Mundials Motivation #12: See proof that Jiu-Jitsu is growing and expanding

Thirty Mongolians from a Judo club made their way to Long Beach for the 2011 World Championship. Photo: Ivan Trindade

The list of reasons so far that show why you should follow, support, watch and enter the 2013 World Championship is strong. Number twelve is no different as we give you and your whole country reasons to join in May 29 – June 2.

Reason #12: See people from all over the world reach the podium and prove evolution

As if we don’t have enough politics in the realm of sport Jiu-Jitsu, the presence of nationalism can create unnecessary tension. Jiu-Jitsu is Jiu-Jitsu and claiming its roots in Brazil is necessary in terms of history and lineage but associating nationalities with the art only serves as another divide. All politics aside, though, non-Brazilians on the top spots of the podium have a way of determining expansion and evolution.

We don’t need new teams in the form of countries or ethnicities but taking note of non-Brazilians and even non-Americans proves a lot. These places can be less privileged and the people training have less advantages as they are from a country that has not harbored great training for many years. Just a sample of athletes shows evidence of this evolution.

People such as Sebastian Brosche and Alexander Trans from Denmark, Oliver Geddes and Luke Costello from Britain, Dais Yoshioka and Daisuke Nakamura from Japan, Ida Hansson from Sweden, the Iturralde brothers Francisco “Sinistro” and Leo from Ecuador, and the troop of Mongolians who took home medals from the 2011 Worlds.

Even for the Americans to top the podiums at black belt at the mundials or even in other organizations like Abu Dhabi World Pro and Copa Podio it still not as rare. Rafael Lovato, Jr. made his way to an absolute black belt title at the Brazilian National as the first American. Clark Gracie, Orlando Sanchez, JT Torres, DJ Jackson, Mackenzie Dern, Tanner Rice, Aj Agazarm, Keenan Cornelius, Gianni Grippo and more are making names for themselves amongst the many champion Brazilians in their categories.

Represent your team and your country. Register for the worlds and let your country be recognized and in doing so, show that Jiu-Jitsu is excelling in even the farthest corners of the Earth. Click here to sign up!

 

 

Too Much Awesome – Oli Geddes update

OK, I come into the office this morning and I see a new instructional video from Oli Geddes. 

He’s been churning them out on his YouTube channel (which you should subscribe to) as he travels North America. 

I watch it and it’s pretty good – he’s using the sitting / hook guard thing that I have been using lately, but turning it into overhook X guard / Lagarto guard, and then going for a footlock. I often get stuck trying to sweep from there so I decide to try it next time I train.

Then I checked out facebook to see Oli had shared a link to Graciemag, where he got great coverage of his fights from the Toronoto open. He got beaten by a guy in the weight finals, then beat him in the open weight.

So I watch the match, and he busts out the exact move I’d just seen him instructionalising. Superb.

Here’s the instructional:

Here’s the fight:

Pic courtesy IBJJF

[VIDEO] Oli Geddes: International Grappling Competitor…?

We are ultimo-pumped about this vid!

Shot and edited by our friend Daniel Willmott, a name to watch out for on the BJJ video scene, it’s a great introduction to Oli Geddes, a household name in the UK BJJ scene and soon to be worldwide. Oli delivers one of the funniest intros I’ve ever heard in a BJJ video, too.

He’s heading off to North America for THE GREAT NORTH AMERICAN COMPETITION TOUR OF AWESOMENESS and I highly recommend you keep up with his progress at his blog, here.

Please like, share, enjoy! Turn it up and make sure HD is on.