance to the left to get a defensive reaction. The opponent overcompensates, exposes his heel and then there's the submission. His danger of it like being broken here. Gordon has a absolutely ferocious outside heel, okay. Until you've felt it, it's quite different. So the the opponent probably before he even felt the heel, he felt the control and that it's good. It's, he's screwed there.
Starting point is 01:17:46 He doesn't even want to. When someone has a, someone who knows what they're doing, gets a bite on your leg like that, you feel it deep inside your knee and ankle tendons immediately. And it's, there's a sense in which you almost tap, he got a couple of taps almost, almost like, as if they're early. Because the point I noticed, people came up to us obviously, this guy tapped early. He knew that late would be a big problem.
Starting point is 01:18:19 Got it. So this is within like 30 seconds, within 10 seconds. I think it was within 10 seconds. So this was an excellent example of someone saying, OK, I'm going to conserve energy with a short match. I'm not just going to go down into a neutral position. I'm going to directly pull into a leg lock attack from standing position. You don't see that much in heavyweight divisions.
Starting point is 01:18:39 It's something you see more in the lightweight divisions. So we got to go to the final match of Gordon's within his division, which I think, as opposed to facing Philippe Pena, who lost to Nicky Rod. Nicky Rod had a great match against Philippe Pena and passed Philippe Pena's guard. I think only the second person in ADCC competition to accomplish that. I believe with the body lock. It started as a body lock, but he converted to half guard, top head and arm, and passed
Starting point is 01:19:13 out of half guard, top chest to chest. I think I listened to Craig Jones interview summarizing what happened in ADCC, and he briefly mentioned that Nicky Robb might have the best body lock pass that he's ever felt. So they're very good with the body lock. The way to face Nicky Robb is don't get them, they'll let him get the body lock. But if you stand up, he's a good wrestler. So there's a dilemma there.
Starting point is 01:19:40 You have to sit down to guard, but that goes into his body lock. But then if you stand up, now you go into his wrestling skill. So it's a great dilemma that he has. And that's what in facing, in facing Nick Yorad, going around here chooses to... Yeah, if you look at the limbs, there's a relaxation there. We should also explain some things here. This is a finals match. So instead of being 10 minutes long, it's 20 minutes long with the option of a 20 minute
Starting point is 01:20:16 overtime. So this could potentially be a 40 minute match. So you can see why the ADCC people were very concerned about Gordon doing this match. Because what if this match had gone 40 minutes and then an exhausted Gordon Ryan has to go out to fight Andre Galvon, who's fresh and ready to mall on. And the top of that is former two former teammates who know each other's game very well. So there was a high likelihood and most people's minds that this would go the distance. Because when you train with each other for years, every single day in the gym seven days a week you get to know each other's tricks.
Starting point is 01:20:49 One big problem here for Nikki Rod is that his body lock guide passing game which is his main weapon on the ground was taught to him by us. So it's not like we're going to be taken by surprise by it. So that must have been figuring in his mind. Do you think psychological for Gordon and psychological for Nicky Rod? It's tough. So for him, with that body lock, for example, do you think it's tough for him to know what to do here? It's tough because he would have remembered the outcome of the training sessions. It's hard to go up against the guy who You used to dominate you in training and then say okay, I'm gonna beat him in competition
Starting point is 01:21:32 Again shut all that off because it's tough. I mean memory is memory. You can't lie to yourself What do you think about competition? So there there's been a lot of Olympics bring this out There's been a lot of big upsets at the Olympics. There's something where people find something in them. I mean, Judo is a different sport and grappling in Judo. There's much more room for upset because a mistake in Judo will have ramifications that will be felt within half a second. Like, if you take the wrong grip in judo, you can be throwing in half a second, and there's no recovery.
Starting point is 01:22:12 If your two shoulders hit the mat with momentum, it's over. It's done. In juditsu, you could, especially in ADCC, where there's no points in the first five minutes, you could get taken down, amounted by your opponent, and still win. Like, you can recover from a bad start. In judo, boxing, kickboxing, MMA, you get hit. There's no recovery time. You just get swarmed on. And, um, you just was a much more forgiving sport where you can make a series of blunders, and you just recover from them. You don't make a series of blunders in boxing. You're unconscious. So that there's the blunder case, but there's also been just people where it. You don't make a series of blunders and bulks and you're unconscious. So that there's the blunder case But there's also been just people where it's their day. I
Starting point is 01:22:50 Mean again, maybe it's romanticized in the notion, but there's been epic performances in Russ in Olympic wrestling in Olympic judo as an example Satoshi ishi he had a 2008 Performance we talked about all Japan and all that kind of stuff, but the Olympics, he destroyed everybody on this path to the Olympic gold medal. That's when Teddy Renaro was also competing, he got the bronze. You could say he was at that time in the best in the world also, but he I'm the only people I have. I say, yeah, but I think it would be very fair to say he was the best in the world. I think about the people he beat to win three old Japan championships.
Starting point is 01:23:34 Like he beat Kosei in a way. He beat Kaji Suzuki. They were Olympic champions. Like he was already. So you don't believe him? You will. I don't believe that a person can walk on stage and be better than what they are supposed to be.
Starting point is 01:23:51 You have a skill level. It's set in stone. This is your skill level. You don't just go on stage and suddenly your skill level gets here. What you do have is a situation where you have a skill level. Okay. Another opponent has a higher skill level, but he runs into confidence issues, so that he only uses a small percentage of his actual skills, and then he will
Starting point is 01:24:12 fall below someone who is technically lower on the skill scale than he is. That can happen, but you can't just magically acquire skills. Yeah, but all of us are able to fall in confidence. Yes. So the question we have, who manages that full best? And that can create upsets, absolutely. So you don't think Gordon could have fallen in confidence against the former teammate when the pressure is so high. There was just no basis for a fall to occur.
Starting point is 01:24:41 You said he doesn't have confidence issues. What are you truly that do? That's because he doesn't have confidence issues. What are you true with that too? That's because he never loses in the gym. There's nothing in the, there's no experience that he's had that would make him say, I shouldn't be this confident. So it's the physical, it's like, like we talked about mental preparation. I think you're wrong. If Gordon lost 20 matches in a row, of course, his confidence with Trump because experience is now there's going to be a psychological dissonance between
Starting point is 01:25:11 his experience, his recent experience, and what he believes. Okay, if you believe you're the best in the world, you just lost 20 matches. At some point reality is going to break in, but if you're just never losing in competition, dominating people in the gym, then there's nothing in your experience that would shake your confidence. Can I ask you this just in a small tangent? Why is Gordon Ryan so good? So we're looking at, you've trained a lot of special athletes, your special human being yourself. I could just look at human history. There's a lot of, not a lot.
Starting point is 01:25:47 There's some special humans. It seems like Gordon Ryan is one of them. I totally agree with that. Can you try to dissect? That's what I meant when I said I had many students, but only one Gordon Ryan. I've taught many, many people, but they don't all have his skill level. So there's an obvious elephant in the room. We, okay, what distinguishes him from from other athletes? Great question. I'll try and give an answer. More than anyone else that I've ever taught, he has a memory for things that were taught to him. He has an ability to recall information
Starting point is 01:26:25 that is extraordinary compared with other people in the room. So that's definitely a big part of it. Secondly, he has a pride in technique and technical prowess that will not allow him to settle for anything less than perfection, and he will hate himself when there is imperfection. So there is a love of excellence and a hatred of anything less than excellence. He has an ability to pull the trigger when opportunity arises, which is truly extraordinary. Many people know what to do, but when the moment comes, they back off and they'll doubt themselves.
Starting point is 01:27:21 They've got to seize the opportunity. The trigger pulls every time So can I just just link on that? Absolutely. There's a few times where he gets a little bit of an advantage and he just chases it to get a big like Lundzge-Gavau You know you get it's like There's a dance and you get one step ahead and he's able to chase that you know Get a little glimmer of the back and he's able to chase that all the way to back control.
Starting point is 01:27:49 So that is that kind of the trigger that you're referring to? Yes. It runs deep in that too. It's the idea that good athletes are greedy athletes. Okay. When they see a small opportunity, they try and get a bigger bite of it as possible. So that the mantra that we always have in training, if you can see the back, you can take the back. And if Gordon sees an inch of your back, you know, that's the direction he's going to be going. If your fast shoulder is within an inch of the floor, he's then remounting you. If your shoulder comes off the floor, he'll be on your back on the other side. he's a maximalist with opportunity.
Starting point is 01:28:27 He's not satisfied with, oh, let me get a good enough outcome. It's like I want the maximal outcome. So when you combine all these things together, an ability to recall information, which is just far superior to anyone else I've ever coached. An ability to work in the training room towards not just good technique but excellent technique. The confidence to pull the trigger whenever the opportunity arises. A maximalist mindset where it's never enough to have a good enough outcome. It's always got to be the best possible outcome.
Starting point is 01:29:11 And the fifth element, which I believe is very, very important, is extraordinary depth in his technical prowess, in particular with regards to his defensive acumen. Everyone looks at Gordon and focuses on his offensive prowess because they see him dominate other athletes. But what they don't see is what I see every day in the gym, where he works from impossibly bad defensive position. Someone locked in on a full heel hook on his body and a full judicatami amba. In a complete pin mounted with Gordon's two arms stretched out over his head and what looks like a hopeless position. And Gordon will work in these positions. And of course, because it's such a bad position
Starting point is 01:30:05 sometimes you'll have to tap but he just works so relentlessly in these bad positions that when he steps on stage he's like if this guy got the worst possible position on me there's nothing he could do with it and within 30 seconds I could turn it around on him and win this match. That gives his game an overall breadth and depth which is very, very hard to deal with. It means there's no obvious weak point where you can just say, okay, I'm going to attack him here and use this strategy to beat him. And that goes back to his confidence that the reason why most people lack confidence
Starting point is 01:30:56 is because they fear bad outcomes. Okay, if you're a strong God player, you've got an excellent guard, but you're terrified of leg locks and your opponent has strong leg locks, you will shut down your own guard and won't play as freely and well as you normally do because you're afraid of the leg lock danger. You'll pull your feet in, you just play with all the confidence you normally do from guard position. Gordon puts himself in that situation. He's so defensively sound that it translates into his offensive confidence.
Starting point is 01:31:43 When you talk about memory recall, which is interesting, I can't help but see parallels between him and Magnus Carlson, who's a chess player, who's the number one in the world. The arguably the best ever, certainly the best ever, if you just look absolute numbers. The chess has the luxury of having a rating, which you can't have, cannot have in Gisou because it's a game of human chess. Chess is just a poor game, which you can't have it, cannot have in jiu-jitsu because it's a game of human chess. Chess is just a board game, so you can actually calculate
Starting point is 01:32:10 the probability that you could win. So he is the highest elo rating ever, and he's maintained that rating. He can, without competing against the number two in the world, he can just prove that he's the number one in the world for many years. Anyway, there's us, certain similarities, one is ability to recall. So memory, recall of information is fascinatingly good. And the other one is not so much your love for
Starting point is 01:32:36 perfection, which is something you mentioned, but the flip side of that, which is what you also mentioned is the hate of imperfection. Now in the case of Magnus, it almost creates a level of anxiety for him that's almost destructive. So the thing he seems to hate the most is imperfection against people he knows are worse than him. So the thing he loves is competing against people that are close to skill level or the favorite is people who are might actually be better than him, especially in certain positions. He loves competing against them. He hates competing against people that are still from the perspective of everyone else, what are called super grandmasters, so top three in the world.
Starting point is 01:33:30 But he knows he's much better than them, and the anxiety of being not perfect against those people. That's why he, I don't know if you're paying attention, but he stepped away, he's not going to defend his world championship, because he hates the anxiety of playing people worse than him. Interesting. He figures they would somehow make him look bad. No, he just for him, at least the language he uses is just not fun. And he likes having fun. To him, it was fun to win no matter the skill level, the world championship the first time But then defending it is a very grueling process is
Starting point is 01:34:13 With classical chess you play these many hours it could be seven hour long games and On top of that he really hates the fact that it's only I forget what it is But it's single digit number of games He says it's it's low sample so I Can't I would like to play 20 30 40 50 games if we're gonna do it this way But then they're too long. It's gonna take too long So he's really emphasizes the the fun of it and the clear demonstration of who's
Starting point is 01:34:49 the best. Now, chess is an interesting game. It's probably different than grappling because it's been played for centuries. So there's this giant body of people that are playing it. Like there's other Gordon Ryan's out there. Imagine a world where there's multiple Gordon Ryan's out there. Imagine a world where there's multiple Gordon Ryan's or something like that, there's different dimensions, but you have like sharks everywhere. And so there there is fun to be had
Starting point is 01:35:15 even at the very, very, very, very, very top. But the memory recall is the thing that stands out and the hate of imperfection, more intense than anybody else in the game. Fascinating. That takes us back to the final. I yes. So here, Gordon is facing Nikki Rod, former training partner.
Starting point is 01:35:39 And again, the intention here is this has to be put in the context that Gordon will be fighting the greatest ADCC grappler of all time and a few hours after this. So what we're looking for is a a quick resolution. Still the shortest possible match. Now there's a complicating factor here. Nikki Rodd was a wrestler before he was a judo player. to here. Nikki Rodd was a wrestler before he was a jitter-to-player. On paper, the way his route to win is via wrestling. He's not going to be able to submit Gordon Ryan and he's not going to be able to pass his guard. So he has to win by wrestling. In the ADCC Finals, you cannot set the guard. So the approach that Gordon used earlier that we saw on video cannot be used in the finals. Gordon must wrestle his
Starting point is 01:36:33 opponent. So on the way out, Gordon and I were talking and we had discussions obviously during the cam what's the appropriate thing to do here and there had been some matches earlier in the event where it was becoming obvious that stalling was being heavily punished by referees. So I said to Gordon on the way out, just give him your leg. Let him take you down, because in the first 10 minutes of the finals, take downs, don't score anything. Well, there are no, there are no means of scoring the first 10 minutes, but you can't set the guard. That will be, that will award you a negative point. So I said, just let Nikki Rodd take you down. And he's like, Nikki Rodd's not going to take the bait. So I said just let Nikki Rod take you down And he's like Nikki Rod is not gonna take the bait And I said if he doesn't I'll call him for stalling and so and then Craig Jones also commented after the fact is I don't know why Nikki Rod took the bait So if we see the start of the match you see Gordon comes out and offers a leg now
Starting point is 01:37:43 It's not that you know Nikki Rod is leg. Now, it's not that, you know, Nikki Roddersmart, he knows what's happening here. And what's he going to do? Store for 10 minutes and get like five stalling calls put against them. So Gordon gives them the take down that way. They go to the ground immediately with no effort. And the match now favors Gordon because Gordon is significantly more skilled on the ground. The question is how can we make this match as short as possible? And as is so often the case the answer comes back to legs. So for people just listening to this, Gordon is in an open guard
Starting point is 01:38:21 and Nicky Rod appears to be trying to keep his hips away from Gordon's legs. Yes, the big Nicky Rod knows there's a danger here. So he's elected to go to his knees that will set up his favorite bodylock passes and it will in some ways mitigate some of the dangers associated with leg locks. So Gordon's whole thing is how am I going to get my body weight underneath them? He has a choice between linear entries where he enters between his opponent's knees and circular entries where he inverts and spins underneath his opponent to get under a center gravity. Is there a way for somebody to try to get a body lock without giving going an opportunity
Starting point is 01:38:57 to get under them? Well, the body lock is an excellent way to shut down leg lock entries if you can get to the body lock, but you can see Gordon's very, very disciplined with his elbow and knee position. Elbow's and knees working in position. It's very, very hard. It was opponent to excess his waist. That shoulder is always either across the hip or in front of the shoulder. Sorry, his knee is either in front of the shoulder or in front of the hip.
Starting point is 01:39:22 And we're one minute into the match. And just if I were to look at the video player here, it appears that the match is over soon. So, so I guess Nicky Rod is facing this. I need to get close in order to do the the body lock. And the closer you get the more danger there is to legboard and get under you and get the leg control. Now they're starting to get close here. Gordon's going to try and get his head underneath his opponent, make a circular entry into the legs. He's clearing his opponent's head out of the way by faking the arm drag on the far side. The first move that he used against his first opponent earlier in the tournament, and
Starting point is 01:40:21 there's the leg. Spins underneath it. Go circular, rotates through, gets his body weight underneath his opponent, and now he's going to trip him down to the mat. Now I believe, Nick, you're out, tries to pull out his foot here. And Craig also said that Nick, you're out, has gotten used to be able to pull that foot out from anybody. And then he was very surprised at the grip that Gordon was able to actually hold on. So I just want to comment.
Starting point is 01:40:52 I'm just I'm just parodying commentary. If you look at what's happening here from the internet, just if you just freeze it, you'll see that Gordon, like any good leglock, I will always treat his opponent's foot like a knot at the end of the rope. Just as you slide down a rope, if there's a knot at the end, your hand will catch. So too, with the human leg, when they go to extract by pulling, you just keep your fist as close to your shoulder as possible. And narrow the gap, the foot will always catch. The failure that many people have is their hand drift away from their own shoulder. So there's room for the foot to extract, but you'll see Gordon's extremely disciplined
Starting point is 01:41:32 with thumb close to his own shoulder, which creates a situation that's very, very hard, just to simply pull your foot out. You're focusing on the nut of the foot. Also, it's very early in the match. It's very little sweat. Both athletes are still pretty dry. Now Gordon has to climb the leg and now he's already captured his opponent, Shule. There's the heel exposure coming up. Nikki Rodd already knows things are getting bad. And there's the win. Actually, the comment I made I guess was from a little bit earlier. There's earlier time where Nikki Rodd was trying to pull out the foot and the Gordon is able to hold on to the knot, which is interesting.
Starting point is 01:42:13 Now that was a brilliant day's work by Gordon Ryan. He said two matches against opponents considerably bigger and stronger than himself. And the time of the two matches can be measured in, I think, less than two minutes. So he's done what he's set out to do. No injuries, no exhaustion. He's beaten four guys back to back, all of whom are excellent athletes with minimal energy expenditure, and he's ready to go on to his super fight. So and that's against one of the greatest arguably for a long time, you know, really, really up there. Just a practitioner's competitors grappling, no geek competitors of all time, which is
Starting point is 01:42:57 Andre Guevara. Yes, Andre Guevara was almost certainly at this point, the greatest ADCC competitor of all time. One more super fights and anyone else by a landslide. So if I may just read a few words of written on Instagram about this match about under Gavau on greatness, how great you become in any given endeavor will always be assessed by the degree of difficulty of the barriers you had to overcome to get to the top. Just as the lion became king of the jungle, not by living among sheep, but by dominating
Starting point is 01:43:30 a world of elephants, hyenas, buffalo, leopard, crocodiles. So too the greatness of an athlete will be determined not just by his own ability, but by the greatness of the athletes he faces. Thus in his quest for greatness, Gordon Ryan owes a debt to the greatness of the athletes he faces, thus in his quest for greatness, Gordon Ryan owes a debt to the greatness of his toughest opponent, Andrei Gavau, and you go on to sing him praises. So, and that introduces this match. You know, there was an interesting moment. I didn't even listen to the words exchange, but because I had the great fortune of sitting next to Hatcha crazy. There was this Fasting moment before the match and I can't believe Gorn is sufficiently relaxed to do this
Starting point is 01:44:15 but he walked up to Hatcha Gracie and had a discussion What do you think you face hunter go out before, what are your suggestions? And they've talked to it back and forth. They brainstormed ideas like minutes before the match. And it was just a beautiful moment of like, I don't know, like, like, Tag of Woods and Michael Jordan talking to each other
Starting point is 01:44:37 or something like that. I mean, I wonder how much brainstorming there really was or and how much was it just kind of like spiritual inspiration or something like that. Yeah, I think it's more spiritual inspiration. He looks after Hodger as a Hodger is a very close friend and mentor of mine. So I always tell my athletes, look to Hodger as your example. This is a guy who always fought for the finish. He tried to express the highest ideal of juditsu, which is control leading to submission. Every match he was ever in, he even lost matches on tactics against people that he could
Starting point is 01:45:15 easily have defeated if he adopted a different tactic, but he always insisted on victory by submission. It defined his career, made him who he was. And I always try to have my athletes emulate him. So what was the strategy going into this match? What were you thinking? What were you thinking? Okay. For Andre Galvon, he had, there's a sense in which Andre Galvon had to fight literally the perfect match to win this.
Starting point is 01:45:42 Okay. This is a match. It's going to be 20 minutes long. And potentially 40 minutes long. Andre Gavon cannot win by submission. Gordon's submission dominance here is just too great. It would be exceedingly difficult for him to win on the ground. Gordon's ground positional game is just too advanced. And so for Andre Garval, he had to win. If he was going to win, it was going to be
Starting point is 01:46:13 in a standing wrestling exchange where most people assist him as having a measure of superiority over Gordon Ryan. The problem is that it's hard to just keep a potentially 40 minute match on the ground, sorry off the ground that whole time. It's very, very difficult indeed. So he would have had to fight literally the perfect tactical match to make it happen. And he would have to do it without getting called restoring points. Gordon has the luxury that if at any point they go to the ground, he has complete dominance, but Gordon too has a problem that he can't pull guard without
Starting point is 01:46:56 being penalized. And if Andre Guevon can play this tactical game of forcing Gordon to pull guard and then staying at a distance where he doesn't, he's doing enough action not to get called for stalling, but not so much to engage with the dangerous Gordon Ryan on the ground. Then it's feasible he could have won, but it would have been, as I said, it would have required the most perfect application and integration of technique and tactics that he's capable of. Now intimidation was here. Was there, or are these athletes already beyond that? When you say intimidation, be more precise. Do you think there are some degree,
Starting point is 01:47:39 if you're just to empathize with Andrzej Gavau. Do you think there's some degree in which Gordon was in his head? Because of the trash talk leading up to a certain events, because of the level of dominance that Gordon has shown in this competition and months and years leading up to it. Also, the fact that Andhra Gavau is also a coach of a large team. So there is some pressure to demonstrate to the team that the all lines still got it. Yeah. I can't speak for Andre, but I know for Gordon, it's hard to be intimidated when you know the other guy has no method of finishing you. It's, it just takes so much pressure off. When you just go in this end, there's literally no way this guy can finish me.
Starting point is 01:48:32 And there's no way this guy can pin and control me. I can't be finished. I can't be pinned and controlled. The only way I can lose this is if this guy plays a tactical game. the only way I can lose this is if this guy plays a tactical game. So in his best case scenario, I lose by tactical, by a tactical game, but from Andres perspective, it's like, if I make one screw up, this kid could finish me. Like it's, you can see which way the intimidation game goes. Now, for the start, things get interesting here. We've already said, if you could just freeze it right there,
Starting point is 01:49:07 Andres' only realistic path to victory is standing grappling. Okay, that would require him to take Gordon down, presumably multiple times, after the first 10 minutes, and not be taken down at all by Gordon. So, it's a tall order, it's possible, but difficult. And here's where things get interesting. I told Gordon before the match, just go out and offer him the leg, same way we do with Nikki Rod. And that's where things get interesting. I must say that I'd loved what Andre Guevon did at the start of this match. He's a little crazy here. This is, there was so much energy in the room at this point that his hand-finding got out of the way.
Starting point is 01:49:47 For people to just listen, there's a bit of hard slapping. That would be considered a strike. That's fine. There was just a lot of electric atmosphere in the room. So now things settle down a little bit. But here's where things get interesting. Andre throws the whole tactical game out the window right from the start. He goes for the take down. Gordon doesn't try to fight the take down because it's in his interests to go to the ground. But I love this about Andre. He's literally like, fuck you kid. Let's see how good your ground game is.
Starting point is 01:50:21 So he shoots the take down. And Gordon accepts that obviously because it's to his advantage to accept it. But I love the fact that Andre was like, I'm not even going to try and store this out. I'm just going to bang. There it is. So he's like, okay, let's see what you've got, kid. They say you're good on the ground. Let's see what you're fucking got. And I love that about Andre. Unfortunately, he's entered the Hornets' nest now. What happened there real quick? Because that was very good and immediately went into Ashi Garami.
Starting point is 01:50:51 Not just any Ashi Garami, but Ashi Garami was holding both legs. So there's an open garden, scooted forward. Oh, wow, that's really nice. So he's against the legs. Now he dominates the space between the knees. So there's a guaranteed straight usher around me here. He's split the knees against Andrega. Wow, like effortless right there.
Starting point is 01:51:11 Wow. So already Gordon's in his preferred domain now. So he's starting to off balance his opponent. He's looking for a reaction to get heel exposure. He does get heel exposure. Andres does a good job of monitoring the feet to try and reduce the braking pressure, but the brute factors that's in Gordon's realm now. This is where he has all the advantage.
Starting point is 01:51:35 And the match is going to be 20 minutes of in Gordon's realm. That's going to be a very, very tall order. realm. That's going to be a very, very tall order. Was there a moment here? Again, going on the legs. Are you impressed that Andrew is able to get out from this? I would expect this. Andrew has been preparing for this for two years. And, um, uh, remember, Andrew has gone against some of the greatest leg lockers in grappling before and prevailed. So he's not naive. He knows how to defend himself. The big problem is that he's going to create defensive reactions, which lead into other
Starting point is 01:52:14 aspects of Gordon's game, in particular back exposure. So here, Ashe Gurami goes to a single leg type of that where Gordon runs to Andre's back. Now I have to return him to the mat. The most efficient way to do so is always courtesy of foot sweeping. So he pulls out a Diashi Harai from the back to sweeping down to the mat and now Gordon's on top. And this is a serious problem for any grapple in the world. Once Gordon gets top position, he's just relentless.
Starting point is 01:52:52 But just getting André Gavaz good, just getting the guard back all of that. This is great. There's also a scene here in which Gordon is pacing it too, just to physically fatigue an opponent. So it's passing the guard, but not rushing it. Now what Gordon's looking for here is complete chase to chase contact. He's getting very close to it now. And once he gets chase to chase an opponent in top position, pass one of his opponent's knees. It's going to be awfully, awfully difficult for an opponent to recover. What is he waiting for here? Is there pressure here? There's over time, it's just where is he out? Yeah, it's part of a campaign of attrition of pressure over time. Now he's creating a situation where he's either going to get back exposure or mount
Starting point is 01:53:45 exposure. And either way is pretty much fatal when you're dealing with Gordon. Andre elected to go the route of back exposure. Now Gordon got the body triangle as on his back. Now there's one physical problem here that's Andre Galvan has a neck like a ball and he's a very short and very thick neck. So penetrating under the chin for a strangle can be a real problem. He also has extremely well developed shoulders and upper arms. So when the head comes down and the shoulders go up, there's very little real estate to work with with regards to your strangle holds. So Gordon in time will trap one of his opponent's arms with his legs in order to take away one of those strong defensive arms. There you can see the arm has been trapped and now you can start riding towards
Starting point is 01:54:39 the strangle. And now here is still difficult. It's still difficult, but things are looking good. There's still considerable amount of time left on the clock, Gordon as well ahead on points. So all the pressure, all the tactical pressure now is on Andre. You'll see the critical penetration of the jewel with the right hand. Yeah, wow. Yeah. Now I'll go in the legs for a one handed strangle.
Starting point is 01:55:18 Wow. Andre, I fought very bravely. But a strangle, it doesn't matter how brave you are. And where does the strangle actually happen in terms of, it felt like the strangle was at the blade of the, it wasn't even fully sunk in. So where does, is that the, like a full comb is like a one handed drill? There's a sense in which once you get underneath, you know the inevitable. Yeah. Follow up is again, the inevitable. You're feeling the inevitable. It's like a, um,
Starting point is 01:55:51 to go back to your chest analogy. It's like resigning in chest. Yeah. And chest is considered almost like in polite to let it run out when you understand. Yeah. When you understand the death is And when you understand that death is on the horizon. And there's a lot of respect. That was the beautiful thing. With all the trash talk and everything like that, Gordon always shows respect. I love that about the drama of combat. It's trash talk in the beginning and respect at the end. I think when you feel someone,
Starting point is 01:56:26 Andre has great skills. And when you grapple someone, you feel just how skilled they are. And it, whatever issues you had prior to the match evaporate, when you, when you feel it, okay, they're just like you, they do the same moves and same kind of concepts. And you see that there's more that bonds you together than separates you. And that's the feeling that the end of most grappling matches. So if we could talk about John Carlo,
Starting point is 01:56:55 who had an incredible performance. And I mean, there's a lot of things we can say. We can probably go through his matches. But if we could just talk without that, about some of the most impressive things he saw about him. One of the things I think you mentioned elsewhere in here is about confidence. So one of the things you saw that could really benefit him
Starting point is 01:57:13 as an athlete and competitor is to build up his confidence. Is there, can you speak to that? First of all, I should give you some background. John Carlo Badoni was a strong local black belt in Boston, teaching it out of Fariascorp. When I would film instructional videos, I would often talk to him and talk to him about his competitions and training. And he would do local competitions. He was trying to go from G-training, which is the majority of his competitor background, into no G- and he was struggling
Starting point is 01:57:47 in local competitions, especially with things like leglocking, where he had no background in leglocking and would often get submitted. So as we worked together in instructional videos, we were talking discuss how it would periodically come to the gym in New York City and come and to work out with the guys and he often struggled in the training room. He had no experience of things like body lock guard passing. This used to mean that he was many of the training sessions didn't go well for him.
Starting point is 01:58:18 He was always a very polite, well-spoken young man and worked hard. was like a very polite, well-spoken young man and worked hard. When we went to Puerto Rico and the team ended up drifting apart, when we moved into Austin, he said, you know, now that many of your athletes have left, could I come down and train with you guys full time? And I was like, yeah, I'd love to I thought it'd be a great training partner for Gordon and Gary We didn't really have any training partners at that point and Sure enough, he literally just picked up everything he had and moved down to Austin Now anyone who just moves halfway across the country to begin training that already gets my respect right there That's a big commitment and He he began training. We put him on a training schedule where first he had to cover
Starting point is 01:59:13 up his big weaknesses. He had limited attacks from bottom position. He had poor leglock defense and he was very, very vulnerable to certain kinds of guide passing which weren't part of his experience. This is all a year out from ADCC. Yes, and we should also maybe give the spoiler, which is he wins his division in a dominant fashion. He also does incredibly well at the absolute. Yeah, It was an amazing thing. To give you an idea, when he first moved to Austin, he competed in a WNO event. I don't think he scored a single point, lost a couple of matches, including matches to people in this ADCC.
Starting point is 02:00:04 He came out of that looking very depressed and he lost the Kenan Dwate, he lost to Mason Fowler. So John Culler always struck me, someone who was positionally sound, like good guard retention, things like this. But he had no offense, he had no leglock defense, and he just wasn't able to assert authority on matches It was a guy who's always gonna be tough to be because it's hard to pass his guard that kind of thing But he wasn't dangerous. He actually a question that yeah, because my interaction with him early on when he came to Austin I remember he interacted me a bunch on the match showing me stuff But I wonder if that kindness is a detriment of the confidence is there some Connection is again But I wonder if that kindness is a detriment to the confidence. Is there some connection? Again, confidence.
Starting point is 02:00:47 So killers can be nice too. Absolutely. Confidence comes from skill level. And confidence is a much more rational thing than most people describe it. People think of confidence as like this esoteric, ethereal element that you either have or you don't. When in fact, confidence is much more a reflection, a rational reflection on your past experience.
Starting point is 02:01:11 And if you're successful with your past experience and you're expecting to compete in a situation which is similar to your past experience and that past experience is mostly being successful, you'll be confident. Are you pretty confident that the Sun will rise tomorrow? Of course you are because it's done so every time in the past. Now there's no, as people like Hume pointed out, there's no supreme rational reason for believing this, but nonetheless, your confidence is high. And it's the same thing that you did. If you're performing well and skills are the reason for that,
Starting point is 02:01:47 your confidence will be high in the future regardless of what your mindset is. So it's not a question of, you know, this personality does better in competition or that personality. Ultimately, it's going to come down to your skills and your confidence will be a reflection of your accumulation of skills. So what was this journey like to a person who lost to a person who dominated the competition? Yeah. First things first, we had to say, okay, you've got an obvious weakness, leglock defense. So every day in the gym, he would be taught, okay, this is where you put your feet. This is where you position your knees. You point your knee this way, not this way.
Starting point is 02:02:27 Then you have to start sparring situations in leg locks and have to work his way out. Initially, these were like heart breaking sessions for him. Where, I mean, I've gotta give that kid full credit. Like, he just worked his way through it patiently, dealt with frustration, initial failures, and just said, I'm going to get better. Can we just look at that?
Starting point is 02:02:52 So what's the experience of those early training sessions like a form and as they talk about it? It's daunting. Are you basically dealing with the rational thought that you're not going to ever be good? Yeah, you're wondering, have I even got what it takes? Yeah. You know, think about it, he's an established player who's being an IBJF
Starting point is 02:03:12 competition. I believe he's a brown belt world champion in the G. And suddenly, a group of kids that he's never even seen before, repeatedly submitting them with leg longs in the gym. And he's like, man, this is terrible. A year from now, I was supposed to fight ADCC against people like Craig Jones, some of the best leg lockers in the world. It must have been hard, but he just stayed in there and no one worked harder than him. He just was in the gym three times a day, studying
Starting point is 02:03:46 every day. And unlike so many other people, every time he was showing something, he consciously and deliberately tried to enact it, even at the price of initial failure. Do you advise that that's a good way to go? It's the only way to go. Like, if you can't wrap your head around the idea that trying to acquire new skills will create a temporary time where your effectiveness diminishes as you're trying to bring on new skills, you're never going to make it because you'll always stay at whatever skills yet you are. The whole mental trick is to is to imbue this idea of delayed gratification. That you have to accept that when I bring on new moves, my overall effectiveness will diminish.
Starting point is 02:04:38 But there's the belief that in time, as my skill performance increases, it will increase over time, but it will come at the price of initial frustration and failure. And John Carlo made that mental switch early on in his time in Austin, and to his credit, just stuck through. Within a very short period of time, it came very hard to leglock. And even the best leglock is in the room at a hard time with them. And that's the first step in confidence. It's okay, I'm not getting finished quickly anymore. Then he had to bring in a whole new set of upper body submissions. He neglected upper body submissions when you tell about his submissions, do you mean not?
Starting point is 02:05:20 Strangal holds, arm locks, things like this. And in particular, you put very, very hard work on his strangleholds. He had always been someone who was positionally strong, he could get to the back, but he could never finish from the back. And then suddenly, in the journey side of finishing from the back. And then as Jim performance against the lesser students increased, then you bump him off against better students. And then this goes on all the way up to the best guys in the room. And in time, in a relatively short period of time, there was significant
Starting point is 02:05:52 increases in performance and success begets success and this kept going. We started to get a hint of his developing confidence in local competitions. I remember putting, seeing John Carlo compete in a local fight to win competition against the tough Brazilian kid. John Carlo just came out dominated and finished with a leg lock. Now that was interesting. It's like, okay, you're the guy that used to get finished by leg locks. And now you're beating tough opponents with leg logs and that was an important psychological step for John Colour Badoni.
Starting point is 02:06:32 With each little step as we went further and further, then he got to ADCC Trials and had one of the great performances. I believe he submitted all of his opponents and ADCC trials and put on a fantastic display of grappling. Shockingly, no one paid attention to it. They were just like, oh yeah, he won. And John Cale flew into ADCC completely under the radar. They just saw him as well.
Starting point is 02:07:00 He's the guy that won American trials. And no one really paid much attention. In his first match, he took on a great Brazilian champion, Izzaki, and won an dominant fashion. He was about to strangle him with just a few seconds left on the clock. And I remember John Culley being furious at the end of the match, thinking like I was so close to finishing, he wanted a perfect finish and up on point six to nothing. And he could have just hosted at this point, but he wanted to finish everyone of his opponents. And he got very, very close, but not quite there.
Starting point is 02:07:40 And then in his next match, he had to take on the defending gold medalist from the previous ADCC. Yeah, Matez and you this was the guy who was the favorite to win. So you have a relatively unknown John Kahlo fighting the man who defeated Craig Jones in the previous ADCC. What do you remember what stood out to you about this match? So, I think it's a nice, good wrestling, good everything. Yes. Got all the wrong grammar. He's got, by Judith's, who's saying he's a very strong racer.
Starting point is 02:08:12 So, our intention was to match his wrestling with John Cardo's judo skills. So you will see if we could perhaps go back. You'll see the first take down. On drag and took him down with a simple drag and pick. So that was John Colors first take down. That was more wrestling oriented and good for his confidence to see that he could score a nice takedown. But Mateus Denise is very, very good at standing up from bottom position.
Starting point is 02:08:50 If we just go back to the step, okay. Now, here we have something interesting. Mateus comes up from bottom, sees his leg and John Cullo defends the wrestling move and then goes immediately into... With a mix of society and Diashi Harae. That was beautiful. I didn't even notice that. That's really nice. Look at that. From from defending a single, threatening a G 18, one of the big themes of our ADCC camp was that most of our opponents now are getting very strong in hand fighting. Look at that. But they are not strong in foot fighting.
Starting point is 02:09:26 And so we put a very heavy emphasis on foot sweeping attacks. You remember Gordon Ryan took down Andre Galvan with a foot sweep. And here you have John Carler using the same technique, not from the back, but from the front. And the Nova Hook, Lava inputting. Catches the foot mid-air. Look at it. And it's just a beautiful, beautiful takedown.
Starting point is 02:09:51 That's beautiful, Judo. And then later on in match, you'll use a Kusura Gake, another classical Judo takedown to get top position. Now at one point, John Carlo was in trouble. He got his back exposed with this situation. Good.
Starting point is 02:10:16 Double leg to an EPIC. EPIC. So he has to expose his back in order to avoid giving up take down points, but here's a defensive training that we work on is coming through. So he has to expose his back in order to avoid giving up takedown points. But here's a defensive training that we work on is coming through. His defensively sounds, shuts out the hook, prevents the score, keeps his body at the right angle to prevent a power half-nelson. Staying calm.
Starting point is 02:10:45 Now he's got to turn this around. It's one of the hardest things to do in grappling. How dangerous is it to put your, in this position, to put your hands on the ground? It's ordinarily, it could be dangerous because your opponent could switch to a number. Oops, and there's the body lock. Now, there's some controversy here, but you can clearly see it, the hands were locked. So it shouldn't really be as controversial as people are saying. Now watch for the right leg, Kusuragake here, pulls in the hips, exposes the leg, boom, and down. Beautiful Kusuragake. Also probably a lesson that complaining to a ref does not protect you from a good take
Starting point is 02:11:32 time. Yeah. That's why they say in combat sports, the fain yourself at all times. But now the great advantage of judo take downs over wrestling leg tackles is they confer upper body connection after the takedown, which is very, very important for ADCC. That's why we put such a heavy emphasis on them. And now John Carlos is absolutely in the driver's seat.
Starting point is 02:11:55 He just scored four points for that takedown, so he's well ahead at this point against the established favorite for the entire weight division. So now Mateus Denise has to start taking some risks. He's staring down the barrel of defeat and there's not that much time left. And that's what's going to set up the pressure. Now it's tactical pressure. It's not physical pressure. It's tactical. is. Mount to back. And Giancarlo capitalizes the Tarris and Smite. He's keeping on his side so that
Starting point is 02:12:38 less than 75% of his back is on the floor to deny the mount points. But that comes at a price and that price is back exposure. So the thing we talked about with Gordon, the circumstance of fate, which is he has a lot of grueling tough matches and still chooses to do absolute. So what's in he seems to just power through all of it. What how much of it, how much of the calculation is how to survive the cardio, the grueling cardio aspect of all of this?
Starting point is 02:13:09 That's a great question and the truth of the matter is, you can't afford to pace yourself because if you say, I'm going to hold myself back for this match, an expectation of the others, you could end up losing your first match. So he didn't pay himself at all. Any of the matches. You have to just be in good shape and that's what the campus was. No, it's mostly physical. That's what the campus was for.
Starting point is 02:13:38 Like he's felt more pressure in the training room than he felt in any of his matches. But still sort of attacking. Look at this. That was a beautiful transition. From back or from whatever the heck that position was, it rate from looking for the back, transitioning here. What the heck is this transition? So Mateus is engaging in a very good tactic, which is to get most of his back off the ground to deny the mount points So as back exposure starts to carry turns in the right Right, but you can see what's happening here is the left foot goes under it's gonna create a beautiful triangle entry Right foot penetrates through underneath the neck and now he's locking a triangle is syncopated but not just any triangle a triangle with the
Starting point is 02:14:23 And now he's locking a triangle, it's in Kaku, but not just any triangle, a triangle with the figure four locked on the back of the opponent's head, which makes any kind of stacking defense very, very difficult, it makes it very, very hard for an opponent to pull away and creates a much tighter strangle than average. And as a result, it's a quick submission. Beautifully done. Still chasing the submission. Yes. He's beautifully done. Still chasing the submission. Yes. With a minute left up on points against the former champion. Against the former champion. That's match number two.
Starting point is 02:14:52 Now that's the first day. That's Saturday. So John Colour goes to sleep that night thinking, okay, I just beat a world champion in my first match and almost submitted him. And I just submitted to defending champion. So of course, he wakes up on Sunday morning feeling pretty damn good. Now there's an interesting twist here. His opponent is a talented young Irishman who won European trials. I believe almost entirely with leg logs and almost all of his major attacks in the tournament so far being leg logs. Now bear in mind that a year ago, John Carter was losing to local blue belt competitors
Starting point is 02:15:24 via leg log. So in my mind, I'm John Carter was losing to local blue belt competitors via leg lock. So in my mind I'm thinking okay how's he going to handle this with the leg lock training kick in and you'll see the result. Jack others as on top passing an open guard so you can see his legs away from any attacks. Yes. His opponent Owen from Ireland is employing the same tactics that we made famous years ago. The idea of sitting to butterfly God and looking to entangle the legs. He's kind of playing that game. So John Cutters obviously used to this from training the gym.
Starting point is 02:16:02 So he's doing a good job of preventing entanglement, controlling his opponent's shoelaces and moving out to an angle which limits his opponent's entry options. So hands on the shoelaces and angles is a good defense here. It's an initial defense. Now his opponent wants to get underneath the center of gravity. So John Kala wants to get outside the line of his legs. At some point, your opponent's going to entangle. If he's determined to entangle, at some point, it's going to happen. So, John Culler decides, okay, let's let it happen. And let's see where his feet go. And I see how disciplined he is with his feet.
Starting point is 02:16:39 And the opponent is inverted. Here, just a good job getting behind John Carlos knee. So now they're fully logged in. So John Carlos moves away to protect the heel, rotates out, controls the shoelace. Now at this point, the Irishman's starting to lose discipline with his own foot position. Okay, he's so focused on his own attack
Starting point is 02:17:04 that he's starting to get a little sloppy with his own foot position. He's so focused on his own attack that he's starting to get a little sloppy with his own foot position. He's assuming, oh, I'm the guy who's attacking, so my opponent will be afraid of my leg locks and is starting to make some small technical errors that John Carlow will be a ticket advantage of. So he's threatening the sort of the North South passer. Like, um, Yeah, he's not putting too much pressure on the past because we're still pretty early in the match and he's not ready to score yet. So here again, he turns away his heel. Now, his opponent's starting to get more and more cavalier with his foot positioning to
Starting point is 02:17:40 a point where now it's just downright sloppy. So John Gallus sees it, identifies it, locks up a wrist to wrist toe hold, and breaks his foot. How? Where's the down question? Where's the control here? How is the control comes from his opponent? The entanglement is his opponents His opponent is holding his own body in place with his own legs. So
Starting point is 02:18:13 He's the root of his own problem here So he got sloppy well done well done And a little smile from John Corp. That was very nice. The reason for that smile, you can probably guess, is because a year ago, this would have been a disaster. And now instead, it's a guaranteed ticket to the finals and either a gold or silver medal. And so you can see in that compressed moment, that's the look of a man who's just recognized just how much progress he's made
Starting point is 02:18:43 and what was once a weakness in roughly 10 months was the time it took. So he faces August Hulk by Bolsa in the final here. Now these two have a history. Hulk is beaten John Carlo many times. And so for John Carlo, it's a question of, okay, here I'm matched up against a guy who's repeatedly beaten me. How am I going to turn this around now?
Starting point is 02:19:12 And in terms of, we talked earlier about confidence. If confidence was just a mental thing, John Carlo never would have won this fight. When you've lost all those times to an athlete, words aren't going to change anything. But you can see right from the start, when they get into the hand fight, John Culler is much more technically adept with his hand fighting. He's doing a good job of controlling his opponent's hands, preventing any kind of prolonged pressure on the head. And Hulk gets a sense here in which he realizes he's fighting a very different person.
Starting point is 02:19:49 And this goes this goes a long time. Again, another super grueling match, wrestling that eventually leads to a backtake here, back triangle. Body triangle, I'll put it. Here you can see the same tactics utilized by Gordon Ryan. Back control based around the body triangle. Many attempts to try and trap his opponent's arm and take away those defensive arms. The main difference here is, again, you have an athlete with a very powerful compact neck, so neck penetration is difficult.
Starting point is 02:20:30 So John Carter will switch to a palm to palm strength on a set of the conventional figure four. And now there's eight minutes left, so all the time in the world, is it only just a matter of time at this point in situations like this? Yeah, John color has a massive tactical lead and points. There's literally no way he could lose this match at this point. Even if his opponent did get out of here and take him down, John color would still be a hit on points. John Culler would still be a hit on points. So this question, the question now is not where the John Culler will get the gold medal, but where the John Culler will get it by submission. And there it is. There's the penetration of the neck.
Starting point is 02:21:14 And he can't get the figure four. So he also, a palm department's dead. There's the submission. Now what a journey. What a job. John C John Carlos, a relatively unemotional man, but you can see there's emotion. That's not fake, that's genuine. And that's the emotions of a man who 10 months ago couldn't have done that. And then 10 months later, by dent of his own hard work and dedication and his ability to actively attack his weaknesses and turn them into strengths and then develop an ability to finish. That was a truly, truly remarkable achievement. Let me ask you about Gary Tonin. He is one of the, at least in my opinion, greatest submission grapplers of all time. There's a lot of components to that. But he lost in his
Starting point is 02:22:14 first match. Not only did Gary lose, he lost to the bottom seed of his division. And that in itself is something pretty remarkable about what's happening in ADCC, how there's a sense in which the days of the invited athletes being far superior to the trials winners over. It was a clear signal that anyone who makes it to ADCC can beat the best people. Sam McNally is a very talented submission grappler from Ireland. He specialises mostly in arm bars, but he has a good positional game as well. He has a very modern look to his to his jiu-jitsu, and he did a fantastic job against Garitonan. I think technically, Garry perhaps got a little far away from his true nature and grappling,
Starting point is 02:23:08 which is relentless submission attack. And perhaps I should be given blame for this because I put such a heavy emphasis on the training camp overall on positional pressure. I feel that worked very well for all of the athletes except Gary Tonan. And interesting. So his, his, his, you have to acknowledge the nature of the athlete. Yes. And I think it, I was coaching so hard to the, to the new people in the room on positional pressure that I neglected Gary's innate ability to it, the fact that he does best when he attacks exclusively by submission. So I think if anyone should get blamed for the failure here, it should be me.
Starting point is 02:23:49 There's another comment as maybe I'm over overvaluing that sort of just the physical aspect of this, but it seemed like Gary was look skinny as the weight cut. Yeah, he, this is the first time he ever went down to the 66 kilos. So you know, it wasn't critical. These other guys who are bigger than him, he made the weight. But the weight cut, if you can just comment on, is that does that ever play a part in the athletes, the physical and the method aspect of the wake cut. It is a thing, a con wrestling that could break even some of the toughest minds. Yeah, but no, it wasn't a wake cut that would break someone like Erichon.
Starting point is 02:24:34 And it was, it's more physical. You, you train lighter and weaker, you tend to get injured more in camp because you're lighter. We have a team now after the breakout that's mostly comprised of people over 215 pounds. So there's very few small people left in the gym. Most of the smaller athletes went to B team. So Gary's been struggling a little bit with training partners. But here I think the chief problem was that Gary focused perhaps a little too much on the positional tactical game and got away from his true gift, which is relentless hunting for submissions. And as I said, I think the person that
Starting point is 02:25:20 blamed for that is me because I had to put so much emphasis on the positional game for the developing athletes that I didn't pay enough attention to Gary's unique attributes. So this, I mentioned that posted some stuff on Reddit, so there's a relevant question here. Somebody on Reddit asked, Gordon has said, and perhaps you have said as well, that there are two types of digestive practitioners, ones who move themselves around like Marcel Garcia, and ones that control the motion of their opponents like Gordon. What are the strengths and weaknesses of each approach? And how do those different approaches apply depending on which way class you're in? That's a great set of questions.
Starting point is 02:26:04 Yes. I'm the person who promulgates this idea that there's two broad ways you can go with you to see. You can either focus on promoting your own movement to create opportunity or by restricting the other person's movement. If you're a slower, less athletic opponent, then you should definitely focus on the idea of restricting the other fellow's movement. That's how slow, unathletic people win and you did so. If you're quick with the ability to change direction, stand up quickly, go down quickly, and move like a leopard, then you're almost always better off generating movement in order to create opportunity.
Starting point is 02:26:51 So one is based more on movement. As the source of opportunity, one is based more upon pressure as the source of opportunity. So you'll get someone like Gary Tonan or the Ruatola brothers. Their game is based around the idea of promoting their own movement to create opportunity. We're a summer like Gordon Ryan or Hodgrey Gracie is about restricting movement and using that pressure to create reactive opportunity. Those are the two paths you can take in juditsu because our team now has become mostly associated with people over 200 pounds and because most of them will begin as I took the more high percentage approach of, okay, let's focus primarily
Starting point is 02:27:29 on controlling the other fellow's movement. But Gary's a unique individual and I feel like I let him down by not giving him special attention in regards to what he does. The fact that you mentioned this now like four times in the spin of a few minutes, just I love that, that all of this stuff weighs so heavy on you. He is a truly special person. It is truly interesting to see what is the nature of a particular athlete that if you highlight, makes them shine.
Starting point is 02:28:03 Let's go to the part where Gary actually loses the match. Okay, so the match is pretty innocuous at this point. The guy does a good job of turning into the arm. And Gary gets caught reaching from the knees. Okay, that's always a mistake. And the guy does it, I think there's a great job capitalizing on it. Now there's limited time left on the clock.
Starting point is 02:28:24 This guy realizes, oh, this is my opportunity. He's got good flexibility and he gets the hocks. If he just frees it right there. So there's a minute and a half left. And typically in ADCC, if you get the back, you score three points. So this is a huge score. For Gary to win here, it's gotta be by submission.
Starting point is 02:28:43 Okay, so Gary's made one mistake. Now, this talented young fellow from Ireland, there's a great job, not only of getting it back, but he really attacks well from the back. And let's look at the depth of Gary Tonin's defensive acumen here. And we should say leading up to this, his defense is incredible. Yeah, keeping everything. He's keeping pushing. I'm nickname for Gary as the slippery salmon salmon because it's like trying to hold a goddamn
Starting point is 02:29:07 salmon on the rail bank trying to hold on to this game. So he gets into a position which looks absolutely hopeless here. It gets worse. This is already bad, but it's one of the most fun things to watch about Gary's the skill in these escapes. It's incredible. It's beautiful to watch. So the guy has an excellent
Starting point is 02:29:25 opportunity to transition off here into a rare triangle, which is one of the hardest things in the world to get out of. And from here, if this was anyone but Gary Tonan, I think it would have been curtains. But you see Gary just extends, keeps his, just the right angle to pop out and gets out. So now Gary's like, oh crap, I'm gonna lose to this fucking guy. So he's got a minute left to do something. So he goes back into his submission mode. He goes back to who Gary Tonin is and immediately goes into leg lock action.
Starting point is 02:29:54 Now, the young man from Ireland realizes, hey, I'm gonna win this match against the number one seed. So Gary goes into the legs, gets to one of his favorite techniques, the heel hook. Now Gary has a brutal heel hook as heck and gets real pressure on the kids leg. Oh, that's hard to watch. Yeah, but to his credit, the kid is smart. He's like, you know, what? Let me, he just let me take some, let me take some, let me take some time. Is there a weakness to that? Like, well, he turned his hips.
Starting point is 02:30:29 Yeah, it's unclear from the video where the Gary's, uh, um, slipped up, there's considerable breaking pressure. Oh, it slipped. Yeah. Yeah, it's unclear. Even before sometimes the heel can slip because it's, we got it because something's popped. So it's unclear what happened there. There seems to be a reaction from the part of the opponent. Like, it definitely did some damage. Gary goes back for a second one. Oh no.
Starting point is 02:30:54 And again, you get that same kind of pressure. Oh no. Oh right. But I like the Irish kids reaction though. He's just like, you know what, let me eat this because I'm gonna win this match and I'm gonna be a legend for beating Gary Tonner. So I admired his internal fortitude, but now Gary knows he's lost it. So there's a sensor in which you see how
Starting point is 02:31:16 closer it gets in these situations, how little there is between winner and loser and sometimes you just get these heartbreaking situations where someone who ordinarily you would probably do very well against and you make one mistake and it's an unruording, uncompromising sport. One mistake can be fatal. In class you talked about escapes for arm locks and it plays here as well. So you were teaching arm lock escapes and I think Chokascaves. And the question came up, but once you're an athlete, not tap and risk that arm being
Starting point is 02:31:49 broken. And you quoted George Patten as, of course, you would that no bastard ever want to war by dying for his country. He wanted by making some other bastard die for his country. So what's your view on when to tap and when not to tap and competition? First off in training, you should be tapping very early because you're not getting paid to fight in the gym. You're getting paid to fight on stage, so be a professional in the gym, tap early, tap fast, that way you'll last a lot longer.
Starting point is 02:32:20 In competition, things are a little different. We also have to specify what is the situation. Okay, if you're in the first round of ADCC, your first match, you get caught. I would always expect my students to tap because if you get your leg broken or your arm broken in the first round, you still got three more matches where you get to the final. There is a escape clause there is if you're a guy from Ireland and you're fighting the number one seed. There is always an escape clause. Yeah. Like let it snap. Yeah, let it go. But your students, yes. Yeah, I would expect them to tap. I also think
Starting point is 02:32:59 that if you're in a stranglehold, it doesn't make a lot of sense and not tapping because you're going to pass out. It's like you said in chess, it's kind of impolite to make the guy take it through to its conclusion. So I don't see any heroism in just letting yourself pass out. Now things change when you get into a final. If you're in a final and you're ahead on points and you're willing to, most people at that point are going to be willing to let something break in order to win a gold medal. At that point, I leave it up to the student. It's a deeply personal decision. I would never say to a student,
Starting point is 02:33:43 I expect you to let your body break in order to win a gold medal. I think my students are more than mature enough to make up their own minds. I would be angry if they let their bodies break in a meaningless fashion in some random tournament or in a first round match where there's no way you could go on to the second, third and fourth matches with a broken limb.
Starting point is 02:34:09 But in a final, in a gold medal match in ADCC, I would leave the decision to them, a spontaneous decision in the moment. I would be confident that I had prepared them to do their very best to defend themselves. But what ultimately they do is their decision. And winning ADCC is for a grapple or at least life changing. You're a world champion forever. And no one can ever take that moment away from you. So I would, I would understand if they took a decision to take damage. Hopefully it will never come to that because I do a good job of preparing people to get out of situations that he saw with Gary Turner. He was in a dreadful situation and got out within five seconds.
Starting point is 02:34:51 Gary's been in, I'm lost, that looked like even I was in the corner going like, oh my God, what is happening here? And still got out. So it comes out to training preparation. But if they did make that decision, I would understand provided it was a situation that would make their lives better. And they made a calculation. It's on an emotional thing. Now, sometimes you get emotional or you fight a guy you just don't like and you just don't want to tap to him. Then things get a little more interesting. I then
Starting point is 02:35:24 Then things get a little more interesting. I then, again, it's a personal decision. If you hate someone so much, you literally can't even conceive of yourself submitting to them. Probably best you don't get into matches with them in the first place. But if it should happen, again, it comes down to the student. I teach technique, not morals. So I let people make their own decisions on that. My thing is, look, don't get injured because if you're injured, you can't
Starting point is 02:35:49 train, you can't train, you can't get better. So stay away from injuries as much as you can. So one of the other incredible stories here is, as you mentioned, Nicholas Marigali, one of the incredible, key athletes Jiu-Jitsu world, not ever having done no-gui training or competition. So on an period of a year, actually a significantly less than a year. Nicholas only came about six months, I believe, before RADCC.
Starting point is 02:36:19 As a phone call came from Gordon, he was like, okay, Nicholas wants to come down and train, he wants to move to Austin. Yeah. So he came down. It was funny. I remember the first day Nicholas came in. Nicholas Miragelli, as you can see, he's just tall, handsome Brazilian guy with a great
Starting point is 02:36:36 personality and a wonderful smile. They're also super nice guy. So he comes in, he sits down on the mat and we're all kind of looking at the new guy and Introducing ourselves and I look at my go buddy. What the fuck are you doing here? And he's like what do you mean? And I go like look at you. You're like Tall and good looking you should be a fucking model not a few days ago Look at us. We're all fucked up with Horrible bodies and bad personalities. You're like a you're like a happy good-looking guy You should be surrounded by supermodels. What are you doing Judith Sufour?
Starting point is 02:37:07 And he just laughed and he started down training with us. So he came in, now historically, he has been an athlete who always pulled guard. And Judith Sufour's violence for your viewers. And Judith Sufour, you have the option of sitting down to the ground. Judith was mostly performed on the ground. You can, and many athletes take advantage of this. They just come out and sit to the ground position and completely forego take downs. Nicholas did this his entire career.
Starting point is 02:37:38 Judith also was practiced both Ghee and No Ghee. Nicholas was a shining light in the Guy side of Judith, who is one of the great champions of his era, but he had not only never competed without a Guy, he had never even trained without a Guy. So there's significant differences between the two. There's a lot of overlap, but there's also some very significant differences. We're talking about a sport where even small differences can make a difference between a guy who gets the gold medal versus the guy who loses his first match. It doesn't take a lot. So this was a very, very tall order. A lot of his attacks involved the Guy from the guard. Absolutely. He's in a very dangerous attack. He doesn't just wear
Starting point is 02:38:23 the guy. He really uses the guy. Like his 90% of all, he's based around his, based around a combination of cross and straight collar controls with, with the control of the sleeve cuff. And so he really actively uses the gear. So when it came off, his first training decisions were like, oh, it's like a fish out of water. In addition, he had no experience of leg locking. So one of the most significant parts of the modern game, he just had nothing. Plus the rest thing. He had literally zero wrestling, which is half of ADCC is based around this. So ADCC is like six months away, and he has to get ready for the GEE World Championships. Nicholas had won many accolades in GEE judo suit, but he had never won the Open Weight Division of GEE Worlds.
Starting point is 02:39:11 So he's like, the first day he's there, he's like, John, I want to be the first guy to win GEE Open Weight and ADCC Open Weight in the same year. Yeah. I'm like, I'm like, yeah. Now, in my mind, I'm thinking, yeah, that's never going to fucking happen. You're fucking wet. Do you think there was a degree to which he actually believed that? A degree. He thought it was like a certainty.
Starting point is 02:39:46 So he's looking at me like, yeah, I'm going to do this. So I'm like, you know, well, Nicholas, this is this is very loadable and I approve of your confidence. But this is a difficult goal. You've set yourself. Perhaps maybe like 2024 would be a more realistic, right? He's like, no, no, I'm going to do it. In all seriousness, it is incredible that Nicholas Meragali had the gust of such a nearly impossible goal. So what do you learn from this experience of sending a goal that most people would say is just unachievable and him actually almost doing it. It's on the surface. It's absolutely crazy. Like when he mentioned the goal to me, I was, as I said, just looking at him and almost like disbelief, I didn't want to show it on my face.
Starting point is 02:40:33 Um, and yet he came within inches of actually doing it. He won his first ever gold in the open weight with a key and got to the finals. Uh, and lost a tight decision in the finals and take a silver medal. He wanted two golds, he got a golden silver, and there's a sense in which the sheer audaciousness of the gold set seemed ludicrous when it first happened. This is insanity. And yet he came out of with a plan, he came at it with his characteristic passion and hard work and came with an inches of doing so. And there's a
Starting point is 02:41:10 sense in which you could look at it as, oh, he had a plan and it failed. And yet, of course, no one in the right mind would look at it. That was a, he set on a decious goal so high that it seemed impossible. And it pulled this entire performance up to a level where even failure creates something truly memorable. Do you encourage athletes or do you not get in their way when they're such a goal? Maybe even just forget athletes, human nature. Yeah, that's a great question. There's a sense in which you know, you don't want to make people delusional That that's that but I do believe that if people are sufficiently Embedded in a given project if they committed to it to a certain degree
Starting point is 02:41:59 Then you can skimp on many things in life, but don't skimp on your goals Okay, because the bigger your goals, the bigger your achievements will be. And even failure, as we saw in the case of Nicholas Merrigali, you, I, I almost frowned use the word failure because if this is failure, give, give me more of it, you know, following slightly short, a full, full, full in short of, of, of what would otherwise be a perfect year. Um, even that still creates such a massive uptick in your performance that it's absolutely the right way to go. But there is a danger to this
Starting point is 02:42:36 where people aren't committed and simply aren't working from a framework where they can realistically achieve these things. Then it descends into delusion. And that direction goes towards madness. You can't have that. So there has to be some kind of reality check here where you have to be physically and mentally capable to some degree of moving towards these goals. You can't just, you know, a random blue belt can't make audacious goals like that. It's just ludicrous. But with that in mind, if you're committed and there's a sense in which this is a definite possibility, set your goals high. Okay, make big demands. Yes, there'll be times of frustration. There'll be more failure in your lives than otherwise, but even your failures will be something great, something memorable.
Starting point is 02:43:28 See, but in the near term, you would be hard pressed to find any data that justifies that goal, because in his case, he probably wasn't very good and no-guy in the training room. So it's like, where do you look for even inklings of hope? We saw it in incremental progress with each success of competition that he was in. His first competition, he looked good, but not great. Second competition, a little better, third competition took on one of the legends of American grappling and one decisively. So there was a sense in which it was becoming more realistic with each outing. So now, now putting that inspiring philosophy aside, what was the actual plan on how to make it happen?
Starting point is 02:44:18 So the leg locks. First, the same thing with John Karour. First, you have to learn how to defend a leglock. So, initially, as John Colour struggled, he struggled. Then he had to learn not just take down, but just how to set up a take. I had to learn basics like stance and motion and how to fight with the hands, et cetera, et cetera. So he had to learn from the ground up. And then he had to learn from the ground up and then he had to improve. He always had a very good triangle, always had a very good amba. There was two strengths coming into the no-gi training. And those translate pretty well between gui and no-gi. But he had no gui at in, he had no, his strength from the back, he has great collar strength from the back, but he really, really struggled with finishing people from the back were he has great collar strangles from the back, but he really really struggled with finishing people from the back.
Starting point is 02:45:06 So he's learning all this and then he's like, well, now I've got to get ready for the gig. So we had to switch his training to to gig training. And that took out a couple of months. Then he got it. He went back briefly to Brazil and got a terrible rib injury right before the World Championships and came back like more or less unable to move. So the World Championships is a weak way and he's like, John, I can't move. So I'm like, what are you going to do? I'm going to compete. So I'm like, you're sure. So we fly to California, he goes out, competes. His first opponent is literally the biggest man who competes in
Starting point is 02:45:45 Juditson. This man is almost like 400 pounds. Nicholas has got completely broken ribs, we're taping up his ribs backstage before he goes out to compete. He beats everyone by submission and wins for the first time the open weight. A title he had never won before. He steps off the mat, looks at me, he goes, well, I got the first of them. He wanted to keep open weight and now ADCC. And now we can barely move. He's still gone through two days of brutal competition and his ribs are completely screwed up. Takes a week off to try and get his ribs somewhere back in order and then begins light training building up to ADCC. We start putting him in no-ge competition. He fights two opponents of good quality but not like world-beating quality.
Starting point is 02:46:38 And then as his game starts improving, we're getting closer and closer. He's starting to develop a sense where he can wrestle confidently on his feet. He's no longer easy to leglock at all and is starting to leglock people and is starting to get his very strong guard passing, which was based mostly around pant grips in the key to adapt to leg, no ghee grips. In addition, he's starting to develop strong chested chest positioning, which was never really part of his game, a pressure top game. So things are looking good.
Starting point is 02:47:20 He's matched against Rafael Lovato, one of the great competitors of ADCC and wins a convincing victory featuring a lot of takedowns and a lot of pressure passing and people would just Absolutely shocked. I remember the staff of flow grappling coming out of like Who is this guy's like he's literally transformed. He's like a different person So he goes into the world championships is In his weight division, he was matched with a fellow Brazilian in the first match and they had an absolute bond-burning battle where at one point Nicholas was picked up and slammed and then ended up winning by Kimura, a beautiful Kimura. Then he took on the man who ultimately wins ADCC openweight division and defeats him
Starting point is 02:48:08 You're ruling matches. Yeah, tough tough match now you're a simo. That stage was two-time gold medalist in ADCC Nicholas wins a very very close match against him and then fights Craig Jones who's one of the best leg lockers in the world So I think most people were expecting Nicholas to get leglocked very easily by Craig. Nicholas showed the degree to which he had improved his leglock defense in a six-month period. Craig never really got close to the legs. And ended up becoming a takedown battle. Could have gone either way. Craig, I thought, did a really good job of pacing
Starting point is 02:48:45 himself. Both athletes were very tired, but Nicholas was ahead on points, and then Craig hit one last take down, which sat Nicholas down to a hip. It didn't score, but it was the most aggressive take down of that last period. And so Nicholas got the nod and won a narrow victory. Yeah. Craig commented afterwards. He said that I really wanted the submission. And he said, Nicholas, he really wanted the submission, but ended up being a grueling match. He took everything. Yeah, like exhaustion wise, everything he had. It was a tough, tough match. And they were very well matched. Once they figured out they couldn't submit each other, it came down to their wrestling ability. Neither one of them is a wrestling specialist,
Starting point is 02:49:29 but they're both competent and wrestling. And it became physically very, very tough. Then Nicholas went on to win the bronze medal in his weight division. So the next day, when we get called for the open weight, obviously John Carlo won a gold medal. Everyone agreed that he should go into open weight and the John Carlo Louguerie. Of course he was. I mean like because he didn't have easy format. You don't order people until you ask. No, no, I guess the question I'm asking is, how do you find the strength to then go on to absolutely
Starting point is 02:50:09 after, because you've done a 14 week training camp where every day was just as intense as any ADCC day, so you're used to it at that point. But he had very, very long tough matches. But he's used to it. He's a good athlete. So Nicholas and John Carlo went out. And John Carlo had a spectacular submission victory against his first opponent.
Starting point is 02:50:35 Nicholas had some firework matches. And one of the toughest opponents he came up against was the brilliant Ty Ruotolo. They had an absolute barnburner. It was a very, very close match. And Ty had an incredible first two matches. He'd beaten Pedro Marino by submission, and he'd beaten the great Felipe Pena in a very narrow match.
Starting point is 02:51:02 Very, very tight. Felipe lost on a guard pole, but Philippe is considerably bigger and stronger than Tai. So for Tai to win that match, even by guard poles, it was deeply impressive. It was an action-pack match that went back and forth, very, very impressive. Can I ask you just another small tangent?
Starting point is 02:51:20 Both are a total of brothers and an incredible performance. What do you think makes them so good? If you were to analyze their game, sort of outside of you in this specific way. Absolutely. There's a range of factors. One is that they started the sport very, very young. They're probably the first example in American grappling of American students who started at age four or five. Most people
Starting point is 02:51:47 when I began juditsu, started juditsu as adults. I was 28 years old when I had my first lesson as a white belt. So in time, people got a little younger. For example, Nikki Ryan started when I think when he was 12. but the rule told us started when they were literally children. They had excellent coaching going all the way up through into their teenage years. So they had the advantage of starting the way so many successful athletes do as children and going up through adulthood and with strong coaching all along the way. Excellent parental support.
Starting point is 02:52:27 So they had like a great history where their youth didn't show off just how long they'd been in the sport. Right. So you're dealing with a kid who's 19 years old but he's been grappling for 15 years. And what counts is not your age but your mat age and quality mat. Now they were very young in years but they were very old in mat age. But there's a lot of athletes that have now, as you correctly said, have spent from a very early age on the mat, but still the particular one
Starting point is 02:53:06 is stand out. It's interesting. Yeah, no, there's a lot more to it than that. It's just the first sitting the scene. But what really makes them stand out is that they've mastered this idea of of covering up and improving initial weaknesses while building upon strengths. When the Rural Tolas first encountered my students, they were relatively easy to leg lock because none of their training experience had prepared them for that. Now they were young at that time. I believe like 16 or 17 and it was an obvious problem for them. They both got heel hooked by my youngsters also Nikki Ryan and Ethan Cranston and you could clearly see that they identified their current weakness and made prodigious steps to improve upon it, to a point now where they're winning championships with their own
Starting point is 02:54:10 leg logs. I love the fact that even as teenagers, they had the maturity to say, okay, here's an obvious weakness, let's get around this, let's turn it into a strength. I love the way they did that. And focusing on the weakness and let that guide you to the thing you're working on, but they also that they cover up their weaknesses, but they also understood what are our actual strengths. Now physically both of the brothers have extraordinary reach for their height. They both have extraordinary long arms for their height. That means that variations of kate-kata-me in particular dhasa's anacondas are going to be much easier for them and their weight division than for most people. These are all jokes. Yes, strangleholds. So they specialize in those. They adapted
Starting point is 02:54:58 a game based around movement, which forces opponents not with physical pressure, but with tactical pressure into positions which expose them to those specialized strangle holes that they use. Traditionally, when we looked at the real tolls when they were young, we saw that there was a disparity between their top game and their bottom game. They were generally much better in top position than they were in bottom position. Again, they saw that as a potential weakness and they turned it around using, again, their unique long limbs relative to their height and they make use of a buggy strangle. I'm not sure why it's referred to as a buggy strangle, but it's basically it's a variation of cardicatama using the legs done from disadvantageous positions on bottom.
Starting point is 02:55:48 And they both make brilliant use of that to not so much as a strangle weapon, occasionally they'll strangle some of it, but they mostly use it to create pressure to make people back off. And as a result, they're able to, they overcame the disparity between their top game and their bottom game. Now their bottom game is part of their offense and they're very, very successful from there. And so again, you had that really impressive sense in which they identified their weaknesses and leglocks in bottom position, turned around and made it into strengths.
Starting point is 02:56:19 And at the same time, they identified, okay, what are our physical gifts and how can we maximize their use? And they created a program of initiating movement that created tactical rather than physical pressure to set up their best strangleholds. I deeply admire what they've done. Those two young men have a huge future ahead of them. And so here, one of the brothers faces in the absolute Nicholas Meragali. And Ben Mine, Ty has just fought two very tough matches against Guy's bigger and stronger than himself.
Starting point is 02:56:51 So he's coming into a third match against a third guy who's also bigger than he is. So hats off to Ty, fighting open weight against three monsters in a row. Now Ty and Cade, one of their best attributes is they are two of the best scramblers in the sport of G-detsu. So, whenever you go to shoot on the legs with them, there's a danger of running straight into a dar stranglehold. They're very competent at counterattacking single legs with dar strangles. It's also very hard to control them after a takedown.
Starting point is 02:57:24 They do a very good job of springing back up to the feet. So I told Nicholas to favor upper body judo base takedowns rather than wrestling takedowns. And you see here a fine example of Nicholas' gathering skill in Uchimata, one of the great throws of judo. Set up with a bit there's a bit of a foot, a foot sweep. Like good. The nice thing is he starts off with what it looks like.
Starting point is 02:57:53 It's actually a two directional ultramarital. He threatens ulti Gary to the back. That's a throw that throws your opponent to the back. He's opponent pushes into him. That he changes direction with a support foot and takes him over with Uchimata. As we said earlier, the great advantage of Judo over wrestling is that because there's upper body connection during the throw and after the throw, it's much harder for an opponent to scramble away from you.
Starting point is 02:58:17 And even Ty Ruitalo is one of the best scrammers in the sport as to stop scrambling here and just go back to guard position and enable Nicholas to hold top position. And some of it is also the surprise. There is something less understandable about judo techniques because there is less data. It feels like. The rules of it also have a good entrepreneur. I think they're very familiar with it. How often do you think are they and they're receiving a note at your
Starting point is 02:58:45 mother? That's a good point. So I just feel like they have more data in terms of defending. I mean, of course, there is fundamentals to each model that make it difficult to scramble around. But this is a good example of someone who literally didn't have a single take down six months ago. Now he's throwing one of the toughest guys in the sport
Starting point is 02:59:05 with one of the more difficult throws of judo. At your judo, man, you'll back me up and say, Uchumar, it's not an easy throw to learn. It takes some time. You're hopping on one foot with both of your body weight support or one foot. Yeah, it's really. It's one of the more difficult throws.
Starting point is 02:59:20 Let go of your understanding of takedowns, of maybe your wrestling style takedowns downs or more intuitive kind of take downs to understand it. There's many throws like this which a garris like this, soda garris like this, chimadas like this, it's weird. What? I'm on one foot. I'm hopping around. It's mixing no sense. But it works. Foot sweeps are also weird in that way. There a little bit bit more intuitive, but to get very good at foot sweeps, you have to understand timing, weight distribution. It's a dynamic thing that's weird. I always laugh when I talk to Nick, and I say, I try to teach him a single leg, which is traditionally, most, you know, like a high single leg is one of the easier takedowns to perform
Starting point is 03:00:06 in terms of mechanical difficulty. And Nicholas always struggles with it. And then I teach him one of the more difficult takedowns which amata, and he does it flawlessly. Yeah, you never know. It's certain things get attached. I mean, you see this in judo, it's kind of interesting to see
Starting point is 03:00:23 there's classes of takedown take downs and certain people just gravitate in their philosophical intuitive understanding of body mechanics or something like this. It's like say no give versus a jimata. You very clearly see there's some people that understand they like to have both their feet planted on the ground. And there's some people that are okay with this one foot on the ground and the other one is doing something else. And I think that I don't know what that, what is that? I don't know, it's what makes you fall in love with one field versus another. So what can you speak to that that you know you've released a new instructional on take downs and standing skills for Jiu-Jitsu just at a high level using Nicholas as an example.
Starting point is 03:01:11 What are some key ideas about take downs? Okay, first, whenever people talk about standing position as you see, they always say, oh, I need to learn some takedowns. But it's never a question of just learning to take down. It's learning to prerequisite to the takedowns. The takedowns are more or less like an afterthought. You've got to begin with stance, motion, the ability to engage in grip and contact, get your opponent out of balance, and then comes the takedowns. The takedowns in juditsu are mostly divided into a lower body takedowns, tackles the legs,
Starting point is 03:01:51 single legs, double legs, to a lesser degree high-crotch in juditsu, and then upper body takedowns, which are mostly judo-derived. Nicholas had to start more or less at the ground. I mean, you know how to come out and make grips or hold a stance. So he had to learn every element of it. And the fact he was able to do so in six months is just incredible. Can you comment on the upward posture? That's the important thing. The matches and you did so much longer than the matches in wrestling. In addition, there are many kinds of submission threat,
Starting point is 03:02:30 which are not there in wrestling. So the stance has to be significantly changed. In wrestling, they favor generally a very low crouch, because the vast majority of attacks are tackles to the legs. So anyone who stands upright and wrestling tends to get heavily punished by being taken down immediately with a leg tackle. In Judith's through the matches, there's so much longer, it would be difficult in a 40-minute match, for example, to maintain a bento or a crouch. You'd be exhausted.
Starting point is 03:02:58 There's also problems associated with submission holes. There are many forms of submission hole guillotine's dacet. Or if your head comes down too low, you become a little vulnerable to this. And so the stances in, due to the competition tend to be much more upright, more like judo and greco. So right off the bat, you see the stances are different. The motion tends to be much slower and more evenly paced because you've got to be able to do this for long periods of time. So the number of fakes per minute, the number of shots attended per minute is usually much lower. So these are obvious differences. The biggest difference, however, has nothing to do with that, has to do with tactics. And you did see these scores will be judged by what happens after the takedown. In the case of ADCC, you can take someone down in ways that would score in both wrestling
Starting point is 03:03:57 and judo and possibly even win the match in the case of judo. And it would score zero in ADCC because of the nature of the rules. The whole idea of ADCC scoring is to demonstrate control after the takedown. It's what happens in the critical three seconds after the takedown that creates the score. In judo and in wrestling, the emphasis is based on the takedown itself. And you did see the emphasis is placed on the aftermath of the takedown. That's where the score is allocated. And that can be a period of up to three seconds.
Starting point is 03:04:36 Now, three seconds doesn't sound like much, but in a scramble after a takedown, three seconds is a fucking eternity. It goes on forever. And so you will see many examples of takedowns that, as I said, would score very well in judo and wrestling, but don't score at all on ADCC. And so the whole skill becomes packaging the standing position in terms of the takedowns themselves,
Starting point is 03:05:02 but in particular, preparing the athletes for that critical three seconds after the takedown. That's why many people who have very fine wrestlers struggle in ADCC, they take people down by wrestling metric all the time, but don't score on the ADCC rules. What makes GSB so good at takedowns? I've got it in GSB, so even recently, I watch them at takedowns. Now, God, and he has to even recently watch him do takedowns. Within this framework that you're teaching, what stands out to you about him that you draw
Starting point is 03:05:32 lessons from. Yeah. That's another example of someone who's performing takedowns in a rule set radically different from wrestling. Just as the ADCC rule set is so different from conventional wrestling rulesets, that the whole manner of what you approach takedowns and even your understanding of takedowns has to be quite strongly modified. So to an MMA it's even more extreme. People always think, oh, this guy is a good wrestler, he should be able to get takedowns in MMA easily.
Starting point is 03:06:06 What you find is that the wrestling skills in MMA enable you to finish takedowns. If you get in on your opponent and get to the legs or the waist or what have you, your wrestling skill will enable you to finish the takedown. But getting to the takedown is massively different in the context of MMA than it is in wrestling. The entire stance is different. The entire set of distancing is different. There's the idea of positioning within a cage, like how close you are to the perimeter of the cage, changes radically how you approach the takedown.
Starting point is 03:06:43 The sit-ups are literally night and day different. The setups are almost entirely composed of striking setups rather than grappling setups. And so the act of getting to the takedown is like a completely different sport. Our George studied wrestling and used to go to wrestling practice twice a week in Canada. They do freestyle wrestling that don't use the American college style of wrestling. Now George's main emphasis in wrestling training was takedowns. Obviously the whole ground element of freestyle wrestling was no interest to him, like learning how to put people back on the ground and turn them with leg laces and gut wrenches was of no value in MMA.
Starting point is 03:07:29 So he devoted almost all of his studies to just the act of taking someone down. So as in pure wrestling, George is not bad. I think he would be a very competitive match, even for a highly ranked American freestyle wrestler. Obviously, he would lose easily on the ground because he's not used to the part here. He'd probably be leg-laced or gut-wrench quite easily by a skilled opponent. But in just a pure takedown barrel, he would be a competitive training partner for even a good wrestler.
Starting point is 03:08:01 But in actual MMA competition, he could take down even the most highly credentialed wrestlers. And in some cases, look, make it look almost effortless. And that came from his unification of striking skill with wrestling. So he used wrestling skills to finish the takedown and his karate and kickboxing pedigree to enter into the takedown. Now, when he initiated the study of this, this is at a time when MMA was pretty much in his infancy. And he was one of the most impressive people
Starting point is 03:08:39 I've ever seen in this regard. He was a true innovator. He innovated this specialized area of striking to a take down to a greater degree than anyone else I'm aware of. Well, let me ask you about this innovation because you're one of the most innovative body lock, now wrestling. What's your process of innovation? So seeing the problems in a particular system, the gaps. How do you identify them? And how do you figure out systems of how to fill those gaps? First thing I look for is what are the current weaknesses
Starting point is 03:09:36 in a given combat sport? So in the case of Judith, it was very obvious that, historically, Judith would always be weak in leg locking. Judith would always be weak in standing position overall, and these were things that needed to be sorted out immediately. And its infancy, mixed martial arts was divided between grapplers and strikers. And most of the emphasis in early mixed martial arts was on the idea of specialists in a given domain forcing the fight into their domain.
Starting point is 03:10:19 And that my early work with George St. Pierre convinced me that the right approach wasn't increased specialization and learning to force your athlete into that area of specialization at the expense of the opponent, but rather the real battles of the future would be one and last not with techniques per se, specialized techniques, but rather the integration of techniques and the overlap between the various grappling and striking skills. So that someone who was an inferior grappler would have just enough grappling skills to be able to hold a grappler off and then defeat them with striking and a striker who was, if you went to fight someone who's superior to you in striking, you would have just enough striking skill to be able to hold them at bay and then enter into grappling. This went further and further until it got clear that there were whole areas of the sport that needed, you
Starting point is 03:11:25 need to change your entire mindset about them. So that people went into early MMA thinking in terms of grapple and striker. What I started to think is in terms of, okay, there are four fundamental skill areas of mixed martial arts. There is shoot boxing, which is the integration of takedowns and striking. There is clinch boxing, which is the integration of upper body clinch skills combined with striking. There is fence boxing, which the two athletes are locked up with each other on the fence.
Starting point is 03:12:05 And they have to integrate, take down, take down defense and striking skills. And there was grapple boxing, which is the merging of ground grappling with striking. And when you broke MMA down into those four categories, you saw that each one of those four domains transcends the specialized martial arts that form their components. So for example, in clench boxing, you would incorporate things from judo, greco, roman,
Starting point is 03:12:35 freestyle, juditsu submissions, moitai, clenching techniques. But even if you took all five of those, the rule set that you're operating in requires such extensive modification that the final product of clinch boxing transcended all five of its component martial arts and became its own autonomous skill needed to be worked autonomously. And when we broke, George is training down into those four areas, that's when real progress started to be made. That's when you started to see the integration of those four phases and the striking and grappling within each of them was where victory was being won and and and law what's your reframe how you see a particular combat sport. Then you could start doing these detailed development of ideas that actually like they
Starting point is 03:13:36 fit. There's a sense in which it had to start with a paradigm shift and then a research program began after that. You don't start with research, you started with the paradigm shift and then went to research. Well, let me ask you, I got a chance to hang out with you and Handsome Gracie at ADCC. He keeps messaging me saying he's going to call me and not call me. I think aside from being hilarious, charismatic and handsome, he is also serious, charismatic and handsome. He is also, and wise for his young age, he's also one of the greatest coaches and athletes of all time in martial arts.
Starting point is 03:14:15 So let me ask, what have you learned about life from Hanso Gracie? The degree of difficulty that Hanso must have encountered. He never talked to us about it because but I figured this out as the years went by. The degree of difficulty that he must have experienced when he first came to Manhattan and started teaching, it must have just been incredible. You've got to remember Hensar came from Brazil training with the best people in the world at that time, you know, Hickson, all the Machados, all of them were located around Gracie Baja and that Rio Dijonero set. They all knew each other and they all trained together. They had internal problems, of course, but they all knew each other well and knew each
Starting point is 03:15:10 other's games. So all of them had beautiful and highly developed Jiu-Ditsu. So all Hanzo Ngu from childhood on was perfect, beautiful Jiu-Ditsu, and communicating with other people who also knew perfect, beautiful Jiu-Jitsu and communicating with other people who also knew perfect beautiful Jiu-Jitsu. Then he comes to New York where he has to teach in a language that he at that stage barely spoke to a bunch of fucking morons who didn't even on my first day in Jiu-Jitsu they had to explain to me the difference between the mountain the guard Because it was fires eyes concerned. Yeah, you're on top the same thing. Yeah, and they're gonna like no
Starting point is 03:15:51 Mounted is different from God and I'm like no, it's not like you're on top of the guy. You just hit him So he has to argue with you about the and Machine going from training with with Hicks and Gracie to having to tell some more on that God is different from Mount. And we was so primitive back then, he went from the best training culture in the world to literally the worst. Just a bunch of guys in their mid-20s who knew nothing about the ground. Well, luckily he's known white first patients. But out of that he molded one of the greatest gyms ever in New York. Yes, he did a fantastic job.
Starting point is 03:16:37 And most of it was based around the idea that he gave us complete freedom. We came in, we trained all day and I started teaching beginners classes and then some of his senior students, Hikaroa, made a Hodrigo Gracia Matcera, opened their own schools around the Tristate area. So they left. There was a vacuum of teachers and he asked me to start teaching. I taught for many, many years there and he always gave us complete freedom. So many things that were just okay, do whatever you want, just make sure it's effective. Prove to me it's effective. And that's the best research program you can ever get. Show me proof and so many times, especially in those days in juditsu, there were so many things
Starting point is 03:17:28 that were just off limits. You couldn't study Legos, you couldn't do this, you couldn't do that. This kind of game was for cow, this is the only kind of game we accept. Hanzo was never like that. He was just like, okay, just do what you want, prove to me it works. If you give people that simple structure, you give them some time some ingenuity a lot of things can happen I got to ask you and by the way he'll come in this a podcast and I do feel like it's a little bit like writing a drag And our bullsom kind it'll be it'll be a fun journey. There's I can't at least from my perspective
Starting point is 03:18:03 Having interacted with having met him. It's hard not to smile from easily one of the most charismatic people in judo school. It's kind of fun to watch. The humans can be like this too. It's just the love that radiation is incredible. I got to ask you this is from Reddit. There's a there's a there's a few legends that come from that gym. But people on Reddit kept asking about some guy named Boris. Apparently, you coached him at Hanzo's and he was a legend. And he was terrifyingly good. What made him a legend? Who's this Boris character? Boris is one of my early students. I think he was either my first or second black belt. Boris came from Long Island, he was a wrestler. He was a Russian Jewish descent and highly intelligent. Now he was a sort of stature but very powerfully
Starting point is 03:18:55 built and compact, very nice polite young man, but also slightly eccentric, which I always liked about him. He would always come dressed with glasses on and he would leave the gym dressed like to use the American phrase a complete nerd with like his pocket protector. And now he was heavily muscled, but he would dress in such way that he didn't appear so when he left. And we always used to laugh, like you mentioned some guy tried to mug Boris. They would see him with his nerdy glasses on his pocket
Starting point is 03:19:37 protector, and they would literally run into like one of the most formidable human beings in the entire New York area. Boris started training judots who I believe in Long Island and then when he got a tech job in Manhattan started training with us in a morning class. Now these were relatively early days in Manhattan and my teaching career and he and a group of others, a very small group, used to train early in the morning around 6 a.m. before work and Boris was a legend in those days. Now a very young George St. Pierre
Starting point is 03:20:14 came to Train with us at that time and he would come in at 6 a.m. to his morning class and he was one of the main training partners for Boris. And Boris being a wrestler used to generally prefer top position. And I would always encourage George to play bottom position. I said, you've got to get good and bottom position.
Starting point is 03:20:36 You never know. I know you could have take downs, but one day someone's going to put you down. So you've got to work bottom position. And Boris had very strong guard passing. I remember one of George's happiest days is finally after like two years. One day he swept Boris, got on top and finished him. And I remember that he was that was one of his biggest thrills in all of his
Starting point is 03:21:00 training career was the last time that ever happened. No, Boris was, he was a very formal man for that time. The funny thing about Boris is every time we would have a conversation, he would say, I'm only going to do the sport until I'm 40 years old. And then I'm going to stop. And I was like, why? Like, why not be like a lifelong martial artist? You know, you got so good, you're good at juditsu. You've got great skills, you've worked hard.
Starting point is 03:21:28 Why not just keep going? He's like, it's ridiculous for a man to train after 40. There's no need. You never give any reason for this. There's just ridiculous. So one day, now this guy came in literally every day, 6 a.m. every day. One day, heam every day.
Starting point is 03:21:48 One day he comes in, he comes up to be at the industry and he goes, hey John, I just turned 40. So I won't be seeing you again. And I thought he's joking. So I'm like, I'll see you tomorrow, Boris. He's like, no, you won and walks off. I'll gank just that. And then he never came back. I've never seen Boris since.
Starting point is 03:22:03 He came in with one of the best crap as I ever saw and That's it buddy. I'm out and So there's no one to walk away. Yeah I also got to hang out to get to meet hang out with Ali. I'm does these he's a hands-on greasy black belt Fourth degree judo black belt and He's a Hanzo Gracie Blackbelt, Fourth degree judo Blackbelt, and a friend and manager of Kabib Nirmangameroff who's coming down to Austin soon. We'll do a podcast. Hopefully you get on the mat and have a bit of brainstorm.
Starting point is 03:22:38 Also he's a manager and friend of many other amazing fighters. I really love the guy, the loyalty, the fact that he, he looks for loyalty and has that inner close inner circle and integrity and character and people I really like them, I connect them really quickly. But any, any fun stories about Ali? Do you train together? Yeah. See, he trained for many years in the in the basement in my classes He's His his story is one of the most unlikely stories Like if someone wrote a movie plot about his life. They'd relate this the absurd
Starting point is 03:23:17 We throw it out the door in a second and yet it all happened You're absolutely correct. He is from the unlikely as possible starts, created a situation where he's, I think it's incontestable now to say, he's the most successful manager and mixed martial arts history. He has more champions under his care
Starting point is 03:23:39 than anyone else I'm aware of, and respected and influential. So on all dimensions, yes. Now, many people aren't aware of the fact that he was actually a very good judo player. He had judoka first. Yes. He had very good nogi judo. He had an excellent Haraikoshi, very good Taniyatoshi, and he threw many people who were highly credentialed wrestlers in back in the basement, back in the glory days of MMA training. He was a good example of a guy who had very, very good judo hips and often used it to counter wrestling. And it was counter-rastling and was a fine demonstrator of the idea that when Judo is adapted to Nogi gripping, it can provide a very effective foil to many of the standard forms of
Starting point is 03:24:34 wrestling attack, and he would often use Uchimata to counter leg tackles and do so in very, very spectacular fashion. Well, what do you think about Kababeab? Is there something from just watching him or is there something you can imagine if he comes down to the gym that you might learn from the way he moves the way he approaches wrestling? Absolutely. He's one of the greatest combat athletes of all time. If you can't learn from someone like that, there's something wrong with you. So he emphasizes control. Yes, he does. And he's absolutely a master of exerting control.
Starting point is 03:25:10 The amount of grappling control he was able to put over some of the most difficult people in the world to control, it's truly a sound. And he beat people from every style. He beat wrestlers, he beat judo players, he beat kickboxes, and he controlled them all in more or less the same way. He has a very underrated bottom game.
Starting point is 03:25:31 People think, oh, he's just about stifling top control. But people forget he was taken down on several occasions and ended up in bottom position. And he showed excellent guard work from bottom. He was able to get into submission holds readily on opponents from bottom position. He's got an excellent bottom game. People say, oh, he's just a positional guy. No, he's not. He's got great submissions. The application of his triangle from both top and bottom was top class. He had a sharp analog from bottom position. Excellent. Kimura, if you look at his Kimura finishes in MMA, they were technically very, very well said. Excellent. Kimura, if you look at his Kimura finishes in MMA, they were
Starting point is 03:26:06 technically very, very well set. Excellent breaking mechanics. He's a very, very fine grappler in both submission grappling and MMA grappling. I think we'd probably learn a ton from moving around with him. Is it possible to learn something about him or about Hodger Gracie or about Gordon by watching them or rolling around them for a little bit? So maybe Hodger and Kabeepa are good examples because they're able to do seemingly very basic things on everybody and dominate them with that. I think Gordon is as well,
Starting point is 03:26:50 but Gordon seems to have more preference and range of what he's able to do. It's almost miraculous how much a hugger can do, but just like the same exact thing on everybody. Is that, like, is a possible to understand why hydro could be we're so good at very basic positions or do you have to feel it or do you have to or is it just something that's developed over? I think I think for most people for the vast majority of people, it would have to be explained to them. For a smaller group of people, if they felt it, they could try to replicate it.
Starting point is 03:27:30 And there are a few people who could look at it and have enough knowledge and say, okay, I can see what he's doing. Like, for example, Hodja could probably look at video footage, if it could be grappling, and say, okay, I understand what he's doing. But the average person would probably go over the heads. You sometimes think of these great athletes, maybe they're too narrow. You might imagine they're so focused on a particular thing. They don't develop in interesting ways.
Starting point is 03:28:01 He's just a sweetheart. He's a wonderful person to be around. Yeah, he's also visiting Austin, but just I was so, I mean, first of all, I'm honored just drinking a little bit too much in Vegas with Haja Gracie and just and talking about love and relationships and life and Death and all those philosophical topics is one doesn't Vegas. I'm a little bit too much to drink anyway After ADCC was beautiful and on top of that hanging out with Rogan Many days for you have seen the need DCC You know one thing. I don't know if you got any chance to hang out with Joe when you place pool
Starting point is 03:28:45 I so I spent a lot of time with him. We just playing pool like recently on that trip to Vegas. And there's something zen like about the first of all just watching him. But I've never seen the focus the guys got on the game for hours. Just deep focus, unshakable focus. That was so interesting to watch that this human being, he's a celebrity, he does all kinds of stuff that he's able to to allocate as close to 100% of his mind as I can imagine to a particular task and nothing can distract him. That was really
Starting point is 03:29:26 inspiring that you could still do that on any task. Cool. It was a game of physics. That should be your domain. Or it is, but that wasn't just physics. Yeah, I would think you understand the game, you understand the physics of it. You also understand the fun of it, because there's friends and laughter and so on. I would be distracted by that a little bit. I wouldn't be as close you get to the table. The more it's everything zooms in, the jokes, there's funny things, you can't get his attention on anything. It's that focus. I don't know, that stays that really stuck with stay with me that like, you know, those memes like, I want to find somebody that looks at me the way X looks at why I want to find somebody that looks at me the way Joe looks at a pool queue or whatever. The focus there, I want to find something in my life. Rather, I want to attain the level of focus he has for pool on a task that I care about. And that that focus like fuck everything
Starting point is 03:30:35 else. This is now it's time to do work. I don't know, that was really inspiring. I haven't seen that kind of focus for prolonged periods of time on a task. You just see some time. The guy, the guy is, I mean, a part of us just being competitive with himself. It's the hatred of imperfection, all those kinds of elements, but embodied in a singular focus. I had no idea even play pool. You should watch him. He won't. I think it could be one of his greatest obsessions. Like, there's deep, see, I thought pool is for like degenerates, like gamblers and like
Starting point is 03:31:16 hustlers, right? Like the same way he poker, but like, I saw like a wolf Slash like a lead athlete in Joe. I said I didn't know this. I don't know much about pool I didn't know that you could have that level of focus while still drunk out your ass, but Extremely focused. That was beautiful. See I don't know inspiring inspiring For me as a person who highly values for me as a person who highly values singular focus on a task. Let me ask you from a perspective of a hobbyist, what major practical changes can a hobbyist
Starting point is 03:31:54 who works regular, nine to five job do to improve their jiu-jitsu? So there's a lot of excellent gyms throughout the United States, what can they do to improve their jiu-jitsu? About the way they think about jiu-jitsu, about the way they approach their actual schedule, those kinds of things. That's a great question.
Starting point is 03:32:12 Okay. The less training time you've got, the more you want to maximize its effect. So a question becomes, okay, well, if I'm training say twice a week and Sometimes even once a week. What can I do to make sure that that? To our period is used maximally The less training time we've got the more the onus is on you to have a plan before you walk in the door If you go in the door. If you go in to saying, I'm going to roll around
Starting point is 03:32:49 and see what happens, or I'll just follow what the instructor says, you'll get a certain amount out of each class, but it will never be what it could have been. Go in with a plan and enact it. Many people go in with a plan and don't follow it. Let's say for example, we start with a program that goes like this. First, try to create the most honest assessment
Starting point is 03:33:21 of yourself as a Judith Suplier. It's tough to make an honest assessment of yourself as a Judith Suplaya, it's tough to make an honest assessment of yourself because you never actually get to see your game. So what I would recommend is to start by videotaping yourself, inspiring with your peers. That's fascinating because we don't even have that level of introspection, ability to reflect of what we actually look like in grappling. Start with an assessment of yourself. The most honest one comes not from you, comes from the camera. Have a look at what you see and start to say, okay, many of the weaknesses and start to say, okay, many of the weaknesses in your game are made much more apparent by looking from the outside in rather than feeling them during the heat of a match.
Starting point is 03:34:13 Identify four or five of the biggest weaknesses that you see and start actively attacking those weaknesses. Ask yourself, let's say for example, in the course of watching the video tip of yourself, you observe yourself losing three triangles. You attempted three triangle strangle holds you failed all three. You could start by saying, okay, let me ask myself, who start by saying, okay, let me ask myself, who are the people I look up to the most with regards a triangle strangle? Who the guys who have the best triangle strangles out there? Then ask yourselves of those people, who are the ones whose body type and personality most closely mirrors my own?
Starting point is 03:35:08 And that would be a good example of taking a problem in your game, contrasting it with a lead level performance in people whose body type roughly matches your own, and then try to take lessons you learn by observing the best people and bringing them into your own game in one specific area. As time goes by and you do this with more and more elements of your game, you will undoubtedly improve. You will also have to make sure that you take time during class to actively work on these things. Now sometimes in class you don't get a choice, the instructor sometimes says, okay, today we're working this, this and this, but there's always time after and before class where you can do your own drilling,
Starting point is 03:35:48 where you can make your own inquiries. And during sparring, there's no rigorous control over what you do. You can try to work the game into the area of focus. So, for example, if you want to work on front triangles, it would be wise for you to do most of your sparring from bottom guard positions. That'll give you the most opportunity. And in this sense, it always begins with an accurate assessment of your current skill level. You've got to start there. Then I always encourage people to use video camera to make the most honest, honest appraise
Starting point is 03:36:27 where you can. Because your own mind is not dishonest, but it's understandably inaccurate. You tend to feel things rather than see them when you're performing juditsu. Then make a Program for yourself based around what you see as excellence Look at the people in the sport who's In the area you want to work on people who are renowned for skill in that area If possible narrow it down to people who have excellence in that area and their body type corresponds with your own. And then try to take lessons learned from observing the excellence in these elite athletes
Starting point is 03:37:11 and bring elements of them into your game. Never try to bring an elite athlete's entire game to your game. That will create an inauthentic game on your part, which will always be a poor copy of what you're trying to watch, rather bring very specific areas and skills that you see and import them from different people until eventually you find something for yourself. Experiment a lot, okay? Everyone's different.
Starting point is 03:37:41 And so you will, don't see the video research as the final word. See video research the way a writer will see a muse. As someone who initiates discussion opens inquiries for your own research. The most powerful moments you will have on the mat come from making discoveries for yourself. Not being told what to do, not observing someone else doing something, but self discoveries. Those are the ones that will last inside you. So use video research, not as the definitive answer to your problems, but as initiating research for yourself on the mat. And as time goes by and you do this more and more often and more and more areas of the sport,
Starting point is 03:38:32 I promise you you'll improve. Yeah, and I guess when you have the plan, have a plan that carries across many training sessions. So I just remember, I know this is many training sessions. So I just remember I know this is perhaps dumb, but I saw in my own game early on a lot of growth by self identifying a problem and coming up by myself with a solution by watching in that case Marcel Garcia, I just thought my butterfly guard was very weak. I just thought my butterfly guard was very weak. And so I thought, okay, what's the solution here? I thought maybe this X-Guard thing, double X-Guard. Okay, so I watched a bunch of video. Let me try to work on this.
Starting point is 03:39:15 And then all I did, just this is self. But when I could get home by myself, meaning like not instructor guided classes, but in training, I would just, everything, I would put myself in the butterfly and X card. And then just let go, like, don't progress, sweep and figure out a way to get swept, to get right back to it, back to it, and everything. It was annoying, probably, to train with me. That's all I did.
Starting point is 03:39:43 And that's all I thought about. I'm going to beat you to it quickly. Yeah, I did. And that's all I thought about. Right, I paid you a little bit quickly. Yeah, I learned it's the most progress I've ever made. Now, you could say that ex-guard wasn't the right solution for me. That maybe that wasn't the weakest point for me to work on. If I were to look back now, it's still to this day, sadly,
Starting point is 03:40:01 the obvious weakest point for me is escapes from much worse positions. That should be worth it. That should have been worked on from the very beginning. That's still today, if I were to say, what's the weakest thing that I should work on absolutely is even with one day a week is escapes. But yeah, a lot of that has to do with just carrying, like focusing on the one thing over and over and over and over across training sessions. Now it also I would write down on the sheet of paper the number of times I would get an X card sweep. And I would set a rule that I have to get whatever it was like 500 sweep to week. So I have to, and then like the close you have to get, whatever it was, like 500 sweep a week.
Starting point is 03:40:45 So I have to, and then like, the closer you get to the end of the week, the more you like, just pick up a small wipe out. 500 in a week? Yeah, so your training partners must have, bro. You know, what, no, you start with good ones, and then you get more and more desperate. Start like finding the kid, right?
Starting point is 03:41:04 You can just sweep over and over. But like that number, for me, the number is for some reason, like it's at a goal to pull off a technique. It enforced like worst thing with this for a while. This is a journey we're doing. And then for some reason, for me, that helped me focus the study to understand the deep complexities of this thing, that at least for me, other people, like nobody at the gym was doing X-Guard or anything of that, so you have to kind of figure everything
Starting point is 03:41:34 out yourself. I'm sure there's better ways to do that, but at least that focus helps from a hobbyist perspective. What's the day, what's the perfect day in the life of John Donner? If we're talking about a basic non-ADCC, now you're, I'm really grateful that you sit down with me on a Sunday late at night, but it all starts again for you tomorrow. So three training sessions a day. What what time do you wake up? Do you do like a mantra in the morning Do you listen to like some Zen music? What do you eat in the morning? What what's the perfect day look like? When you say if I say small animal
Starting point is 03:42:33 To the gods, I usually, when you say a perfect day, what I think you really mean is an average day, perfectly productive average day. Yeah. So let's take Monday morning. We're watching this video. We're filming this late on a Sunday night. So after this, I'll drive home. We just had ADCC. It was two weeks ago. It was one of the longest training camps. It was the longest training camp I've ever run because of the fact we had to go through three different matches. We're for Gordon Ryan leading up to it. So immediately after ADCC, I cut the training down for the competitive athletes to one session per day for the first week after ADCC to give their bodies a bit of a break. I still have to teach two classes in addition to that, two recreational classes. So my teaching schedule went
Starting point is 03:43:26 down to three classes per day. After one week of relative break, we go back to two competition classes per day plus two recreational classes plus an MMA class for Gary Tonan and his friends. plus an MMA class for Gary Tonan and his friends. The first class requires me to get up around 6 a.m. to drive. I'm still a student driver, so I'm not very good at driving, so I have to spend a little extra time to get through the destination on time. Just for the record, John pulled in in a red Lamborghini with a no. You're the worst liar I ever met. My day typically starts pretty early. I don't eat in the morning. I just get up and go to work and I teach through the day. My last class finishes usually around 8 p.m. During that time, I coached Judith Sue.
Starting point is 03:44:32 I try to find time for one Instagram post per day, which usually describes some basic theme of Judith Sue in most cases, unless we've just had a competition in which case I'll talk about upcoming competitions or what happens after a competition, but most of them are just expressive, a simple Judith Zutheme. I try to do a short workout for myself,
Starting point is 03:44:56 and then I go home at the end of the day, I always start by asking myself, what do my students need for me tomorrow? Based on what I've seen today, what do the recreational students need, and what do the competitive students need? This is always done in the light of what are the upcoming competitions. But throughout the day, you're doing a lot of really in-depth classes. So how do you either prepare for them or think through them as they're happening, think through the material that you're teaching?
Starting point is 03:45:32 I can look at a class. I've been doing this a long time, so I can just look at a class and be like, okay, these guys need distance and this. And then I make reflections at the end of the day. Then I'll take care of things that we all do, talk to family, occasionally go out on Fadenna with friends, dates, things like that. Yeah, Hanzo had to really harass you to drag you out and to hang out and he was very convincing. And food wise, I eat once a day. He wants a day. At the end of the day, I usually stop off at a place
Starting point is 03:46:05 like a supermarket like Whole Foods or some equivalent to that and buy something simple and eat. The internet wants to know the details. Did you end up getting Wi-Fi for your apartment? No. I'm still thinking about it. It's still, yeah. I've got to think of it. What are the pros and cons? There's no cons, lots of pros, but I just don't put much importance to it. Things that are unimportant, I just ignore. Yeah, there's a lot of things in life that have a lot of pros, but like they're lower in the priority list, why?
Starting point is 03:46:40 Why? Because of the 5G already. 5G's got to cover. Do you watch much video? Do you watch much video do you watch video do you watch footage? Video footage quite often. Yeah, I especially things from freestyle wrestling Rekaroman wrestling judo And mixed martial arts also subsidiary sports to mixed martial arts like boxing
Starting point is 03:47:04 Muay Thai and European kickboxing. Just for long term idea generation. Yes. Like plants, seed, and idea. This is an interesting thing. How could this be incorporated in the context in which we use it? MMA or G-dets? As maybe it's immediately obvious or it might become obvious in a few weeks or months.
Starting point is 03:47:26 Is there some aspect to the way you approach life and training and martial arts that amends itself to minimalism? It seems like you live a pretty stoic life. Or is that just the symptom of a focus exists? My life wasn't always like this. I've gone through different phases in my life. I was a university student and teacher at university. I was a nightclub balancer for more than a decade.
Starting point is 03:47:51 I've been through different areas of life. I've seen most things. I've experienced a lot. I've traveled the world. At this point in my life, people think I live some kind of like monk-like existence. But I have a private life. at this point in my life, people think I live some kind of like monk-like existence, but I have a private life, I like to go out and have fun like everyone else.
Starting point is 03:48:18 I'm not like some kind of like monk who just sits under a waterfall and meditates for anything crazy like that. Well, that's what I'm currently going through that stage in my life, the monk-like existence. So I would be a, not to ask you one of the most important questions one can possibly ask John Donahar, which is on the topic of animal combat. Who wins in a fight to the death or maybe in a sport competition setting, but let's go with the fight to the death. Or maybe in a sport competition setting, but let's go with the fight to the death. A grizzly bear, a silver bag gorilla, and maybe a lion or a tiger, an African lion, or one of the flavors of tiger. I don't know who you think is more ferocious.
Starting point is 03:48:59 What are the parameters to consider here? Maybe I can throw a few out and maybe you can give me some thoughts about how much of these parameters matter. So, first of all, intelligence. I do believe the gorilla is the most intelligent. I've did research for this, as you could imagine. So, with Joe Rogan. The, the, the, the, the expert advisor to this very podcast on this very topic is indeed Joe Rogan. Yes. So in captivity, gorillas have been documented to show complex emotions
Starting point is 03:49:37 for family bonds, the ability to use tools and to be able to reason about the past and the future. That's impressive. So that's something that at least in captivity, the other animals have not been able to do. They've already so much more advanced than I am. Yeah, so that's intelligence. Then there is weight. I think that's something that you think of it first. The lion, let's go with the big ones that took notes here, 550 pounds for big lion.
Starting point is 03:50:12 That's exceptionally large. Most male lions were around 450 pounds. That's an exceptional beast then. Thank you. The tiger can be larger than that. Yeah, much larger. Thank you The tiger can be larger than that. Yeah much much larger So we got the grizzly bear which is probably the biggest of the bunch at the large ones get to 1500 pounds Correct me some of this numbers. I leave most grizzlies around Thousand pound mark it's a big big beast while I was looking up the biggest but I didn't want to do the biggest ever Just what are the big like the top of the range, because there's always a range.
Starting point is 03:50:48 You can put it in a roughly double, you had even a very big line. Of course, how that weight is used is very important. So there's also things, which I find is interesting is anaconda, which is, let me throw that in there because there is 200 pounds. What I really like about that is is it's not just the weight, it's the form factor. And I think out of all of these, the amkan is the most non-standard form factor.
Starting point is 03:51:14 I totally agree with that. Yeah, that comes usually. It's like the night on the chess board, it comes from a completely different angle. So we got that. We got also strength in which could be measured in ability to carry stuff. So this was surprising to me.
Starting point is 03:51:32 I did look into this carefully. The grizzly bear at 1,500 pounds can only carry at most its body weight, which is a lot. But a gorilla can carry 10 times its body weight. A gorilla can lift over 2,000 kilograms. That's over 4,000 pounds. And gorilla's themselves, and adult male weighs in around 350 to 400 pounds. 400 pounds, yes. So I like how in this particular place where I found this 2,000 kilograms is as heavy as 30 average humans. So gorilla can 30 humans. So that's carrying strength. And then of course, bite force because that's one of
Starting point is 03:52:13 the weapons in question here. So a group. Now this is really surprising to me. The gorilla is one me over through this, by the way, intelligence, intelligence and the sucker for intelligence but the gorilla bite force is the highest of all these with 1300 psi bear a second with 1200 psi tiger is a third I think tiger and lions third with 1000 psi this comparable and a bear is anywhere from 900 to 1000 psi they're Gorilla, I would not have expect, now that's not a carnivore, but apparently it's mostly its grass, it's still right, but it's difficult to explain why it has such a powerful bite, and it also of course has very large and size of teeth as well as chewing
Starting point is 03:53:01 teeth. So also known neck. So Yeah. So it's Nick begins at the top of his head and this goes down to the shoulders. Well, a lot of the way they use their teeth, all of these animals, the ultimate kill us to go for the neck, the bite on the neck. I don't know exactly why that is probably has to do. Why is that? Because it's a very strong, controlled position, not just that it's a... Is it the same as you just do, you think? Because they get to also joke them out.
Starting point is 03:53:31 It's very much in line with you, to like, lines are famous for using strangulation as their primary method of killing. They get a hold of the neck and hold until any animal drops. Plus, claws leave the tiger and the bear use their claws and the lion to the lion right there and the lion This is something that the gorilla doesn't do and And a condolacy doesn't yeah, yeah, yeah, so what do you think? How do we think about this also?
Starting point is 03:54:03 There is I'm just not letting you talk apparently, there's levels of aggression in terms of these are also very important considerations. Yeah. What is all the considerations you've raised are very important and we would have to address them if we're going to go through this topic. top it. First things first, whenever you go into a discussion of this kind, there's a kind of natural impression that we all have as to which one would be the most formidable. And it's important that you become rather skeptical of your first intuitions, because they're often very misleading. Just as every boy thinks his father is the strongest man in the world, and then when he grows up into adulthood, he realizes his father was not even close to being the strongest man in the world.
Starting point is 03:54:59 It's not because of anything other than inexperience to a boy, his father seems to have well-meaning strong. He literally can't even imagine anyone else being stronger than that. So naively he thinks his father is the strongest man in the world. So to in our relationship with animals, when we look at a silverback gorilla, it just looks overwhelmingly strong to us, to a degree which is almost absurd. You picture the greatest combat athletes that humanity has ever produced. They prime Mike Tyson, Gordon Ryan for grappling. They would literally be torn limb from limb by an angry gorilla. It wouldn't even be remotely competitive.
Starting point is 03:55:43 And so there's a sense in which we look at them in awe because of what they could do to us. But that can be very misleading. And just as a boy looks at his father as like the pinnacle of strength, you can't necessarily from a position of inexperience and weakness look at a given animal and say, oh, that must be the toughest animal in the animal kingdom. These levels to this game. And I think we can point out that the gorilla ultimately would be pretty low on those levels to see if he has some pushback to the analysis. Because the data, we don't have much data on this. We don't have, we actually have slightly more than you think, I believe.
Starting point is 03:56:23 Oh, boy. Well, it's anecdotal. I feel like it's out of context. So these species don't use, we actually have slightly more than you think, I believe. Oh boy. Well, it's anecdotal. I feel like it's out of context. So these species don't use, this is not MMA. They don't do interspecies fighting often. Yeah, but there are some ways of looking at this, which can take this already interesting question and make it a lot more interesting. First, we've seen that intuitions aren't to be trusted.
Starting point is 03:56:45 So if intuitions aren't to be trusted, well, what is to be trusted here? Well, I've always believed that there are three general elements that determine what level of success or failure anyone will experience in combat. And this is true both for individuals and for groups and even all the way up to nations. The first is what are your skills? The second is what are your physical and mental attributes? So it's skills, attributes. Those are the two primary ones. And there is the third, which is your experience in using those skills and attributes and real world scenarios. Okay. So whenever we'll
Starting point is 03:57:33 start with two humans, when two humans get into a fight, ask yourself, what is their skill set? What are their physical and mental attributes? And what is their experience in using those in real-world applications. And that will give you your first look at, okay, who's going to be the most successful. Then in addition to those three general elements, there's also four more specific elements. more specific elements. What is the ability of the combatants to initiate combat? Because initiation is a big deal in fighting. The one who sees the enemy first and can create ambush conditions or initiate combat in an area or terrain which is favorable to them. This is huge in determining the outcome of battles. Second, not only is initiation important
Starting point is 03:58:33 but disengagement is important. A lot of battles don't go according to plan and so your ability to disengage at will and break off and away from a battle is key to success. So initiation and disengagement are big. The third big element, what is your ability to end a fight? Do you have an efficient method of ending conflict? Without that, the conflict could go on to a point where you no longer have the ability to continue it. If you have some succinct method of finishing, this is huge in combat, and determining winner or loser. So both from a winning and losing position.
Starting point is 03:59:17 So if you don't have one, there's a high, much higher chance you're loose. But if you have an ability to finish an opponent in the conflict reliably, this is very, very important in determining success or failure. And third, as your ability to endure conflict longer than the person you're engaged in, okay, it's engaged with, sorry. And so you get these four more specific elements now. Do you have the ability to initiate contact at will? Do you have the ability to break contact and disengage at will? Do you have the ability to finish your opponent
Starting point is 03:59:52 efficiently? And do you have the ability to endure longer than your opponent does? If you have all four of those, that's huge for combat. That probably applies to human and human everything. Millicence is the most important thing. Even all the way up to nations. Yeah. Also, ask yourself, what are the most efficient methods of combat across the globe, across all species, all times, etc. etc. And you'll see that ultimately, they always come down to three things. The first is concentration of force. One of the most successful combat strategies of all time is the ability to take concentrated force
Starting point is 04:00:46 against the zone of weakness in your opponent. And if you can do this, you will often break through to a point of vulnerability, attack that vulnerability in a way where your opponent cannot respond and cannot recover from that vulnerable point being broken. Do a high amount of damage with precision. So this is one of the great combat strategies and across the animal kingdom, across human history, et cetera. The second would be ambush tactics. If you can ambush an opponent with the element of surprise, this is huge for success in combat.
Starting point is 04:01:25 Almost all of the truly successful predators on this planet are ambush predators. The ability to get off to a good start in a way where opponents simply can't recover is huge for combat. Are we allowing ambush in our discussion because we'll call this cheating perhaps. Yes, we would. And humans are pretty damn good at it too. And then the third is endurance. Okay, some species, some people, humans actually are pretty good at this. Um, using durants as a weapon and they simply wear an opponent down over time and break them.
Starting point is 04:02:11 And internationally this can be done economically through through numbers, etc, etc. and, uh, and you can destroy someone with just sheer endurance. Yeah, a lot of wars throughout human history has been siege warfare. Yeah. And so when ask yourself okay which one of these animals are going to be the most successful on combat, ask yourself well there's these three elements which tend to determine successful failure and warfare which animals exhibit these three principles the best and we'll discuss this. But as far as generalities go, whenever you ask a question who will win between A and B, ask yourself in terms of the light of what we've just discussed. What is their skill said? What are their attributes, both mental and physical, what is their experience
Starting point is 04:03:06 in utilizing these in real world situations, and then the four more tactical elements who gets to initiate contact. Can you break off contact at any given time? What is your endurance? Can you keep going longer than your opponent does? So with skillset, I wonder if a big component of that of how much practice there is off the battlefield. So how much caught on quote, you would probably call it play, like play fighting. Let's not going through our animals. Okay. When you
Starting point is 04:03:35 look at the gorilla, you will see immediately that almost every experience, the gorilla experience a gorilla hairs of combat is theatrical. Yes. They don't engage in killing things. They scare rival males away in order to gain ownership of females. But there is almost no interest species death in those conflicts. They're almost entirely theatrical. They have, for example, enormous canine teeth, but there is no record of them ever being used in combat. They appear to be used purely for intimidation purposes. There's a sense in which they have this tremendous appearance and they have tremendous potential. They really do have freakish levels of strength in many different ways. And yet, the actual track record of using it is negligible. So, strangely, evolution will develop such a powerful machine.
Starting point is 04:04:43 Like, their bite force just makes no sense with regard to what they actually eat. I think, well, no, I think they even the presence of canines doesn't make a lot of sense. They're not going to use them. What are they? It comes down to this idea. Their big thing is intimidation. So the show you want to fake it and don't care if you ever make it because fake is good enough given given that particular dynamic now let's contrast that with a male lion lions Take on the biggest Minest toughest animals in the most competitive killing war on
Starting point is 04:05:23 Planet Earth, which is continental Africa. And they literally just take, I mean, occasionally they lose, but it's rare. And they take out everything. Just in order to eat, they have to take down wildebeest, Cape Buffalo, like Cape Buffalo are incredibly dangerous beasts just by themselves and yet lions regularly take them down. Occasionally large numbers of lions will even swarm elephant and over 12 hour periods take down elephant on some occasions. This is all on videos, it's not just speculation. So they just have a level of combat experience which no other animal can if I were to also project so the Eastern European style of wrestling where they spent so many hours in the mat They really value the number of hours in the mat at play from childhood. The lions probably, for my extensive watching videos on YouTube, they seem to play with each other for fun a lot. And I guess with the real hugs, you
Starting point is 04:06:31 see it. You don't interact, you don't play with other gorillas, you have, like, you're more spending a lot more time around the opposite sex. Yeah. So, yeah. I mean, even lions, when they fight each other, the mortality rate when lions fight each other, male lions for ownership of a pride is very, very high, much, much higher than I believe any other species on Earth. They're almost always fights to the death for the simple reason that when a male lion loses control of a pride, the first act, the new lion does is to kill the genetic offspring
Starting point is 04:07:12 of the previous male lion. So when a lion fights another male lion, when one male lion fights another, it's not just a fight for his own life, it's a fight for his genetic offspring. And failure means not only does he die, all his offspring dies. And so when they fight, the implications are so deep. It's like a fight for you, not just you, but your DNA. Most male lions have very short runs at the top.
Starting point is 04:07:43 They get killed or run off by other lions. Now, this kind of harsh combat experience, no other animal can claim to have this between what they kill to eat and what they have to do to defend their steak and a pride. No other animal fights like that. and what they have to do to defend their steak and a pride. No other animal fights like that. They just bring a level of depth to combat, which is unmatched in the animal kingdom. They also have some other elements too that they get to,
Starting point is 04:08:26 they get the luxury because of their social nature of taking more risks than other animals. Like a tiger hunts alone. So if it gets injured, it's a big problem. It can die if it's injured. A lion can fight, keep buffalo, get injured and be covered by the other lions for food until it recovers. So it learns to take risks and it's not afraid to go out and fight very, very hard.
Starting point is 04:08:46 Whereas other animals tend to shy away from risk because they're solitary, bears are solitary, tigers are solitary. So they learn from an early age not to take the big risk to go to a certain level and stop. If I could push back, so that's aggression and risk taking, That's a plus for the lion. But to defend the gorilla, because you said skill set, they are of all of those, the only ones that use tools, I've shown to use tools, we didn't say anything about weapons. A gorilla could, in theory, pick up a rock. And it does have the force, the power, and the capabilities. You do a lot of damage. It doesn't have the practice. It doesn't have the experience. But don't you think if a
Starting point is 04:09:37 gorilla's back is to the wall? So you put them in a situation of it is life and death for both the lion and the gorilla. Don't you't you don't you value intelligence at least a little bit here There's a reason why humans this is like evidence that you know humans have spread all across the world while being kind of weak Why intelligence is a huge huge asset humanity is positive proof that is the most important asset but it takes time in order to work its magic it took humans 200,000 years to go from the bottom of the food chain to the top of the food chain and gorillas have a lot of work to do before they get to that level and gorillas have a lot of work to do before they get to that level. You said in theory gorillas could do this, but let's talk about practice now.
Starting point is 04:10:29 First off, there are many documented incidents of lipids killing gorillas. That's anecdotal evidence. No, it's not anecdotal. There's a bunch of bitch-ass gorillas walking around. We know this. We're asking anecdotal. It was observed by a group of people who specialized in observing Gorilla's over a 12-year period. They regularly found Gorilla
Starting point is 04:10:53 toes in leopard defecation. They also saw that over a certain period some 36 Gorillas have been killed and evidence strongly suggested leopard predation was the reason. Apparently, leopards had figured out that there was a femoral artery in gorillas' legs, and were doing a move from the sounds of it, sounds a lot like a barambolo, where they were spinning underneath gorillas and biting the femoral artery, and then disengaging and watching them bleed out and die and then eating them. Now a leopard is no match for a lion. The only defense that has to a lion is to run up a tree. It cannot engage with a lion on anything close to equal terms.
Starting point is 04:11:38 It may seem like we're going on tangents, but we're not. Just because as a foot, the attack of the artery, and the foot. Is there weaknesses that the lion might have of that? What I'm saying is I know it's not equivalent, but the fact that a leopard does so well against even fully grown male gorillas makes you should make you rather suspicious of a gorilla's ability to fight a lion. Fair enough, let's also go further into this, about concentration of force. A lion has the quintessential concentration of force, which is fangs and claws. The gorilla is the exact opposite, it can't even make a fist.
Starting point is 04:12:18 And so it can only throw open-handed slaps and grab things. So it has no ability with its arms to concentrate force in any kind of efficient way. When a lion or a tiger swore, or a bear for that matter swings that year, it's got four claws from four to six inches long. It's like four blades going into you. They can retract their claws so they're always sharp.
Starting point is 04:12:41 But the reach is significantly longer for the gorilla, the length of the ability to engage with speed and the part of the cats is far, far greater. And also mobility on to feed the bipedal nature of a gorilla, the temporary bipedal. This is the bear has the same. No impact. Humans are bipedal and lions kill 240 humans a year on average. So okay, okay, okay, what about bear? Now bear bear is a difference for all the same things that a lion has. The claws, the teeth, yeah, has more weight, has more strength, has more power. Okay, now this is an interesting question. Okay, you get a fully grown North American grizzly, this is an African lion, this is an interesting question. Okay. You get a fully grown North American grizzly versus an African lion. This is an interesting bet.
Starting point is 04:13:29 I also have questions about polar bears. It's unclear to me because they're bigger in every way than a grizzly. Yes. But they probably don't get the experience in the practice. Yeah. Also, they have a much more limited set of animals that they pray upon. So pretty sure Grizzly is going to be tough to beat as far as top bear goes.
Starting point is 04:13:53 A Grizzly bear, I believe, would be a formidable adversary, even for a male lion. They're literally twice their size. They have an ability to get away from strangleholds by standing up on two legs. So the lion's primary method of killing, which is the strangle, would be very difficult for them to employ upon a bear. Interestingly, the bear's primary method of killing is to pin. It pins animals and then just slowly eats them while they're still alive.
Starting point is 04:14:24 They have a rather barbaric means of killing lions are much more humane in the way they kill. What I see is the primary problem is that neither one would be able to kill the other. They're finishing thing. Yeah. They both fail on the finishing criteria. The lion would not be able to strangle a bear, even in a best case scenario where he got his teeth into the neck, the bear can stand up and presumably shake him off. The bear would never be able to pin a lion for long enough to better hold it down and slowly mall it over time the way it came with an elk or a caribou. So I don't believe either would be able to finish the other.
Starting point is 04:15:10 Those just become exhausted. It would come down to endurance. Now that's where things get interesting because the bear is much more of an endurance hunter and the lion is much more of an ambush hunter. Lions quick explosive, much higher top speed. They've got a top speed of 45 to 50 miles an hour. A bear can do up to 35, but it can run for long periods that have to 25 miles an hour. Very long periods. They're mostly an endurance hunter. They just run elk and moose down until they're exhausted and then pin them and kill them. So if it came down to endurance, might go the way of the bear, if they were, if they were caged up together. However, there is very strong evidence from both hunters and video, which shows on many occasions, bears being chased off by kuga and wolverains. Now, what's that? That's fear. What is that? What do you mean chased off? If they fight over meat, which in say,
Starting point is 04:16:19 for example, the kuga is killed, something in the beer wants to meet. The Kuga will wear a chaser risk aversion. Exactly, exactly. The beer is a risk averse. What I would say is that the beers are very, very powerful in their domain, but they don't have the battle experience of a lion. They don't take on animals. It's tough as a Cape Buffalo.
Starting point is 04:16:38 They don't take on elephant. What the toughest thing it would probably take on is probably a bull moose. And a bull moose and A ball moose is a formidable animal, but it's nothing like a Cape Buffalo. It's nothing like an elephant and elephant or a hippopotamus so What I would suggest is this in the wild I don't believe either one is capable of killing the other But I do believe based on video evidence of kugas and wolverines chasing off bears. That a lion would provide enough.
Starting point is 04:17:11 Threat. In a brief fight that a bear would back away if you put them in a cage however when neither one could back away I would slightly favor the bear. Based on the fact that it neither one can kill each other would come down to endurance. You mean like an octagon? Yeah, this gotta be the next UFC by the way. Bear versus the things change. Joe Rogan is a big fan of the idea of fighting in a stadium for humans fighting in a stadium. So in a stadium of bear, I would slightly favor a bear. Now, I still think that the lion would have a chance,
Starting point is 04:17:46 but I would favor the bear in a betting match. Some of the best evidence we have for animal versus animal fights come from the ancient Romans who actually used to put animals in gladiatorial combat. And they, for example, had several incidents where they wrote about tiger versus lion conflict. And in one famous passage, they described a lion getting destroyed by a female tiger. So there's some evidence to suggest that they had more expertise of this than we do, because they had a big population of wild animals, which they just put to fight each other. Unfortunately, there's nothing that they wrote about bears versus lion.
Starting point is 04:18:36 They did talk about bears versus bulls. They did talk about lions versus tigers, but they never mentioned beer versus lions. So we don't have any evidence for that. So we have to be a little bit more speculative. Now given that beers do get chased off by Cougar and Cougar is weak compared with the male lion. They're listening to you draw from that, by the way.
Starting point is 04:18:58 I would suggest that about the bears. Yeah, it's more about the bear. Like in theory, a bear should be out of crush at Cougar. But it seems to be the bear is saying, er, this thing could hurt me. So I'm not gonna risk injury and backs away. I think it would back away in the wild from a lion, but put him in a cage.
Starting point is 04:19:17 And I slightly favor them grisly, based on endurance. So the final conclusion, if you had to just bet everything you own, so you got, let's say, we got the octagon, we're bringing a bear. Now this is like legendary bear, okay, full grown grizzly, full grown grizzly, but not only that, that grizzly has seen some shit. What's the most it could have seen? A bull moose, a caribou? That's the toughest opponent you ever had.
Starting point is 04:19:49 It wants, no, no, no. Now this one once ran into a pack of other grizzlies and had to defend. It's got scars. It's got grizzlies. It's got a pack of grizzlies. It's voluntary. Wolves, wolves, wolves.
Starting point is 04:20:03 Wolves good practice for a bear who attacks a bear? That's that's my point based on really living a competitive environment. Lions, but sometimes you can get desperate as it was a pack of wolves. But that pack of wolves is nothing. All right. Fight lions. Deal with packs of hyenas.
Starting point is 04:20:20 Okay. What was the just imagine or the past 100 years, what do you think is the hardest fight that a grizzly bear has been in? Like some more in Alaska, we never heard all of a sudden in the middle of the night, all you hear is the bear just, yeah, they didn't really, it's nice, nothing that does. God have been something. Humans have killed.
Starting point is 04:20:40 They run away from war. They run away from kugas and wolver Wolverines like that. That's anecdotal evidence. There's got to be one bear. There's video footage over. You can watch it. Yes, they'll hold anecdotal evidence. There's got, I guarantee you in the dark of the night, there was an epic battle of which they're still legend amongst the bears of that part of Canada.
Starting point is 04:21:00 Who did it battle? In Canada. Moose. On the bears. You don't think they'd go at it. Yeah, bears fight each other But it's largely theatrical they never kill each other when lions fight each other kill each other all the time Like that someone would have seen it by now Interesting
Starting point is 04:21:16 All right, so so you're my point is that bears it just They want to get the feet with they're giving no credit for gorillas. So you're saying lion wins your money's on the line. I'm saying lion would win in the wild because they can't kill each other. They can't end the fight. That's one of our most important criteria. But lions can almost always initiate the action because they have much better ability to see it night, for example, bears have very average night vision. Lines have superb night vision. So at night time, they can always initiate the fight. Lines are natural ambush predators, so it's always going to be out of the advantage of
Starting point is 04:21:54 ambush. The great advantage that bears have is endurance, but bears are very risk-averse and they're not used to fighting like the toughest toughest animals. The toughest animal they fight is a moose or a caribou. These are not even close to the animals that lions have to go up against on a regular basis. So if somebody wins it's going to be a lion for you. I still think that the size and endurance of the bear, if they were locked and accaged
Starting point is 04:22:21 together, I would still favor the bear under those circumstances. But in the wild, I believe the beer will back away quitting the cage, no time limit, you favor the beer. What if it's five rounds of five minutes champion? Then I would go with the lion, because the lion has a huge speed advantage. So it's going to, it's going to injure it, tear it up, and do immediate damage.
Starting point is 04:22:40 Like, I put it this way, if lion and beer fight, first 15 minutes, I favor the lion, 100%. But then it's time goes by that size and weight is going to and endurance is going to have an effect. I'll bring up shortly somebody that's going to probably disagree with you about some things. Hopefully it's a grizzly bear and he comes and he just eats me. Oh, that would be so epic. Make a hell of a podcast. I wonder who we would eat first who would look scarier more delicious. I'm not sure The black and white could either piss them off. He would think you were a penguin Is that a good thing or not? No good. If it was a polar bear, maybe it's different
Starting point is 04:23:20 Do you care? deeply about your About athletes you coached about people in your life? So I have to ask this question If one of those athletes that say Gordon Ryan Now I was the dictator of the world and this would entertain me. So I force you in Gordon to do this to fight a bear or a lion, Gordon has to. How would you coach him to do it, to have any chance of winning? He goes in empty handed. Empty handed. You can choose stadium
Starting point is 04:23:57 or cage. Gordon, Ryan, empty handed versus a lion. You get to choose lion versus bear. It's up to you. Okay. My advice will be very simple. I would say Gordon, you're fucked. You're going to die badly. Choose the lion because it will strangle you to death rather than pin you down and mow you to death.
Starting point is 04:24:20 Doesn't we just talk about audacious goals? It's a little bit like this. This is not a question of audacious goals? What? What? What is this, Margot? This is not a question of audacious goals. This is a question of minimizing pain. So you coach your athletes to quit before the battle has been fought? A hundred percent, yeah. What is it?
Starting point is 04:24:36 You don't think it has a chance? You don't think it has a chance. How? What's he going to do? You don't think there's a technique, first of all, intelligence. So technical side. What's he going to do? He'll hook. No, no. Well, first of all, maybe. technical side of the way he'll hook no night well first of all
Starting point is 04:24:46 Maybe you can do a double a go full fucking legs. Okay. What if Gordon gets any starting position? He wants Yeah, that's gonna be really useful. You don't think he and him here on a thousand pound beer. Yeah What we're back control shaking off shaking off you'll get torn off with what like the Reaches back. He's got four, six inches. It's hard. Oh, okay. I wonder what is the reach? Whatever he touches. He's got a flexible bear. So you think there's no control. What about like a loath, like a, some kind of controlling position from,
Starting point is 04:25:20 yeah, like we said, Brambo, like from underneath, nothing. This discussion is so insane that I didn't even know where to begin criticism I'm thinking you're over. Why did we we could we could turn this down forget about Gordon fighting a Lion or beer. That's that's completely impossible An adult male chimp will destroy Gordon tonight. I think gorilla What about the aggression? Yeah, the the aggro the aggro and Mayo chimp is more than enough to kill any human on the planet including Gordon Ryan So Gordon Ryan Fighting a chimp a good-sized dead no a thousand times how many times does he win he loses a thousand times
Starting point is 04:25:58 It's not even competitive. It's not even remotely competitive. Do you think he will disagree? No? Do you think anyone will disagree anyone? Yeah, more on Okay, somebody that I think you might know There's a famous actor Tom Hardy, but he's also doing quite a bit of Jiu-Jitsu The reason this makes sense to bring up now is he's also, I saw narrating a new sky original series called Predators coming out in December where they follow five different predators and tell their full story about all the fighting and the killing and all that kind of stuff.
Starting point is 04:26:37 And he's doing that. He's like, it's like Morgan. It's like Morgan Freeman from March of the Penguin. It's Tom Hardy for the printers. So I don't, I saw a bear and a lion in the trailer, but they also had something, I didn't watch it too careful, but they had something like a hyena.
Starting point is 04:26:57 So they think they were talking about, I don't know if it's a hyena, but something like that like pack animals that attack and... High use of formidable, formidable animals. So it's not all about size, it's about like strategy. Yeah, most important thing in nature is numbers. Like, you know, a pack of animals will always destroy a single animal.
Starting point is 04:27:15 And I think that showing particular is not 100% about who wins or so on. It's about the fascinating stories of how these predators sort of Dominate their particular environment because it's it's not about these like artificial matchups It's about giving your environment how you succeed and all that kind of stuff Maybe we could do Gordon Ryan this is a house cat He Gordon might have a small chance against a house cat maybe maybe See now I know you're just trolling me I think Gordon has a chance against the house cat maybe maybe See now I know you're just trolling me. I think Gordon has a chance against What definitely gets the smaller apes But I have no way of proving it and the internet will say I'm an idiot so there you go
Starting point is 04:27:58 The interior is correct every so So there's a it's funny enough. I'm looking at Tom's Instagram. He has a picture with Hands-O. He's competed recently, which is very cool in Giu-Jitsu. That's awesome. That's tough to do for a celebrity to step up. Oh, yeah, absolutely. Yeah. He used to consult with me a little bit on moves when he was starting out. He's a very, very nice person.
Starting point is 04:28:20 Oh, Bob Giu-Jitsu. Yeah. He asked questions about Giu-Jitsu. He struck me as being a very, very nice person. I would love to be a fly in that while, but he made a post on Instagram, which I'd love to get your opinion on. It has very much like a John Donnellar style of digging into the philosophy of the impact of digits on one's life. Is Instagram post 18 pages long? Yes. He's got potential then. Yes, with a profound deep picture of somebody practicing the art of Jesus. I think he's at least a trainee in this art of the Donahar style of communication.
Starting point is 04:29:00 If Miyamoto Musashi would be alive today, he would probably be doing these five pages to grandpa's like you do Addiction writes Tom Hardy addiction is difficult and complex stuff to navigate as is mental health subjects Which are both deeply personal for me and extremely close to my heart It is an honor to be able to represent the charity and my team Reorg and the great work they do supporting the mental health and well-being of veterans of service reorg and the great work they do supporting the mental health and well-being of veterans of service, military and first responders through the therapeutic benefits of Jitsu and fitness training. He represented them in this competition that he competed in. Simple training for me as a hobby and a private love has been fundamentally key to further develop a deeper sense of inter-resilience,
Starting point is 04:29:42 calm and well-being. I can't stress the importance it has had and the impact of my life and my fellow teammates. He goes on to talk about this organization, RE-ORG that uses Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu to form a therapy to overcome physical and mental challenges, strength and social connections and improve overall health and well-being. This is for veterans, for people going through PTSD. They have saved lives around the world by not only providing an effective and positive means for navigating and managing the challenging
Starting point is 04:30:13 psychological aspects of military and for a despotic careers, but also has allowed many to find a renewed sense of purpose, identity and community that's often lost when transitioning to civilian life. Do you have thoughts about that, sort of the effects of Jiu Jitsu on, on folks who've gone through some really difficult things in their life? First of all, I think that's just a beautiful statement by Mr. Hardy. I must give him a phone call after this and talk to them.
Starting point is 04:30:45 That was beautiful to read. One thing that's always struck me when I train people who either have a military background or on more than a few occasions, we have special forces so I'll just come in and train with us for a week or two. And when you talk to them, the overwhelming sentiment I get when the conversation is over and we go our separate ways is I'm always asking myself the transition from military life, especially the more extreme military lives of special forces soldiers back to civilian life.
Starting point is 04:31:30 It must be the craziest experience of all. You've got people who are fighting and dying alongside their comrades in the most extreme circumstances that any human being can go through. And then they're pulled back into a life where people are arguing with them over parking spots. Just like the average person's day-to-day life is so mundane that imagine what must be going through a man's head who a few weeks or months ago was literally fighting for his life and his comrades' lives, watching people that he loved die or get mutilated in front of
Starting point is 04:32:19 them, things that, you know, in a matter of seconds, people's lives can be torn apart and changed forever. And then suddenly you get thrown into a life where people are arguing over, you know, who's cut who off who in line to buy a coffee. The intensity of camaraderie and love each other and then you go from incredible intensity and war to just mundane boring life and going from one to the other where people yelling at you or nagging you over issues that just seem so inconsequential compared to what you've been through and you're supposed to take these people seriously and listen to them. But not only that, you do have trauma, visions of dead brothers and sisters. And you feel like you can't really talk to these civilians about it.
Starting point is 04:33:18 There's nothing in their experience that would enable you to have a conversation with them. Like they don't even... How do you talk to your new girlfriend about watching one of your friends' legs get taken off? Like, there's no conversation you could have with them. So I find that typically they do best when they hang out with each other because they have shared experience and they can talk about these things. But I do find that most judicis schools have something like a kind of military barracks demeanor to them.
Starting point is 04:33:59 Of like camaraderie, hard work, shared hard work, teamwork, building towards a goal over time, the acquisition of skills, usually along with that, a kind of want of a better word or rustic and primitive sense of humor and a kind of soldierly way of talking to each other and disparaging, you know, self-deprecating sense of humor. And it's something that most people with military service kind of naturally come into because it's part of what they were in. And so it's like a tone down version of it, which enables them to form a stepping stone between the military life that they were in all the way down to civilian life and Judith was kind of like a bridge between those two.
Starting point is 04:34:52 And also the honesty that you said like the skill acquisition, the honesty of really testing that skill, there is a deep honesty to war in a distant way, but in a way, there is an honesty to jits of use technique working and not and there's a final there is simulated death. It's not a real death. It's simulated death on the mat. Yeah, and there's a similar kind of honesty there. And there's also a similar kind of esteem towards skill. Just as regular soldiers look up to special forces soldiers because they see them as people have you know, greater skill than themselves, something to aspire to, so too, and judicially. The thing that we esteem most on a judicially matter skill, no one gives a damn what you look like
Starting point is 04:35:37 or what you think that you judge mostly by your skill level. And so they tend to identify with that. I do think that most people from a military background kind of find a natural gravitation towards the atmosphere of judicity learning. And if it proves to be a positive way for them to rehabilitate and come back into civilian life. That's a wonderful, wonderful thing. I know we're linked with We Defy, which is an organization which caters to former soldiers who were badly injured in combat, and many of whom lost limbs and always suffered mental trauma and they come in and train and they often speak very, very highly of the degree to which Judits who has helped them come back into civilian life and for them it's even worse because they come back not only mentally but physically disadvantaged after war. And I've always been proud to be associated with We Define. I'm very happy to see Tom working with this organization.
Starting point is 04:36:52 Is this an organization based in England for English veterans or is it international? It's a good question, but I have to look into it. It certainly is based in England, but it could be international. But it's just nice to see somebody use that large platform that could be- And also to step on the mat and show the kind of jiu-jitsu
Starting point is 04:37:16 you would probably be proud of which is chasing submissions. He got a normal, he got a straight foot lock. We're not gonna analyze the techniques, because there could be a different perspective, the intent that they finish is the finish. Yeah, no, that's impressive. He's actually quite an ass ladies. He's in great shape and strong and flexible and I'm glad he's doing well with his students. And it's good to see Hanzel smiling face next to him. I can only imagine the conversations. I have to ask you a deep and important question.
Starting point is 04:37:51 You often, when we text back and forth, send me two hugging emojis. Can we psychoanalyze the reason why that's your favorite emoji of the hugging face? Let me, it's like, it's kind of like sending a heart, but a little bit more. Yeah, it's a neutral. When Judas Uplayers meet each other, they often shake hands and then give a quick hug. So I thought it was the most appropriate emoji for Judas Uplayers.
Starting point is 04:38:22 I see. So you're pretty simple explanation. Nothing too Freudian then. Are you sure? Quite sure. Okay. Have you really asked yourself deeply? Because you really lean on emojis. There's something behind it. Tomorrow, I'm never going to use that emoji again. Walk away. I'll shock you tomorrow and meet you with three. Three. It's almost always two. I think maybe your creature of habit in communication. There's a creature of habit in almost every aspect of my life. So even emojis.
Starting point is 04:38:54 Yeah, you fall into these little pockets of how you communicate, how you show affection towards others. I sent, I say love a lot. I sent, I sent hearts and don't give a fuck if it's to like you know like in a you know me sending a message to like a seal about to interview you all send a heart I don't give a damn. They'll probably just like look what is this but I think people are too afraid of simple communication of affection. Like it could be in any form, but there's a hesitance to that because I think underneath it, in order to show affection, you're taking a risk and you're showing vulnerability. Because if you show affection and the other person rejects that affection, you've now placed yourself in a hierarchy, going back to lions of like,
Starting point is 04:39:55 or this person, you're just like the silly weak person and they're the strong person. I think that's how you might see it, I guess, but I don't. To me, the display of vulnerability is a display of strength, not weakness, at least in human society, at least at this time. I don't know. Let me ask you about love. I must ask John Donner, how about love? What do you think is the role of love in the human condition at the highest philosophical level in me first ask? What's like romantic love? Romantic love. Let's say romantic love. I have one or two areas of apparent expertise in my life. Romantic love.
Starting point is 04:40:41 Definitely not one of them. So like lines versus bears. I'm good. I'm good I'm good pretty good at and then different grappling arts judo, sombo, jiu-jitsu wrestling For MMA so fighting and so on romantic love. You don't see them as similar. It's a kind of fight It's a kind of dance. By the way, do you do you know I'm I'm I'm a There's a sense in which I'm kind of glad I'm not an expert on that. Imagine what it would be to be an expert on romantic love. You would take the one thing in life that's actually interesting and make it boring because once you develop an expertise about something, you can start to predict how things are going to unfold
Starting point is 04:41:26 You get answers before events even occur. You see you can read into the future of everything I think there are certain parts of human life where you want to be a beginner at all times and you don't want to gain expertise So excellence and Systematizing something in order to achieve excellence might destroy the very magic of things. And I think the magic of romantic love is the fact that we're all beginners at it. And the minute you try to gain expertise in it, what does that even mean? Like what would it mean to me? And would it be good?
Starting point is 04:41:56 I don't think it would. I think you'd be a better off just having fun with it and plowing through and making dumb mistakes and looking like a fool and and then whatever success whatever that means comes in a kind of lighthearted, frivolous kind of way and and that I think is over the course of a lifetime far more desirable than having you know expertise and affairs of love so I don't think it's even a good thing to study too much. And I think if you did, you would actually take something good
Starting point is 04:42:31 out of your life. Yeah, there's communities of people call pickup artists that try to optimize this particular aspect, which is of dating, of guys picking up girls and turning that into a system and seeing what's the most successful. I think that would be, I mean, maybe the first few months would be good and then after that I think it would be a disaster.
Starting point is 04:42:54 I mean, given that humans are fairly easy to study from a, from a standpoint of psychology. I'm sure it's not that difficult to gain expertise and things like picking people up. The same way advertisers can pick up your attention to sell a product. You can do the same thing presumably with romance and sex. But I don't know, I think, well, if you became very good at it, you would end up being very disappointed by the results. And so as I said, I think there's some things in life where it's better to be a beginner. And this is one of those. Yeah. Enjoy the chaos, the push and pull beginner and make that a lifelong journey. That's really inspiring to hear you say that. And there's a deep truth to that.
Starting point is 04:43:45 That also justifies the fact that I still get it. I think it also justifies, and it was still very well, that John Donner should write a book on dating. And that would be chapter one, embrace being a beginner. Chat the tool we bear versus lion. Pivot quickly to violence. By the way, we totally skipped over Anaconda. I assumed the implied I'll put it to this way. On video, you can watch Puma. And similar size cats, jaguar,
Starting point is 04:44:30 similar size cats, Jaguar, Destroy, Anacondas, even in water, which is Anacondas preferred domain. So given that Puma and Jaguar are several orders below lion, you have to go with the idea that lion would utterly decimate Anacondas.. It's probably good that we did skip over it. And I think going back to the original thought that you had about this, don't trust your first instinct. Also, I think about the other elements. Anaconda has no ability to disengage from the fight. Once the fight's on, it's got to go until the end. It has no ability to disengage and get away. It's only hope would be ambush.
Starting point is 04:45:06 And it's got a tiny, tiny chance against a truly formidable animal. And the fact that if we look at actual concrete real world results when Puma and Jaguar are kicking your ass, you know, lion and bear, it's gonna be a lot worse. Science is not to be found on YouTube, or rather, YouTube is not science. I bet you there's a bear somewhere in Canada that has seen some shit. I'm just gonna leave it at that.
Starting point is 04:45:38 Your fan of knives, there's guys like Miyamoto Masashi, who, instead of doing who's number one type of tournaments, when both competitors walk away, only one competitor walks away. Miyamoto Masashi is known for somebody having John Donah her like philosophical skills, but also is known for having fought 61 duels to the death and won them. Great. Obviously. What do you think made him so good? I don't feel qualified to talk about him because I haven't made a deep study of his life
Starting point is 04:46:21 and times. And we also don't know how much truth there is to his recollections. And there's a lot of controversy over this. So I don't feel like you can give it like a definitive statement of certainly I can't give a definitive statement of his prowess. But his writings are fascinating and deeply insightful. But as to what actually happened out there in his deals, it's unclear. But there is, you know, with guys like that, you almost certainly know that they wore people like the character he projects that have existed. Whether it's 61, whether it's 20, but people really put their life on the line
Starting point is 04:47:06 in a different time in human history. Is there something compelling to you about fighting to the death? I think it's not just compelling to me, but to anyone. I mean, there's nothing we value more than our lives. And to be able to say, I'm prepared to die for a sense of honor, things that are so foreign to our modern society. Imagine, we criticize people for something as simple as road rage, and yet you can imagine someone who has a sufficiently developed sense of honor. If you took them out of the 17th century and put them in a modern car, they might be killing people on the side of the road on a regular basis, just over the smallest acts of honor, to say that your sense of self-overwhelms, your sense of self-preservation, it's a very unusual thing in the modern age, and it appears to have been quite common back then.
Starting point is 04:47:59 You often wear a fanny pack, I'm not going to ask you what's inside the fanny pack, but if you were to design a perfect killing machine that also wore a fanny pack, what would you put? In that fanny pack, would it be something mundane and practical, or would it be something surprising and hilarious? surprising and hilarious would it be something of philosophical significance, I mean, be sentimental significance, or would be empty as a troll on human civilization. Whatever was a perfect killing machine, it has to be some kind of weapon, put it in a fanny pack. It's again, it has to be a very compact weapon. Fanny pack. Is it anything that has to be a very compact weapon?
Starting point is 04:48:52 We mentioned offline that there's also things in the chest world, or there is a different kind of vibrating devices that could be used to communicate information in communication with AI systems that can help you in your particular pursuit. I don't think in Jiu-Jitsu, you need, it's possible for a machine to give you information that gives you advantage. You can in Chasin and Poker. So you could put one of those vibrating devices in your Fanny Pack, but in Jiu-Jitsu it would not help you.
Starting point is 04:49:22 Any idea what kind of weapon? To fit in a fanny pack? Do you fantasize? Where's the interest that the guys gone from, by the way? That's more metaphorical. The truth is, in the modern world, a knife is not an efficient weapon. Easily be overwhelmed by firearms.
Starting point is 04:49:41 My fascination with knives comes more in the sense that they convey a spirit to my students, where a knife is made of steel and steel begins as ore in the ground. It's an ugly, unfinished product which through the enactment of knowledge, time and discipline can be transformed into beautiful, shining steel. It can have something which it begins as something which has no real function and becomes one of the most functional and important tools in all of human history without which human civilization could never have even begun. It's what separated humans and took us from the bottom of the food chain
Starting point is 04:50:27 and began our gradual rise towards the top of the food chain. So it has immense historical and cultural value, but it has this metaphorical value and so far as the martial artist begins as a white belt like iron or, but over time, transforms into some beautiful shining steel which can have immense value. In addition, there's a sense of maintenance. As remarkable as steel is, it is in need of constant maintenance. It will fall apart through rust and neglect will destroy, it will ablade both in terms of rust and the edge falling apart. And so just as the martial artist, it's not good enough just to learn the techniques,
Starting point is 04:51:14 you need to maintain them over time. And just as steel is perishable, so too are the skills of martial arts. And when I give a gift of a knife to a student, these metaphorical elements start to emerge. They see, okay, I began as iron ore, and I want to become the finished blade. There's another sense in which a knife is morally neutral. A knife can be used to save a life. It can be used to cook a meal, but can also be used for murder for the worst possible purposes. Judith who is the same way, Judith who can make you a better person, it can make you a worse person.
Starting point is 04:51:58 Judith who is just a power. It's not a particularly great power, but it is a power. And like all power, it can be used for both good and bad. It's morally neutral in itself, and it's up to us to make sure that just as the knife gets used for good purposes rather than bad, so to let you to be used for good purposes rather than bad. There's also an element where the basis of the knife is steel. And historically, there's always been a riddle of steel, which is steel has the property of both hardness and suppleness. The harder you make steel, the better its edge retention becomes.
Starting point is 04:52:43 The longer that edge will stay sharp, this is good, but it comes at a price. The harder you make steel, the more brittle it becomes. And now that edge can be damaged easily. So the solution is to make the steel softer, more malleable, that will prevent breakage of the blade and chipping of the edge. But when you make the steel softer, that comes at a price. And that price is now the edge loses its sharpness very easily. And so the riddle of steel is how to
Starting point is 04:53:23 work with these two to the greatest repossible and create an edge, which is hard enough to stay sharp for long periods of time, but without making the steel so brittle, that the blade overall is compromised. So too, and you did so. Your task and training is to make the training competitive enough that you actually get used to the rigors of real combat. But on the other hand, it can't be so brutal that the athletes get broken down on the gym to a point within no longer effective. And so this duality of hardness and softness, which we see in the case of blades, is there in the training of the Judith's who athlete. So I often give a gift of a knife to a
Starting point is 04:54:11 student when they've done something significant, because it demonstrates in a metaphorical way these key themes of the sport. Well, I've been honored to be a student of yours. I've been plagued by injury, but I hope to one day earn one such knife. And I think that's a really powerful metaphor. I'm really honored that you would spend any time with me in any context, but especially on the mat and especially today in conversation. John, you're an incredible person. Thank you for everything you do. Congratulations for historic accomplishment.
Starting point is 04:54:48 It's always beautiful and inspiring to see greatness. And what I saw, what we saw at ADCC was greatness, rare greatness. And it's beautiful to see that humans can achieve that kind of thing. So thank you for making that happen. And thank you for talking today. Thank you, Lakes. Thanks for listening to this conversation with Jaudana Har. To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description. And now let me leave you with some words from Neomotomusashi. The only reason a warrior is alive is the fight. And the only reason a warrior fights is to win.
Starting point is 04:55:29 Thank you for listening, and hope to see you next time. Thank you.

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