Lex Fridman Podcast - #439 – Craig Jones: Jiu Jitsu, $2 Million Prize, CJI, ADCC, Ukraine & Trolling
Episode Date: August 14, 2024Craig Jones is a legendary jiu jitsu personality, competitor, co-founder of B-Team, and organizer of the CJI tournament that offers over $2 million in prize money. Thank you for listening ❤ Check ou...t our sponsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep439-sc See below for timestamps, and to give feedback, submit questions, contact Lex, etc. CONTACT LEX: Feedback - give feedback to Lex: https://lexfridman.com/survey AMA - submit questions, videos or call-in: https://lexfridman.com/ama Hiring - join our team: https://lexfridman.com/hiring Other - other ways to get in touch: https://lexfridman.com/contact EPISODE LINKS: CJI tickets: https://lexfridman.com/cji CJI on B-Team's YouTube: https://youtube.com/bteamjiujitsu Craig Jones's Instagram: https://instagram.com/craigjonesbjj Craig Jones's Instructionals: https://bjjfanatics.com/collections/craig-jones B-Team's Instagram: https://instagram.com/bteamjj/ B-Team's Website: https://bteamjj.com/ SPONSORS: To support this podcast, check out our sponsors & get discounts: Eight Sleep: Temp-controlled smart mattress. Go to https://eightsleep.com/lex LMNT: Zero-sugar electrolyte drink mix. Go to https://drinkLMNT.com/lex BetterHelp: Online therapy and counseling. Go to https://betterhelp.com/lex NetSuite: Business management software. Go to http://netsuite.com/lex Shopify: Sell stuff online. Go to https://shopify.com/lex ExpressVPN: Fast & secure VPN. Go to https://expressvpn.com/lexpod OUTLINE: (00:00) - Introduction (12:20) - $1 million in cash (14:24) - Kazakhstan (16:49) - Ukraine (48:58) - Bali (56:18) - CJI (1:07:20) - Gabi Garcia (1:10:14) - The Alley (1:25:24) - Gordon Ryan and Nicholas Meregali (1:32:18) - Trolling (1:35:06) - ADCC (1:45:19) - Training camp (1:57:01) - Breaking legs (1:57:44) - Advice for beginners (2:04:23) - Volk (2:13:26) - Future of jiu jitsu (2:16:32) - Steroids (2:20:01) - Hope PODCAST LINKS: - Podcast Website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast - Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr - Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 - RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ - Podcast Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrAXtmErZgOdP_8GztsuKi9nrraNbKKp4 - Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/lexclips
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The following is a conversation with Craig Jones,
martial artist, world traveler,
and one of the funniest people
in the sport of submission grappling.
While he does make fun of himself a lot,
he is legitimately one of the greatest
submission grapplers in the world.
And underneath the veil of nonstop sexualized Aussie humor
and incessant online trolling,
he is truly a kindhearted human being who's trying to
do good in the world. Sometimes he does so through a bit of controversy and chaos, like with the new
CGI tournament that has over two million dollars in prize money and is coming up this Friday and Saturday. Yes, the same weekend as the prestigious ADCC tournament.
The goal of CGI Tournament is to grow the sport.
So you'll be able to watch it for free online, live on YouTube and other places.
All ticket profits go to charity, mainly to cancer research.
So I encourage you to support the mission of this tournament
by buying tickets and going to see the event in person.
Craig gave me a special link
that gives you a 50% discount on the tickets.
Go to lexfreedman.com slash cji
and it should forward you to the right place.
They're trying to sell the last few tickets now.
It's a good cause, go buy some.
And also let me say, as a fan of the sport, I highly encourage you to watch both CJI and
ADCC and to celebrate athletes competing in both.
From CJI with Nicky Ryan, Nicky Rod, Rotola Brothers, Fion Davis, Mackenzie Dern, and
more.
To ADCC with Gordon Ryan, Nicholas Margali, Giancarlo Bodoni, Rafael Lovato Jr.,
Mika Galvao, and more.
I have a lot of respect for everyone involved.
I train with many of them regularly and consider many of them friends, including Craig, Gordon,
and of course, John Donoher, who I will talk to many, many more times on this podcast.
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It is a pretty interesting mystery of what's going on in the brain while we sleep.
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So yesterday I had a really hard training session in jujitsu.
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And now, dear friends, I invite you all
to come to the pool with Craig Jones and me.
I invite you all to come to the pool with Craig Jones and me. When you brought the $1 million in cash on Rogan's podcast, did you have security with you?
We had security, but only by Joe Rogan's request.
Because he said, you're really going to bring it?
Yeah.
Do you have security?
I said no.
He's like, don't worry about it.
I'll send my security.
So you were going to do without security?
Yeah, we're going to win.
I thought, I mean, I was told not to tell anyone.
Yeah.
But I sent pictures of it to everyone I know.
Yeah.
So that was probably a security risk.
Yeah.
So it's just you in a car with a bag of cash.
Yeah.
It was a company that sponsors me, Shuffle.com.
It was their friend, a friend of theirs.
So a guy that's never met me before just took the risk to show up to a stranger's house
with a million dollars in cash and bring to Joe Rogan.
It was a big risk of him.
And you just put it in the car and drove it.
Drove it over there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, no security except Joe.
Except Joe.
That's common sense.
And then Joe said he'd never seen a million dollars before.
Yeah.
But I don't know if I believe him.
That's what everyone says.
That's what Paweł Escobar probably says also.
What's your relationship with risk, especially with the risk of death?
I would say I'm very risk averse.
You are.
No, you're not.
That's a lie.
Um, my relationship with risk.
I like a bit of excitement.
I like a bit of adventure.
I'm more about the adventure, but I will not let, um, the risk getting the waiver.
And also, obviously just got back from Ukraine.
I'm happy to take a few risks if it's part of what the locals want me to do.
You know what I mean?
Like in Kazakhstan, we did some things that were dangerous.
Like if the locals are like, come along, join in on this activity, I feel personally obligated
to go with them.
So it's not about the risk.
Like you're not attracted to risk, you're attracted to adventure and the risk is a thing
you don't give a damn about if it comes along with it.
Sometimes the best adventures involve the most risk, unfortunately.
Speaking of which, you went to Ukraine, like you said, twice recently.
Twice, really pushed the limit there.
Including to the front.
To the front.
Tell me the full story of that from the beginning.
How did you end up in Ukraine?
So we're in Kazakhstan.
We're doing some filming in Kazakhstan.
And obviously, Borats do a very traumatic memory for them.
Yeah.
And some of my jokes felt like they don't go as well in that neck of the woods.
So we had some difficulty filming out there.
So we filmed this horse game.
Have you ever heard of Cockba?
Thanks to you, yes.
It's a game, a very, very old game.
They cut a goat or a sheep.
I didn't get too close to look at it,
but they cut its head and legs off
and they use it as some form of bull.
And then they'll have like up to a thousand guys on horses
violently trying to pick this up
and drop it in the other end's goals basically.
The goals used to be concrete.
Now it's just a tarp,
but local
business owners will throw down huge amounts of money for the winners. And these horses
have been trained from a very young age. The riders have been trained. I've never ridden
a horse before. We wanted to film something that made it look like I was going to go into
the horse pit, into the cock bar pit. However, the drunk stunt man that we used just decided that when
he took my horse reins, he would take me straight into the pit instead of ending the shot there.
So I was in there amongst, I guess the horse riders, the cock bar riders, and we weren't
leaving. We just were in there for quite a while and he was just, he could talk a little,
he could talk English pretty well, actually.
And he's like, Oh, I thought you'd want to check it out from the inside.
And then while we're in there, someone picked up the sort of carcass and a wave of horse riders came at me.
I was quite concerned at that point because they're bashing into each other.
And obviously the angry, they're seeing a foreigner and I was wearing like basically Biggie Smalls, Kuji Geku looking sweater.
So I stood out.
They definitely didn't like that I was participating
in a game that they probably trained their whole life for.
And that amount of money they could win
is very, very significant.
And there's me in there.
They're also pointing out,
Borat, Borat, thinking I was making Borat jokes,
which again, very traumatic memory
for the people of Kazakhstan.
Were you making Borat jokes?
No, but I guess it's the same type of humor.
But I guess I'm not pretending to be Kazakh.
I'm just there being an idiot and enjoying the local culture.
But we're over there in Kazakhstan. We did that.
That was obviously a bit risky.
Did they learn to love you?
I think they learned to love me and then to hate me again.
So it was like a bit of an all encompassing relationship for the Kazakh people, but
we, we basically abandoned ship.
It was proven too difficult to film some things, some sensitive subjects over there.
And I said, where should we go next?
And I just looked at the map and I was like, when you Ukraine, Ukraine was a place
that I've been offered a to teach a jujitsu seminar prior to, I guess, the war commencing,
the full scale war commencing. And we're looking for a bit of adventure, something interesting
to film. So I'm following the news, obviously very controversial in the news. People have
very strong opinions. And I was like, let's go over there. Let's throw a charity event.
Let's do something. Let's train with the people and really experience of ourselves. So we
set up the seminar, turned out to be the biggest seminar for Jiu-Jitsu in Ukraine history, which is wild considering obviously they are
at war, but everyone came together to support it. And one of the soldiers there, one of
my friends there, good friend now who's on the frontline, he made a comment on there
and he said, Hey, like this is a seminar to donate profits to the soldiers, but we're on the front line.
And I was like, you know what? I'll come to you.
And he's like, Listen, I can't promise you'll survive, but I'll promise you have a good time.
And I said, That's all I needed to hear. So we connected and my friend, Roman, we went really, really close.
I think we were at the closest point, seven kilometers from the front line.
Obviously very surreal experience to be over there,
seeing basically how the battles fought with all drones.
How long ago was this?
I think it would have been March or April.
So we went there, we went basically spent two nights
up on the front line, went back to Keef,
and that was it for that trip. in terms of crazy stuff that happened.
Obviously, just the people living like you download the air defense tracker.
So at any time, there could be an air siren going off an air alert on your phone.
Could be like drones heading your way.
Planes are in the air, missiles flying.
And then those missiles will change direction and stuff. So the air alert, you don't know if it's heading a different direction, but they just sort of warn
everyone. So you live under a constant state of fear basically. And then on that first trip,
the heaviest moment was I was going downstairs in the hotel to work out, which is honestly a rare
thing these days, doing something healthy with myself. You're working out. Getting the gym pump into mine. And this was divine intervention
that a hypersonic missile was shot down by the Patriot defense system,
just like five minutes from the hotel. So the whole hotel and the attached gym just shook like crazy.
Some people started freaking out. Most people went to leave to go outside,
which I don't think is recommended, but you want to see what's going on out there. This was in Keef. This was in Keef.
So it got shot down and then some of the local troops actually took me to the site of where just
part of the missile had landed in the ground and left this huge sort of indentation that already
cleared up most of the, I guess, shrapnel from the missile. I don't know if I should or if I was legally allowed
to do this, but I took some of that missile back home with me.
I don't know where I left it actually.
But I thought maybe that would raise some alarm bells
and airport scans, but I took it regardless.
And that was basically the craziest thing
that happened on that first trip.
The Patriot defense system is incredible.
It's an incredible piece of technology.
That's from the United States.
It's expensive, but it's incredible.
And then so that's protecting Kiev.
That's protecting Kiev.
Yeah.
That was at the time where US hadn't voted to, I guess, keep funding the weapons over
there.
So it was kind of a tense moment because I think, I don't know, everyone was thinking
like, when do those air defense missiles run out?
So that was a heavy moment for me thinking, look at what it shot out the sky.
Like imagine if they didn't have that.
But that was probably the most surreal moment.
But Kiev largely, life goes on most of the time as per normal.
I was faced with crazy messages and comments even just posting that video
like I'm getting paid by Ukraine and stuff and it's just like
People just don't understand that like life has to go on like keves here the front lines far away
Like the cities have to largely try to operate as normal
Just life life will not go on in those villages and cities. Well, it's human nature as well.
It's not just Kiev, it's Kharkiv, it's even Donbass,
Herson, people get accustomed to war quickly.
It's impossible to suffer for prolonged periods of time.
So you adjust and you appreciate the things you still have.
Yeah, it's some ball of moves out there.
I love seeing people that just crazy stuff's going on from the war and they don't
even react to it.
They don't go to the bomb shelter.
It's like a baller move.
Like I'm not going to change my lifestyle.
Actually on that first trip as well, something else that I probably shouldn't have been allowed
to do was go to Chernobyl.
So Chernobyl, I believe troops came through Belarus and there was some fighting going
on in Chernobyl. I
think the whole world got concerned at that point if any sort of radiation leaked. But
Chernobyl as it stands, the troops back down and it's completely covered in mines. Very,
very difficult to go to Chernobyl. Basically as a tourist or as like, I guess, an idiot
like myself should really probably not be allowed in a
place like that. But we were able to get there. We passed like four security checkpoints.
It took two attempts. First time we tried to go in there was with the special forces
guy. We cleared two security gates. Then they stopped us and basically threatened us with
arrest. Rightfully so. Really have no business going to Chernobyl.
We made a connection. I won't say this connection was, but he had heard about what I had done
sort of with a charity event and opened some doors for us to be able to go to Chernobyl.
So we got to see Chernobyl. We had some filming restrictions there just because it was a crazy
military sort of conflict at one point. And we got to actually see Chernobyl.
Chernobyl has always been a dream of mine to see because it's just such an interesting place.
And to see it under these conditions, very, very strange.
Yeah. What was that like? So there's no civilians there now.
It's just completely empty. I guess it's kind of like the fantasy you have.
I imagine people going on tours of Chernobyl back in the tourist days when it was a tourist bar,
and it would be busy full of tourists.
We got basically a private tour.
So we got to really feel that abandoned sort of vibes.
I guess I was interested in it from playing Call of Duty and then Chernobyl
series, all the documentaries and stuff, but very, very strange place to go visit.
And it is now a minefield, like a lot of parts of Ukraine.
And it is now a minefield like a lot of parts of Ukraine. That's one of the dark, terrifying aspects of wars.
How many mines are left even when the war ends for decades after.
There's mines everywhere because demining is extremely difficult.
And that could continually kill people.
I don't think it'll be a tourist spot for a very long time
because if you were thinking about areas to demine
when the conflict ends,
an area where if you accidentally trigger a mine
could cause a radiation leak,
it's probably gonna be very low on the list.
So tourism for Chernobyl,
who knows how long until that returns.
Why do you think you were able to get to Chernobyl?
Is there, why don't you think you were able to get to Chernobyl?
Why don't you think the Ukrainian people, the Ukrainian soldiers don't see you as a
threat?
Maybe they were hoping I did step on a mine.
Maybe my jokes didn't go too well there.
So your connection was actually Putin.
He was trying to get rid of you.
Putin, yeah.
Now, I don't know.
I mean, we felt pretty safe when we were there.
There was an air alert went off.
They were kind of more concerned with me dying just for the PR side of things.
It's like Australian tourists.
In one of your videos, actually, you know, her Ukrainian language, you're talking
about, we don't want to lose an athlete.
That's what they're saying.
As you're loading the rocket launcher.
Oh yeah. the rocket launcher.
I shot a rocket launcher with the troops on the first trip, but the second trip I went
back to, which was only maybe four to five weeks ago.
This time we went to some craziest spots.
So we went to Odessa, which has been hit a ton.
I really enjoyed the video of old man stretching and like exercising on the Odessa shore.
Yeah, what is that? exercising on the local custom.
Well, Odessa people are known historically to be wild.
That was wild.
It was abrasive to the eyes, but I appreciated it.
Especially a middle-aged man in underwear with a beer belly doing a sun dance at
dusk that would frighten many people.
Yeah.
The battleship would turn around.
Uh, yeah. So where else? We went. Yeah. The battleship would turn around. Yeah.
So where else?
We went, yeah.
So we went Odessa.
We briefly went back to Keefe.
We, so I made a connection with the police chief for basically the
entire country last time.
And he had said to me that if I wanted to go somewhere, sort of really
heavy in terms of action, we could go to curse on and he's like,
oh, personally escort you to curse on.
And I was just like, well,
here we have an invitation for adventure.
I think it's a great idea to go.
And I thought, you know what?
I'll completely lie to my cameraman
and tell him it's a safe trip to go on
so that he can pass that information onto his fiance.
And she won't have any concerns.
So we basically take this huge journey all the way down to Curzon. We switch at a city outside,
I can't remember the name, but we had to switch to sort of armored vehicles. And I remember the guy
that picked us up there said, hey, give me a phone number for someone to call to recover your bodies.
And he said that in a joking way, but I think
it was serious. But I said, just leave it. I don't think they need it. I don't think
we much left probably if we get hit over there. But we go basically into Curzon. I think Curzon's
population used to be like 250,000. Now it's like basically all military down to 50,000.
So we went into the police, basically stationed in the bunker underneath the top
of the building was destroyed. And then one of the local guys just took us on a city tour,
which again, we had some filming restrictions because obviously anytime something's hit,
I guess the other side wants to be able to see what damage has been done. So if you take
any footage of recently destroyed buildings, that's going to help them recalibrate
and target the next shot.
So Kursom being so heavily hit, it's basically within range of every single thing Russia
has, every form of weapon drones.
Before we took the tour, he put some drone blocking things on top of the car, which didn't
look reassuring.
He also took a helmet out the back of the car, which I thought he was going to give
to me, but he just threw it in the back of the pickup truck and said, Oh, you, you won't
need this.
You'll be dead anyway.
And I was like, Oh, I've made a great life decision with this little curse on tour.
But then we took a tour of the city and curse on used to be kind of like a beautiful beach
city by the Nipah River. But basically it's just the river that separates Russia from, I guess, the Russian land they've taken from Kursan.
So Kursan split across that river and there's just Russians on the other side of the river and Ukrainians on this side. So very, very dangerous.
But Kharkiv makes a lot of press because of the long range missiles that hit, but Kursk is just being hit all the time. So we took this tour, we went along the river,
we went to within one kilometer of the front line. So that was the closest we got.
After this point, we heard artillery strike. And because you're in an armored vehicle,
it sounds further away than it is.
Obviously, the sound doesn't get in.
So I thought it sounded far away.
We could see some smoke that actually appeared close in the distance.
The guy driving us took us to a point where a large building was blocking us from, I guess,
the angle at which the missile would have came from.
And I thought everything was cool.
I thought it must have been off in the distance.
And then we heard two more strikes hit very, very close.
They sounded really loud.
And then I think he's ready to win to see if everything's safe,
if we can leave this point.
And then we basically race back.
But we started to realize we're in danger at any point where he really sped the car up
or sort of took sort of evasive movements in the car.
But we got out of there and I think I had someone translate it later.
And basically, yeah, he was checking to see if the roads were clear for us to leave.
Ultimately, it ended up being someone died and a few people injured from that blast,
which was less than half a kilometer from us.
And basically they were radioing saying, end the tour, come back to the police station.
Artillery is terrifying because there's just shelling and it's the destructive power of artillery is insane.
Yeah. And it's constant all the time.
Yeah. And you hear that noise and you're like, is that coming or going?
Very concerning.
Right.
You don't know.
Yeah.
You don't know.
And just like that, it could be you. You don't know. Yeah, I'm like, I don't know. And just like that, it could be you gone.
Last time the village we went to, basically, it was the day we left, we stayed there overnight.
The day we left, it just started getting extremely shelled. And the soldier we were with just took
a selfie video of us and basically the location we were in, just hearing just artillery strike after artillery strike, just being like, oh, you guys left and the
fun began. So they, they take it in good spirit. I was trying to use their energy to reassure
myself, but I guess when they see it every day, it's, they're kind of more adjusted to it.
They're not like, they're not freaking out every time something crazy like that goes on.
Well, they have to, right? They have to be in good spirit. You have to be joking and laughing.
Yeah, the guys are always laughing and joking. They were laughing and joking at me quite a bit,
holding weapons, trying to shoot weapons and stuff. They got a lot of enjoyment out of me shooting the RPG.
Yeah, they're probably still telling stories. That crazy Australian American that rolled in.
They helped me out though in my marketing campaign for the tournament. We were able to secure a Lada
classic Soviet Union car. We painted it with the logos of the other event, the ADCC.
And we got to shoot some RPGs at it. Yeah. Great experience.
Great fun.
Yeah.
It's a very creative marketing campaign.
Very dangerous one.
I don't think like Coke or Pepsi are going to do that one.
So it's very, very innovative.
It was a bold move.
Luckily they let me get away with posting it, but when we were there, it was at a,
basically at a shooting range and we cleared them out for a while.
So we'd blown up the car.
We'd set it on fire.
We'd done all this sort of stuff.
I remember we were trying to blow it up.
It wasn't quite hitting.
One of the missiles was lodged in under the car.
So it was kind of risky.
That could have gone off at any moment,
but we needed to get it to ignite.
We needed to get a shot where it was on fire.
The logo of the enemy tournament was basically on fire.
So we poured gasoline on it.
We shot the gasoline tank. That didn't work.
That must be a movie trick or something. And then we decided we had light on fire, a rag,
and just throw it into the blown out back window. So I'm with this guy, special forces guy,
and we throw the rag in the back. Like soaked in gasoline rag?
Yeah. And we start running and he's like, stop, stop. He's like, it didn't go off. So we're sitting there quite close to the car, lighting it, trying to light more as
we walked back to the car.
And then we just hear the car ignite and he's like, run, run, run.
So we came quite close to death already at that point, but we wanted to get the shot
with some photos in front of the burning logos.
But we told the guys at the shooting range
to basically give us 10 minutes or so.
So we could take the photos.
I don't know if they didn't wait the full 10 minutes or if we took too long,
but they started firing at the targets anyway.
And then the ricochets were flying very, very close to us over our head.
One landed right by my leg.
We're like, should we better get out of here?
Obviously, not much safety concerns at that point,
but we survived basically artillery strikes.
We survived a bit of friendly fire
with the bullets coming our way.
But again, I was strangely calm
because the other guys were calm,
but then afterwards they said to me,
they were like, oh, bro, if you got shot,
we'd just have to dump your body at a hospital.
We wouldn't be able to explain
why you're here blowing up cars.
Right, right. dump your body at a hospital, we wouldn't be able to explain why you're here blowing up cars. Right.
Right.
And you're American and athlete, international celebrity.
They'd be like, what is he doing on the front line?
There's no real good explanation for it.
But I mean, even through the jokes and stuff, it's good to highlight what's actually kind
of happening over there.
You know, it's obviously very, very bad.
What's the morale of the soldiers like? Is there still an optimism? Is there still a hope?
I mean, there's sort of the battle fatigue, you know, and as they say, like,
all the heroes die early, you know, the guys that the real heroes that are willing to sacrifice
themselves, they're the ones that are going to get taken out quick. Unfortunately, that's the reality
from over there, but their thoughts are mostly that it's going to be a prolonged quick. Unfortunately, that's the reality from over there, but their thoughts
are mostly that it's going to be a prolonged war. Like when I ask them about how fast the
frontline moves, they're like, oh, it could take six months to move one, 200 meters. So
it just feels like it's going to go on forever. And from the Ukrainian side's perspective,
those guys talk to me about how when they hear radio intercepts of Russian soldiers
marching to the same frontline spot is that basically they're marching into certain death
at certain locations. And based on the radio transmissions, they know they're going to die,
but they head forth anyway, straight forward into a Ukrainian position position which is just was me I guess I will what to they just keep throwing troops at it.
And you see a ton of footage they take themselves just mind blowing mostly some of this footage doesn't make it to the internet cuz it's important sort of details in those conflicts but like they're showing first person perspectives of trench warfare.
Just crazy to see what some of these guys have, have gone through.
So I went to a lot of the same places as well, including her son.
Um, what was your sense of the place?
Curse on was like, it was just so destroyed.
I think at this point, most of the civilians are gone.
I saw a lot of just elderly people left behind, especially a lot of old men. And I just think they're just
like, Hey, I've lived in my whole life. I'm just never leaving. So no matter the level
of danger, those guys just remain. And then for the, it's largely just, I guess, military
in Khorasan, but that place felt very, very dangerous. I didn't realize until we got there just quite how destroyed it is.
How did that experience change you?
Just seeing war head on?
How did it change me?
I guess just realizing a lot of these soldiers are just like, you kind of distance yourself
from them thinking that they're something separate.
But really speaking to a lot of the Ukrainian soldiers, like my friend Roman,
he hadn't lived in Ukraine for eight years.
He lived in France. He had a life.
He's got a wife over there. He's got a daughter.
He basically volunteered to come back to protect his mom
and brother who still lived there.
So it's like you sort of I used to view them military guys, because in Australia,
and I guess in the US, they don't have this conscription ongoing right now, you know what
I mean? Like, whereas obviously, there's guys like Roman who volunteered, but then there's a lot of
Ukrainian soldiers that were conscripted into the war. So it's like, you just realize how a lot of
these guys are everyday people, they're just in this
crazy situation, like where Roman felt obligated to return to Ukraine. Like from my perspective,
anyone in it from Australia or US, just, it's just a different perspective on like those,
they feel different to the regular people fighting in Ukraine from my perspective.
Yeah, it's defending the land that is your home.
Yeah, like Japan was coming for Australia, I guess in World War II, they attacked the North,
but really there was no foot battle and there was no soldiers on the ground within Australia,
I guess the US too during World War II. So it's like a completely different perspective
from our recent histories compared to like if you were Ukrainian and there's Russians
within the defined border, their responsibility to protect their homeland and their family
is just something you can't imagine. But also after having spent time with them, you can see why
they feel such a strong sense of obligation to protect Ukraine, protect their family and friends.
In a lot of cases, the soldiers are using their own funds to buy equipment, whether
it's bullets, whether it's guns, whether it's armor. Is that still what you saw?
Yeah. I mean, in terms of the weapons, America provides weapons. So we saw a wide selection of weapons.
Some of those would be old Soviet weapons, like obviously the RPG we shot and what we
shot out of it is all Soviet.
It's very old weaponry.
And then you've got US weapons that have been given as well.
But in terms of the basic soldiers equipment, like if they want good quality
stuff, that might be the difference between them surviving the winter or the
summer, just in the extreme temperature range, like they have to pay for that
all themselves.
So they always joke about when foreign soldiers come over to train them or they,
a lot of foreign soldiers come to learn about sort of the drone technology they've
developed on a budget is they always joke with them about how like everything from most countries is
basically supplied. All the good quality standard equipment they'd need is just supplied by
the government. But in Ukraine, obviously funding is very stretched. So these guys to
have the best equipment, they have to basically find money to pay for themselves. And they'll do that by seeking donations.
Best way to get donations would be to go social media profiles.
So that's when you see a lot of sort of social media warfare from a perspective
of gaining fame to secure donations for the battalion, to be able to fight better
or protect themselves.
And also some of the social media warfare, I guess is psychological warfare
against the enemy.
Yeah.
You'll see like private telegram groups where they're showing what they've done to the enemy,
what the enemy's done to them.
It's just crazy.
Yeah, there's telegram groups on both sides and it's basically some of it is propaganda.
Some of it is psychological warfare.
Some of it is just the human nature of being like of increasing your own morale and the morale of the people around you by showing
off successfully killing other human beings, which are made other in war.
And the nature of this war has evolved.
So drones have become more and more prevalent.
They're consumer level, cheap drones.
Can you speak to that?
Have you seen, have you seen the use of FBV drones?
Yeah.
So I mean, basically like a three to $500 drone.
I think it's like carbon fiber, 3d printed and they can address attached different forms of weaponry to it, whether it's just dropping a frag.
I could drop a mine out of it.
just dropping a frag, they could drop a mine out of it.
I know they were talking about how they had a liquid that could basically burn through sort of a lot of cars and tanks.
So the person inside would basically melt alive, which sounds horrible.
But what's mind blowing to me is you could have like a three million dollar
Russian tank that could be destroyed by a three hundred dollar drone,
which is just crazy how fast the war changes.
I think they're kind of the world
leaders in budget drone technology. They obviously don't have the budget for these crazy, elaborate
massive drones. I did see some higher budget, bigger drones over there, but for the most part,
those FPV drones is really how most of the battles are fought. And you're seeing the cameras on them. So you can see like basically
kamikaze drone will chase someone down and they have that footage. And that's what the police chief
said to me when he gifted me one of the drones they used. And he basically said, he's like,
artillery is scary, but a drone will follow you into a building. It's like kind of a haunting
thing to think about.
They'll see the drone, they'll hear the drone,
they might try to shoot it down,
or they might try to run.
But if it's a kamikaze one,
those guys are pretty good at flying them.
It's gonna chase the soldiers down.
A lot of soldiers pretending to be dead,
it's really crazy, some of the footage out there
of those FPV drones.
So it's a terrifying tool of war and tool of psychological war and used by both sides
increasingly.
Yeah, both sides use it.
I remember I was with Roman in Marseille and he had his break period.
He was allowed to leave the country because he basically volunteered to join the army.
Ukrainian men can't really leave Ukraine right now.
But Roman, I was in Marseille
and this was a surreal experience for him.
We went to the beach and there were some tourists there
flying a drone and you just saw his instinctual reaction
to that drone sound in the sky.
Flashback to that.
Currently they're all, as far as I know,
all human controlled, so FPV.
But to me, increasingly terrifying notion is of them becoming autonomous.
There's the best way to defend against a drone that's FPV controlled is for AI to be controlling
that drone.
Just have swarms of drones that are $500 controlled by AI systems.
That's a terrifying possibility
that the future of warfare is essentially
swarms of drones on both sides.
And then maybe swarms of drones,
say between US and China over Taiwan.
That would be wild.
Because I mean, they do those crazy drone light shows
where they do those performances with the lights and stuff.
So they're already pretty sophisticated
with sort of pre-programming.
Those are pre-programmed.
So the low level control, flight control of those is done autonomously, but there's a
interface for doing the choreography that's hard coded in, but adding increasing levels
of intelligence to a drone where you can detect another drone, follow it and defend yourself.
In terms of the military on both sides of the Ukraine War, that's the technology, that's
like the most wanted technology is drone defense.
Like how are you defending those drones on both sides?
And anybody that comes up with an autonomous drone technology is going to help whichever
side uses that technology to gain a military advantage.
And so there's a huge incentive to build that technology.
But then, of course, once both sides
started using that technology,
then there's swarms of autonomous drones
who don't give a shit about humans,
just killing everything in sight on both sides.
And that's terrifying.
There's civilian deaths that are possible
that are terrifying, especially when you look 10, 20,
30, 40, 50 years from
now.
Yes. I mean, it's surreal. Like when we went to Kerslan, he was like, uh, the entire sky
is just full of, full of drones at any given time. They could decide to come and attack.
So like just the, they could just sit there forever waiting, waiting for you to come out
of that building. They'll wait a long time when someone goes and hides inside,
or potentially if it's open window, fly straight through the open window to get people.
Yeah, so you're not even safe indoors.
Yeah, there's nowhere to hide. And they can wait for a very, very long time.
And as far as I know, even politicians, like you're in danger everywhere in Ukraine. So if
you want to do a public speaking thing and doing outside, you're in danger.
Cause it's very difficult to detect those drones.
It could be anywhere.
So it's a terrifying life where you don't know if you're safe at any moment, anywhere
in Ukraine.
Well, sure.
I mean, it's crazy with what happened to Trump.
I thought maybe the next attack on a public figure might come in the form of drone technology,
some sort of something along those lines.
I wonder how they protect against that here.
If that happens, just imagine the insanity that would ensue.
Because we understand the idea of a gunman with a rifle
shooting somebody.
But just like a drone, just imagine the conspiracy theories.
Who controlled that drone?
Where did it come from?
Yeah.
And now everybody, I mean, that will just cause chaos.
And the range is ever increasing.
One of the battalions in Ukraine, because those FPV drones have short range, pretty
short range, but they were able to attach it to one of the larger drones with a
signal booster so they could potentially go up to 30, 40 kilometers into the
distance.
So the drone that hits you could be flown by someone so far away from you. drones with a signal booster so they could potentially go up to 30, 40 kilometers into the distance.
So the drone that hits you could be flown by someone so far away from you.
And if they did that domestically, that would be very frightening to think of the sphere
of where it could have come from.
Do they, when you talk to the soldiers there, do they have a hope or a vision how the war
will end?
No, really. It just seems, I guess it just seems to everyone that it's sort of,
there's going to be no middle ground.
When I was there, there's a kind of optimism that there would be victorious,
like definitively. And so is there still that optimism? And also also are they ready for prolonged war?
I mean, I think it would be a soldier by soldier basis.
I know like each of them had a different perspective.
I remember I would ask him about like in terms of US politics and their fears because the
first trip I went there, US hadn't agreed to resupply weapons. So it was a very different
feeling in the air there of concern over what was going to happen, but they still remained
quite optimistic that no matter who got in, they felt would do the right thing. But in
terms of prolonged war, most people think it's going to go for a very long time. Like
the Children's Hospital that just was bombed in
Kiev. Anytime there's a moment like that, that reignites everything. And I think it happens on
both sides. So I know that there was an attack in Crimea. It was an attack on a beach, I guess.
And I don't know if that attack on the hospital was retribution for that. But that's sort of the energy that is felt like they might have battle fatigue.
But when something happens to civilians, especially kids on your side, kind of
reinvigorates the energy to fight for as long as necessary.
And in terms of a case by case basis, one of my friends, Dmitri over there, who
trains Jiu-Jitsu, owns a gym.
He was very passionate about it just because of the history. Like he brought out documents of his grandfather
being executed by the USSR. So I know that when the war started, he took a bicycle helmet and
his AK-47 and went out into the streets. And he's like, I'd rather be dead than live under
like I'd rather be dead than live under Russian rule again. So I mean, very case by case basis, sort of personal history for them, I think. Did they comment on US politics, whether they
hope for Trump or for in that situation, Biden now Harris to win the presidential election?
I think most of the guys tried to keep it pretty positive.
You know what I mean?
Like some people did think that maybe if Trump was elected,
he wouldn't continue to fund it,
but they really try to stay optimistic.
Most of the people I spoke to really tried
to remain optimistic that they would be protected
if it comes down to it.
But obviously there was a nine month period
where they weren't refunded.
So as that stretched, obviously they're refunded now,
but it takes a lot of time to get that equipment back
to the points at which they need it.
So I mean, if ammunition had ran out,
Patriot defense system had ran out,
really, really sort of scary prospect there.
I don't know what's all,
I guess no one knows what's gonna happen there, but.
Did you lie to people and say you were close to the president
so they can be nice to you?
Like so they can convince you to continue the funding?
I'm an Australian diplomat.
Diplomat.
Yeah, that could be a nice way in.
Yeah, that would have been a nice way to the top.
Luckily for me, most of the places I travel to,
Jiu-Jitsu gives me access to so many different individuals.
It's super bizarre.
Like oligarchs, royalty, I guess tech wizards.
It's just, it's a strange group of people, like a code around the world of just,
I get strange access just for being good at wrestling, wrestling dudes.
Yeah.
Martial arts.
There's a, there's like a code and there's a respect to mutual respect.
Even if you don't know anything about the other person, if you both have done martial
arts, I mean, there's similar things with judo, with jujitsu, with grappling, all that.
I don't know what that is.
It's like an inner circle.
That's kind of like, cause this film project we're working on, it's kind of focused on
that is, uh, because of the history I have in Jiu-Jitsu and traveling
and doing seminars and just getting access to strange experiences from the local, strange
in a positive way and participating in those experiences.
That's what I sort of wanted to focus this travel show on was the community of Jiu-Jitsu
people around the world kind of really has no sort of ethnic background, religious background, even level of wealth.
Like it sounds, as cheesy as it sounds,
kind of a good equalizer on the mats
and that community camaraderie
sort of knows no limits there.
Including like mats, the shittiest mats
and some small town in the middle of nowhere.
100%, even like Shayk Tarnoon who started ADCC,
I know when he went to the US and he studied there, he would train at a very simple gym.
He wouldn't declare who he was.
Like I watched a documentary produced about sort of the story of Shaik Tarnoon and how he studied in America, basically in anonymity.
The people at his gym didn't know who he was in his country.
And he trained there, he trained with them for years, cleaned the mats like anyone else.
And then they didn't realize who he was until he said, hey, I want to invite you to my country.
But he actually meant basically as royalty come and then they realized who this guy was
and the significance of him.
That's gangster.
That's great.
One of the things I love about Nogeek JJitsu is like, you don't see rank.
So on a small scale, there's no hierarchy that's that emerges when you
have the different color belts.
Everybody's kind of the same.
It's nice.
You get to like see the skill, the skill speaks, but there's just like a mutual
respect and whatever you can quickly find out, I actually wonder if I would be able
to figure out the rank of a person.
You think you can, can you usually figure out how long a person has been doing?
I like to think with some of the aggressive clothing choices I've made and
sold in the sport, that that should be a beacon that that person has hopefully
some talent cause they're fearlessly provoking the other party there.
Oh, it's, it's like in the jungle jungle whenever there's like a insect that's red, that is like really
flamboyant looking, that means they're dangerous.
It's a target.
Yeah, being flamboyant.
If you come on the mats with something pink, pinky or something, people are circling in
fast, especially in Eastern Europe.
Okay.
So, yeah, you mentioned the project.
Can you talk about that?
I saw there's a preview that you showed Craig Jones going walkabout.
Going walkabout, yeah.
And so you showed a preview in Indonesia where you're both kind of celebrating and maybe
poking a bit of fun at Higgs and Gracie.
Higgs and Gracie, yes.
So I like to match looks from time to time in an homage.
It's comfortable actually.
I enjoy it.
Yeah.
You should keep it.
Oh, why don't we wear this now?
I'll wear this for the Gabby match.
Um, I mean, yeah, we're trying to do a documentary series because the way I see
it is I want to grow the sport of Jiu-Jitsu.
And every, this sounds funny to say now because I'm doing a tournament, but everyone tries
to do it through competition.
But as we know, most Jiu-Jitsu gyms we visit, a very small percentage of people compete,
let alone compete regularly.
You go to gyms that could be Brown or Black Belt that don't know many of the big name
competitors. So my thoughts were we're never going to grow this sport by competition.
We're going to grow it by appealing to the large majority of people that do it,
which are just people that enjoy it for the benefits it provides to them, whether
health or psychological.
And obviously many people inspired by Anthony Bourdain.
Basically, he was looking at what he did with food by showing the very interesting characters in the food culture, the food industries, especially with street food
and building around that. So I'm trying to look at Jiu-Jitsu like a giant cult.
Scientology isn't starting with planet Xena, it's starting with John Travolta and Tom Cruise. So
we can create a documentary travel series highlighting the diverse, interesting people
that participate in the sport.
In that sense, I hope we can grow up, but also doing some charity work along the way.
We'll release the Indonesia Bali episode pretty soon, but as an Australian, I do do a lot
of damage culturally around the world.
So I'd like to do some good as well.
We've done a lot of damage to Bali.
So give back to local communities.
We have an Australian there that runs an Academy, Academy Christos.
He's one of the guys we're donating a portion of the ticket sales to from our event.
But he basically went straight into a Balinese slum, started
teaching Jiu-Jitsu on a mat under a tree and then slowly through donations has built a gym.
And his real focus is not just taking money from people and gifting it to them
to help the community, but to teach them skills.
So he'll take a lot of the disadvantaged kids and he'll teach them things like
photo editing so they can get that work
from the internet really.
Incredible guy.
It's good to know that you see yourself as the John Travolta of Jiu Jitsu.
Many masseuses have accused me of the same thing, unfortunately.
All lies.
Yeah, there's a lot of similarities between the two of you.
So you mentioned Anthony Bourdain.
What do you like about the guy? What do you, what do you find inspiring and instructive about the way he was able
to, as you said, scratch beneath the surface of a place?
I just felt like he's very authentic.
Wasn't afraid.
Like, this is something I had trouble with when we first started doing the travel
show, it's easy to do a travel show if you only say positive things about a place.
You know, but he would find a very creative way
to show what's good and bad,
a very honest reflection of the place.
So that's something I would strive to do.
However, in some places it's very difficult.
You know what I mean?
Like for example, Kazakhstan.
If I were to say something negative about Kazakhstan,
they'd be like, who's this foreign idiot
talking about our culture?
And I think that was what was incredible about
Baudain is he could talk about both the good and bad of places and he would do it in such a way
that it was tasteful and was respected by the locals. Yeah, that's actually a skill that you're
incredibly good at. You make fun of a lot of people, but there's something, maybe there's
an underlying respect, maybe it's the accent, maybe, I don't know what it is. There's, there's a love underneath your trolling.
Hopefully.
Yeah.
Gabby Garcia is a deep, a deep passionate love underneath the trolling.
Yeah.
Speaking of which, let's talk about CGI.
You're putting on the CGI tournament.
It's in about a week, same weekend as ADCC, $3 million budget, two divisions,
two super fights, winner of each division gets $1 million.
Everyone gets $10,000.
How do you even say that?
Plus one.
10,000 plus one.
Yeah.
Plus one.
Uh, just to compete.
So it's August 16th and 17th.
Everybody should get tickets same weekend as a DCC, which is August 17th.
Okay.
So what's the mission of what you're doing there?
The mission has always been first and foremost, increase athlete pay.
So ADCC has invested a ton into the sport.
Obviously I mentioned Shake Tarnoon, Shake Tarnoon has done so much for the sport of grappling, particularly no-gig grappling. So
he's grown it. He has funded this for a very, very long time. But we've kind of hit a point
since 2017 where the audience, the crowd watching live and at home behind a paywall has grown considerably.
We had things like MetaMorris, we had the Eddie Bravo Invitational, Polaris, all these sort of
professional events that have also contributed to growing the sport. And obviously people like
Gordon Ryan have definitely increased the popularity of the sport, but the payment for ADCC has never
gone up despite again, the growth of it.
So what I did, a lot of fans were asking me earlier in the year, they said, okay, you
want to do ADCC?
And I said, that is a big commitment of time, energy, expenses on steroids to get my body
ready for a tournament that I'll probably lose.
And if I lose on day one, I make $0. If I lose on, if I lose in the final, which I have done a couple of times, I only get $6,000.
I think third place is $3,000. Fourth place is $1,000. So if you make day two, you get paid. But for me personally, seeing ADCC 2022, you're looking out to a sold out crowd of like 10,000
people.
It's on flow grappling, which you know, pay quite a bit of money for the streaming rights.
I can't comment on what that number would be.
And then you go home, despite having put in all that effort with only 6,000 and they're
basically the argument is you issue paid in exposure.
But again, there's many ways to expose yourself.
You know what I mean?
That's just one of the platforms to do so.
Yeah.
My problem was that they announced that they were going to go from Thomas and Mac
to T-Mobile, which is a jump in quality of stadium, but not a significant
jump in sort of stadium, but not a significant jump in sort of seating.
So we've gone from like 11,000 seat arena to I think a 15, 16,000 seat arena.
And I knew that flow grappling would have had to pay more money because
now the sports growing so much.
And I can personally kind of track the growth of the sport through selling
instructional DVDs, instructional online products, because that keeps growing.
And we're targeting those white and blue belts vulnerable to internet marketing.
And that audience continues to grow. And those will be the people that largely watch
ADCC events like this. So I simply said, in response to a lot of fans asking me,
why are you going to do ADCC? And I just simply made a video saying,
me, why are you going to do ADCC? And I just simply made a video saying, no, probably not.
Probably not.
It'd be nice to make some more money.
And then I listed a bunch of sports such as Cockbar that you get paid more to
win Cockbar in the villages of Kazakhstan, the payment structure is higher.
And I received a very aggressive response, not from any of Shake Tarnoon's people,
but from Basie who runs the event today.
One of those guys amongst giving me death threats said, hey, T-Mobile costs $2 million.
You don't know what you're talking about in terms of business and production.
And he's probably right.
But to me, $2 million is a waste of money for a Jujitsu event.
I don't think we're at that level yet.
Like that's where the UFC host events, you know, $2 million.
That's expensive, expensive venue. So we argued a bit on the internet and he
said, Hey, if you don't like it, why don't you go get $2 million and put on your own tournament?
And I said, I might just do that. And one of my anonymous friends kindly donated a $3 million
budget and actually messaging before the show to say, Hey,
we won't reveal your identity because obviously anyone that has money is going to get asked for
more money for, or ask for money from others. So he wants to remain anonymous, but he basically just
said to enjoy the trolling aspect of it and also contribute to the sport of Jiu-Jitsu.
It's good to know that the anonymous funder appreciates
you for who you are, Craig Jones.
He sees my true identity and he wants to provoke.
It's, it's, it's trolling for a good cause.
Yeah.
But basically we were able to find Thomas and Mac event center,
which was their original venue.
And it just so happened to be available that same weekend, which
we're very happy about.
And so we booked that out.
We decided to, ADCC pays 10,000 to the winner.
We were like, you know what, we'll pay $10,000 plus one to show up.
So to show up in our event, you're going to get paid more than to win ADCC.
And not only that, we're going to broadcast it for free.
So on Meta, X and YouTube, you'll be able to watch this event for free.
That's amazing.
It's very considerate to the flow grappling streaming platform, I believe, to have also
a free alternative on the same weekend.
And the brilliance of this whole thing is I was largely criticized for not knowing anything
about business, but the people criticizing me decided to host a tournament at 15,000 seat arena.
They decided to take sponsors.
They decided to use a stream platform with self subscriptions based on the athletes that would enter it, but not give any of the talent, the athletes a contract,
which gave me this beautiful position to basically say, Hey, what do you prefer?
The prestige of an ADCC gold medal
or money?
And that's the fuse so far.
And we put that, we put that out into the world.
I didn't chase too many athletes down.
Obviously a lot of these guys really need money.
So you throw a million dollars out there.
People are jumping on board.
So initially we started getting, we got two local guys here in Austin,
the Taka brothers, they jumped in first and they're great kids.
They really legitimize the whole thing.
Cause if, if we pick certain athletes, like just B team guys straight away,
it's already looking a bit dodgy, but we've got some legitimate athletes,
especially the under 80 kilo divisions full of.
Minus two or three guys, That's the best people in the world
in that weight division. And as we started to grow our roster here, what happened,
I'm going to say this allegedly for legal reasons is that the first move ADCC did
was they matched the female pay to the men's pay. So the women always traditionally got paid less,
I think $6,000 for first place.
As soon as we had Fion Davies,
the reigning champion come across to do a super fight with us,
bang, ADCC raised the prize money of the women's division
to equal the men's.
So me being a feminist activist
throughout many of my years on this earth,
immediately got women's pay raised in the sport
of Jiu-Jitsu equalized basically, which went counter to everything the promoter had said,
because he said it was out of his control to raise money. He said only the ADCC, I guess,
coming directly from the Sheik or the Sheik's sort of guys could raise the prize money. He got it
raised. And then what happened was once we started getting some of these
big names here, so some of the best guys from ADCC would be in this division. We've got a bunch of
champions or medalists or really the top betting favorites for their divisions there.
They started again, I can't emphasize this enough, allegedly paying show money, which has never
historically been done before to keep athletes in their show.
So you're saying allegedly there were some under the table payments by ADCC.
Do you have secret documents proving this?
I do have the documents.
No, some of the guys obviously told me, you know how it is, you slap a
million dollars on the table.
It looks great.
That was me proving I had the money, which wasn't even my money to begin with, but I
was basically me saying, Hey, the money's real.
I don't know why, but strangely a lot of people don't believe me when I'm telling the truth.
I don't know why they wouldn't.
But what logically happens is they're like, Oh, look how much money he has. We're going to give like, give us more show money. So they're negotiating with me. particular Brazilian businessman manager.
I won't say his name, but he looks like the thing from fantastic four. And he was a manager for some of these athletes and he would take a massive
20% cup.
So what he, and I got to, I got to pay respect to this, uh, respect to this.
Cause it actually caused trauma to the other team as well, but he would, uh, I
would invite an athlete to CJI. He would go to the other organization and he. But he would, uh, I would invite an athlete to CJI.
He would go to the other organization and he would say to them, Hey, what sort of deal could you give me to keep this guy? You want to keep him in your event? And he would use CJI to leverage
more show money for his guys of which he gets to grease the wheels with 20% for himself. However,
which he gets to grease the wheels with 20% for himself. However, at CJI, everyone gets $10,001 across the board and a million dollars prize money. So there's no room for really
negotiation for the tournament aspect of us. So he has a vested interest in putting these
guys in ADCC because he can negotiate show money and he can basically take 20% of that
for himself. But really for the sport of grappling, this is incredible across the board,
because by us stealing or at least borrowing a bunch of athletes from ADCC,
ADCC had to fill their divisions.
So they filled their divisions with many other competitors that wouldn't
have ordinarily had the chance to do ADCC.
And really, although we've scheduled it the same weekend, ours is actually Friday,
Saturday, ADCC being Saturday, Sunday, our day starts pretty late. So we start 5pm Saturday.
So really ultimately it was a big marketing ploy to go head to head pretending like we're making the
fans choose, but the fans will be able to watch both events. You've got to go all day Friday for us.
You'll sadly miss the ADCC hall of fame ceremony where you'll see many of great speakers,
public speakers, philosophers, tell their stories about hardship.
Just like at the end of any jujitsu seminar or beginning, if you're blessed like that,
you might have a 45 minute monologue about how they more knowledgeable than doctors, lawyers, classic black belt
technique, but you will miss that.
With great metaphors about lions and about lions.
Yes.
About being a humble lion, most importantly, but you can watch all that
Friday, you can watch most of ADCC Saturday and then Saturday night in Las
Vegas, I'll be doing what many men have done before
and that is wrestling a giant woman.
Can you speak to that?
How are you preparing for this moment of violence on a Saturday night with Gabby Garcia?
So Gabby Garcia is the legend of sort of women's grappling.
I think she's won more than anyone else.
So between me and her, we would at least have 15 to 20 world
championships.
I'd imagine.
Yeah.
She's huge.
I say that in an endearing way.
She might be six foot four, six foot three, and her weight varies depending on what time of the day it is between 220 and 275 pounds,
but she's going to be coming in quite big and strong.
Me, I am about 179 pounds right now and a five foot 11.
So I've got a significant size disadvantage.
She has the credentials, but we're going to, we're going to scrap it out, scrap it out and see who's best, the greatest woman's competitor of all time, or a guy that's
never won anything. Has it added some complexity of the picture that, you know, there's some sexual
tension in the room whenever you, the two of you are together. Yeah. Maybe I'm being romantic,
but it seems like there's, you've slowly started to fall in love with each other.
It's been three years of seduction. It's been a long time.
It's inspiring for many young men that follow you and look up to you.
Just the romantic journey that you've been on is truly inspiring.
I would say it's a motivational message to the guy that keeps sending DMs to a girl on
Instagram for years.
That maybe after three years, it could also happen for you too.
No matter her high and weight, I think persistence is the key here.
We do have a wager on the line.
This might be the first wager of its kind. I would hope in combat sports history.
If she wins, I'll personally give her a million dollars.
If I can footlock her, we're going to collaborate together in an OnlyFans sex tape.
Did she agree to this?
She shook on it.
You do have an OnlyFans channel.
Is that still up?
It's after August 17th.
It's going to be fire.
It's going to be on fire.
Wow.
I think that, and honestly, when we talk about secret investor, I think that could fund the
entire tournament.
It'd be that successful.
That'll be the only paywalled thing about this tournament is your OnlyFans.
Yeah.
I mean, it's going to be tournament is your only fans. Yeah.
I mean, it's going to be a spiritual experience for me.
Yeah.
Wow.
Okay.
I'm totally distracted now.
Can you talk about the ruleset?
So we're using the angled walls inspired by karate combat.
Karate combat did those angled walls.
Those are awesome.
You're calling it the alley. That's really, really interesting.
So the it's like in a pit, I guess. And the angled walls are.
Yes. A karate combat have a square pit. We have a rectangular alley.
We like the visual of just you're in the alley with someone, you know, you come,
we both know what goes on an alley.
Only a couple of things that could go on back there.
What's the second thing?
Nevermind.
I got it.
But why this is brilliant.
Why the angled walls are brilliant for grappling is because any grappling
tournament, this goes without question goes IBGF, ADCC.
The reset is one of the most annoying aspects of the sport.
And one of the aspects of the sport that these, some of these sneakier
guys take advantage of, there's guys out there that are brilliant at playing the
edge, open the ref or reset them, or they'll shoot a takedown near the edge.
And you might watch, and again, I'm picking on ADCC here, but you might
watch an ADCC match where 90 seconds of a 10 minute match is the referee
grabbing them, bringing them back to the center, or trying to recreate
something of a position that landed outside. Not only is that sort of boring to me, it
and it sort of could be bias, you know, like, again, it's happened to me in events where
like I've the refs gone stop, I've stopped, he's moved a little bit more. And then there's
an adjustment in the reset. I mean, it's cheating to a certain extent, it's just more of an annoyance.
They bring it back, they reset it to the best of their ability in the center.
The angled wall mitigates that and it mitigates it in such a way that is a
disadvantage to be pushed up against the angle wall.
You're very easily taken down against the angled wall.
You could use a cage like the UFC does or any sort of MMA organization.
However, cage wrestling can be slow.
You're obviously at the vertical and it can stagnate there.
Guys are very good at using split squats to really defend that position.
So we, and for me personally, I don't love the cage for grappling.
I'd like to differentiate it for grappling.
What holds people back from using the alley or a pit like structure is the viewing, the viewing angle.
Because if obviously if you're one of the VIPs or you pay for expensive seat, that angle walls above you.
A cage you can see into an elevated platform sort of stage.
You can see clearly into because it's basically flat, but the
athletes could fall off an inch of themselves.
So something happens, UFC fire passes, the elevated flat stage.
It's kind of scary to be near the edge.
You go off, you're going to land on concrete.
You might want to do that to the other guy if you're that way inclined, but the alley,
the angled wall solves all those problems.
Very minimal referee interference.
Again, the only thing that holds me back is the expense of building it.
But again, when you're spending someone else's money, you will spare no expense in production.
So we've spent a lot of money on the alley and we've really gone out of our way to create an experience that around the alley,
we've elevated everything so that the people watching with that are see down into it.
Cause that, Adam, your instinctual thought is, Oh, it sounds great, but how am I
going to see in it unless I'm far up?
Like you'd need like a Coliseum like structure, which is basically what we've
attempted to create so that you get both a perfect place to, to wrestle, to grapple in, as well
as a perfect viewing angle for the fans.
Well, I think it's an amazing idea.
What about the Jiu-Jitsu on a slant?
You've triangle-ed somebody on a slant.
Is there like some interesting aspects about the actual detailed
techniques of how to be effective using a slant?
I'll be honest, I competed for Karate Combat twice.
Never once did I ever step foot into the pit.
Just again, like you said before the podcast,
if there's a right way of doing things,
I'm probably doing it the opposite.
The wrong way.
I actually, no idea why people take advice from you,
but they do.
I'm mostly an inspirational speaker at this point.
Yeah, you and Tony Robbins are like this. Same size at least, from you, but they do. I'm mostly an inspirational speaker at this point. I think.
Yeah.
You and Tony Robbins are like this.
Same size at least, but in terms of the training for obviously the athletes, very difficult.
Some of these guys are going out there and built their own angled walls.
Yeah, I saw that.
That was a cool video that.
They're getting into that.
That's a smart thing to do.
There's a million dollars on the line.
You should probably invest in that, but I also like a new surface that no one's competed
on. No one's competed on.
No one's gamed it yet.
No one's like, we're gonna see it unfold.
Like when UFC, when people started figuring out
how to use the cage, we're gonna see this unfold
in front of our very eyes,
how the strategies work for this.
The other thing we've done too, is we're doing rounds.
So qualifying rounds would be three, five minute rounds.
The final would be five fives.
Why I want to do that is to incentivize action.
We're going to incentivize action through penalizing people, but we really want,
I love a short burst, a break, and the guys can go hard again.
I don't like a jujitsu match where the guy takes the back early and he's like,
Oh, if I keep this position, I've won. And that's something that people that don't compete,
don't realize is if you take, if you get a good position early, get up on the points,
you just sit there and go, Oh, let's ride this to the end. That's why I want rounds so that you
might take guys back. You really incentivize to get that finish. And the way we're trying to
grow the sport is to
steal the MMA scoring structure, which a lot of people criticize because they think it's overly
complicated that I understand it. But to the mass audience, they understand a 10 point must understand
a decision in that sense, understand it being scored round by round. So we're trying to appeal
to a broader audience here, but we think based on the structure,
based on how hard we'll call stalling penalties, based on you wanting to finish your opponent
quick to have a better chance at a million dollars, because it's 10,001 to show up and
a million to win.
If you ain't first, you're last.
There's no reward for second place.
So I'm punishing the one position I've only ever been able to achieve in tournaments.
Are you worried that because of how much money is on the line, people will play careful?
A very generous friend of mine has provided this money. I'm like, unless you guys go out there
and try to kill each other and put it all on the line,
I just won't do it again. Like I'm giving you guys a massive platform.
We've turned down offers from streaming platforms that wanted to buy the rights to this event
because the marketing is going very well. We're turning down money to grow the sport.
The ADCC promoter said he wanted to grow the sport.
So what he did is he put it behind a paywall and use the money from the paywall to buy more expensive arena i don't think that's a good spot to grow the sport like comedians do.
These days like guys like mark norman will release a special for free and you should get a first release a special for free and it grew his audience massively.
special for free and it grew his audience massively.
I think that's what Jiu-Jitsu needs. We need an exciting show.
That's not behind a paywall that'll grow the sport, grow the audience.
And really then ultimately we can get to a level where it could be behind
a paywall, but I just don't think where they are.
Yeah.
I think million dollars is a lot of money, but the opportunity here
because it's open and freely accessible by everyone,
is to put on a show.
And then you get a million every year.
If this is a crazy exciting event,
the funding's gonna be so easy year after year.
And the other aspect we're doing to it is,
unfortunately, I'm not gonna make any money off this thing.
It's a nonprofit and the money from charity.
Except the OnlyFans, but whatever. Yeah.
That's the real cash cow. But that's the real work too.
Yeah. And that's not for charity. That's for your personal bank account. The OnlyFans.
Oh, that'd be for the follow-up therapy, but that'd be expensive gig for whoever takes that on board.
Love hurts.
That physically will. Yeah. Ticket proceeds to charity. So like, obviously we've got the $2 million budget.
We've got production expenses.
We've got the team of staff to hire.
But if we could sell this thing out, we could potentially donate a ton of money to charity.
One of those charities is Tap Cancer Out.
And what's great about this is Rich Burn is a black belt from new york who's in the banking world.
He's the one in the bank or cassia grappling he went through.
Can't see he basically had a very aggressive can't see how to treat it and now he basically has said to us that whatever we donate from the profits of the event.
that whatever we donate from the profits of the event, he's going to match dollar for dollar.
And we've also had another guy who wants to remain anonymous
agree to match dollar for dollar as well.
So the more ticket sales revenue we can create here,
the more we can actually give back to charity.
So it's really all round.
It's going to be a great event.
Yeah, Tep Cancer Hall is great
and all the charities that the athletes have been selecting
are great.
What's been the hardest? You are wearing a suit, so you figured out how to do that.
The tie was difficult, for sure.
The tie was difficult, but you figured it out and congratulations on that.
But you've never run a tournament.
No.
I've never wrestled a big woman either. Well, I have, but not in this form.
Not in a competitive environment for OnlyFans.
What's been the hardest aspects of actually bringing this to life?
The first one was people believing it was real.
That was quite difficult.
And then communicating with the athletes.
That's basically my responsibility is securing these guys,
getting these guys to commit to things.
They're very, it's very difficult.
There's a reason a few athletes in every sport
really stand out and it's kind of professionalism
and kind of the way they market themselves.
And I think those two things do go hand in hand.
So we're in a sport where there's not enough money
where a lot of these guys do have managers.
I think in MMA, things would be a lot easier for the promoter because you're not talking directly to the athlete.
You're talking to a guy who might, who's obviously taking a cut, but like he's, there's a middleman.
So in a situation where you're talking directly to the athlete can be very difficult, can be very annoying,
can be very hard to reach these guys. They can be very noncommittal.
That for me has been one of the biggest challenges.
The guys that I speak to that are like, I'm in,
and they're like, I'm out.
I'm in, like navigating this area.
One other aspect is because we did this basically from idea
to event will be less than three months, three and a half months.
So it's like, we're having to do so much in such a short period of time.
Little things like of the show money we've given them, they're expected to
basically secure their own flight and hotel to the event with cutting down on stuff. Cause that
would be one of the, if I had to coordinate getting these guys flights, I would just jump
off a building. Like it's, it's hard enough to get them to agree to the event, let alone coordinate, Hey, what date do you want to come in? It's like herding cats. So
really just the interpersonal stuff's been difficult. Obviously going up against ADCC, the
legacy of M has been pretty damn difficult as well. Well established, huge history. They've been
selling tickets for two years. Everyone's known it's been coming for two years.
That thing was largely sold out before we even announced the event.
So we're going head to head with this event.
So from a ticket sales perspective, very difficult.
What's been a Reddit question?
What's been the most surprising people who turned down your invite?
Ooh, I mean, we can, we can name names.
I mean, obviously Kynan, he was a semi in semi out.
His suggestion was actually to do a second and third place prize rather than a million.
And I'm like, no, we want an all or nothing.
It's all or nothing here.
Well, that's a better spectacle, better entertainment.
Yeah.
Probably more injuries, but it's all or nothing.
Miki Galvao, the one that got more injuries, but it's all or nothing.
Miki Galvao, the one that got away.
Yeah.
That's sad.
But we got the Rotollos. The Rotollos props to these kids because Cade's the reigning champion.
These are two of the best guys in the sport.
Allegedly were offered pretty significant show money to stay, but they hit me up and
they said, hey, promise us one thing.
We're on opposite sides of the brackets and we'll fight to the death in the final for
the million.
And we know, everyone knows that we've seen them compete against each other multiple times.
So that was not a surprise because I know they're good kids, but to basically turn down allegedly show money to do this event, to support the event to me is incredible.
Mika gave out things would be more complicated there.
Like obviously Mika officially joined ADCC before he secured the Rotolos.
Cade beat him in the final.
Mika's personally motivated to face off against Cade.
So he didn't know Cade was in our event before he agreed to ADCC.
There's more to that story too, in terms of Meek doing ADCC because a bunch of the
kids in his team, I think they're being flown out to the ADCC kids event.
So there's like his two teammates, well, at least one of his teammates will be
doing the ADCC 66 kilo division.
So his dad, his coach doesn't really want to split time between two events.
That's a difficulty for athletes there, but obviously disappointing.
We couldn't secure Mika.
Mika said he was about the legacy.
So he wanted to be the youngest guy ever to double grand slam, which is basically
when all the gear events and when the ADCC that same year. My thoughts were, if I was in his
position and I never was obviously a prodigy, a talent like that, is I thought he had a
position to make a statement in the sport to kind of as cheesy as it sounds, be on the
right side of history, to have turned down a double grand slam
to be in an event that supports athlete pay. Again, I don't overly criticize him, but I think in
terms of your legacy and reputation, to be at a point and choose to do that is much more memorable
than him getting that double grand slam, which I'm sure he will win the ADCC 77
killer division this year, but it'll be somewhat tarnished anyway.
So I do feel bad for some of the athletes that win this year and potentially
people will be like, Oh yeah, but that was half the people weren't in the division.
I feel bad for those guys.
But at the end of the day, most of these guys had an opportunity to be a part of
an event that really there's no downside to.
You'll have a chance to be paid more money than you've ever been paid in your life.
You're selling tickets that are going to go to charity and it's not behind a paywall. So
anyone anywhere in the world can stream this event, watch it, and there's no barrier to entry in
terms of finances.
Was there ever any chance that Gordon Ryan would enter?
I don't think so.
I don't think so.
Is that something you tried?
Me and Gordon don't text each other too often.
I tag him on Instagram and things, but he doesn't respond.
Tell me about your history with Nicholas Marigalli.
My history with Nicholas Marigalli?
Actually, it dates back to a time where probably he does not even remember.
Back when I used to wear a kimono.
So I went to Abu Dhabi World Pro, I was chasing my Gi dreams.
I lost in, I can't even remember, again, probably the final, no, me.
I probably lost in the final against Tommy Langlacker in the weight division.
This was the last year they did the absolute.
I went into the absolute.
I made it all the way to the semis.
Nicholas Marigalli destroyed me in the gay.
I did hit a nice little reversal on him though.
He, he passed my guard and I somehow reversed him from side control.
That's the only part of the match I share after which he swept me, submitted me.
You reversed them from side control.
Yeah.
Okay. So that could from side control. Yeah. Okay.
So that could be like an instructional.
That could.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
But the right place, right time though.
But then years later, I left the team.
Mary Gali replaced me.
So they brought in a more credentialed, handsome, doesn't speak as well, but they brought him
in.
He's my replacement. He's coming to the team. We face off at ADCC.
I'm, I do a heavier division thinking I looked at the names and I was like, that looks like an easy division.
And I had two teammates at the time that were in my 88.
And I was like, those guys will have to face off first round.
I'll have to face one of them second round, the way they do the seating
and the structure of the bracket.
So I was like, I'll do 99.
I'll leave 88 for the boys.
They both like it. They both was like, I'll do 99.
I'll leave 88 for the boys.
They both lost my division first round, unfortunately.
So I faced off against Marigalli beginning of day two, a lot of pressure
because Dana has used to corner me, used to be my coach.
Now he's cornering the Brazilians who So we used to complain about as the enemy.
And I'm like, what's going on over here?
It's like karate kid stuff.
I face off against Mary Garley.
I go hard early because I think he can't defend leg locks for the first three
minutes, I'm just attacking legs, legs, legs.
I ended up sweeping him getting on top, no points before the points period.
But I'm very tired.
I'm very tired at this point.
Mary Garley is big. Like there's some guys that get juiced up to hit a certain weight.
That's what I did to enter this division.
You can't keep your gas tank.
Marigalli is just a big dude.
I don't know who knows if he's on the juice or not, but he's just
naturally sits around 230 pounds or even 225.
When you're naturally that big, your gas tank's a bit better.
Again, if you balloon yourself up naturally that big, your gas tank's a bit better. Again, if you
balloon yourself up on every substance possible, gas tank's surprisingly not too good.
So we have a bit of a close one. Decision goes my way. Ultimately finals next, I lose that, but that
is sort of our competitive history. We were meant to have a match that had been pre-booked immediately after ADCC.
So we agreed to this before ADCC.
I was like, the price is right.
I'm in.
So I signed up for it and I'm thinking ADCC that we're going to face off soon after.
Mirigali chose instead to have some vacation time.
He wanted to go on vacation. He wanted to have relax, but a relaxation down in Brazil.
So the match is scrapped.
Flow hit me up and they say, can you do February?
And this was about the time that Valks fought Islam in Perth.
I was like, no, I can't do February because I'll be helping Volkanovsky.
That's going to take precedence over this match.
Flo goes, you know what we'll do?
We'll announce it anyway.
We'll sell those tickets anyway.
We'll get the people hyped and then we'll just have you pull out. And I'm like, all right,
do it. Do it. I might do whatever you want. That's fucking probably not a good idea, but
they do that. And then people keep trying to rebook this match. But now I barely even train
anymore. I'm busy being a promoter traveling around So now, instead of facing him in competition again,
which I would do if the price was right,
that'd have to pay me very well,
two of the shows have offered me the match,
but the money, terrible.
What do you think is the number that would convince you?
It would have to be, I would think, half a million dollars.
Otherwise, I just can't be bothered.
You know what I mean?
It'd have to be worth it.
Because to put a price on a guy that takes himself as serious as Marigalli, million dollars. Otherwise, I just can't be bothered. You know what I mean? I have to be worth it because
to put a price on a guy that takes himself as serious as Mary Garley, Mary Garley is a very serious man. He's talking about authenticity. He's talking about words he doesn't even understand.
For me to give him the opportunity to live in a world where he had won the last match against me,
it's hard to put a price on that. You know, when people say it's not about the money, it's not about the money.
It's about me waking up every day knowing that he knows he lost to me.
So you think you've gotten it in his head?
Yes.
How do you think you would do if you were to face them for the, for the said 500,000?
For the 500?
Yeah.
I think over five minutes, I beat anyone in the world.
But I still think you got it. You still think you got it?
I still think I got it.
Gabby about to find out too.
All right, so you're going to make a statement with Gabby.
Like that it'll be a match she remembers.
Yeah, she for sure.
I think the fans will remember it as well.
I'm open to it.
Like if we do this match,
I'm taking it very serious, but we'd be open to rematches. I've always said I would have a MMA fight with her. I wouldn't be afraid to hit a big woman.
So unlike with Marigold, if you win, you're not going to ride off to the sunset with Gabby.
I'm a bit of a romantic. I think she deserves a few finishes, you know?
Not one and hit the bed that night.
So you think you can actually beat Nicholas McGally?
I think so, yeah.
I mean, you could throw a riddle at him before the match.
That'd fucking complicate things for him for the next hour.
Will you and Gordon ever get along again?
I think so.
I think we need...
The origins of MDMA was couples therapy in the 70s in Houston,
I believe. I believe something like that for us could resolve these underlying issues.
You're a man of Reddit because they suggested that you should consider ketamine therapy
sessions.
Just imagine a therapist sitting down with him. They'll be like clear the schedule for
the next couple of weeks.
With all due respect, Craig, I can't imagine a therapist sitting down with you.
That would be a terrifying.
I do have a therapist actually.
They prescribed me Vyvanse.
He's, he's quite confident in my,
Is this the Metta Mmbali or what did you?
It's a Russian, Russian website.
Yeah.
It's the old Sean Connery thing.
It's, it's not a therapist.
It's just something that's spelled the same.
Uh, I think me and Gordon, a debate of some sort would be awesome.
Like a political debate?
Yeah.
Me representing Kamala Harris and him representing Donald Trump.
So intellectual sparring.
An intellectual battle, a battle of wits.
Can you just speak to your trolling?
Is there like underneath it all, is there just a respect the human beings you go after?
For sure. They have to be worthy of being attacked. You know what I mean? Like,
if someone attacks, that's the thing. It's like you want a worthy adversary, not in a sense of,
I don't want to battle someone that has better banter than me because I'm going to lose,
but I want to battle someone with a profile large enough
that it doesn't look like you're just.
Who do you think is the biggest troll
or shit talker in martial arts?
Pernado Laranjo.
Yeah, well, you can't even put him in the,
he's another class of human being.
He's overqualified.
Chael Solonin comes to mind.
Chael's good. You versus Chael.
Who's a better shit talker?
If you look at the entirety of the career.
Chael is better.
I mean, I think if you can shit talk in MMA, because there's far worse consequences for you.
If you're still willing to do it, when really violent things can happen to you.
I mean, I'm getting death threats, but like he, he has a certainty of violence against
his opponents in MMA.
So on Reddit, somebody said you are a coral belt level troll and just happened to be good
at jujitsu.
So what did it take for you to rise to the ranks of trolling from white belt to the black
belt to coral belt?
What's your journey?
We're talking shit. What's your journey with talking shit?
That's a good question.
Hey, I think it would have happened
after I moved to America.
Because in Australia, like we just on a daily basis
say some of the worst things you could ever imagine.
Like in private life.
Yeah, we just trying to ruin each other's day.
In a way that's so blasé, you're going back and forth
and the guy that actually gets upset and says some real shit, that's so blasé, you're going back and forth and the guy that actually gets upset
and says some real shit, that's your victory. You know what I mean? Like you're like, Oh,
we got you. You're actually, that actually bothers you. All right. We'll take that as
a victory.
So when you come to America and everybody takes themselves a little too seriously, those
are just a bunch of victims you can take advantage of.
An Australian entering American banter is like Neo getting his matrix skills.
You're just like, whoa, I see everything coming.
Do you ever look in the mirror and like regret how hard you went in the paint at somebody?
I don't think so.
I don't think so.
You see you're proud of yourself?
I think what I offer is some balance.
It's like I'm bringing think so. You see you're proud of yourself? I think what I offer is some balance. It's like I'm bringing some justice.
Ultimately it'll probably come back in spades to me.
Yeah.
I don't know, as a fan of yours,
as a fan of Gordon's also, but as a fan of yours,
I see the love behind it.
I don't know, it seems always just fun.
The shit talking seems fun.
I wish he'd buy it back.
He doesn't buy it back anymore though.
What's your relationship like with Mo, the organizer of ADCC?
I mean, it's been a love hate relationship.
I guess it's like any good relationship.
If you don't get blocked at the end of it, were you really in love to begin with?
That's my thoughts anyway.
But so in terms of my friendship with Mo, me and Mo
were really close friends for a long time, we'd talk a lot. He was instrumental in us moving down
to a death squad to Puerto Rico. He lives in Puerto Rico, spends most of his time in Puerto Rico.
I've spent time with him in Florida, California, but in terms of our relationship, I'm trying
to think of an exact time where it went south, but I guess in my, him being the ADCC organizer,
in my attack of athlete compensation was taken personally, which is obviously going to ruin whatever friendship
you had.
And that started around the time you were thinking about CJI.
I mean, to be honest, CJI was a result of the response of my discussion of athlete compensation.
So me and Mo had been close friends, even after the Danaher team broke up.
We were still close friends for quite a while after that.
But it does complicate things when someone is, for all intents and purposes,
as an ADCC competitor and he runs ADCC, the event, he's in control of it now.
He is your boss.
So that does complicate our friendship.
Have you had a conversation since you announced CGI?
Have we had a conversation?
When did you get blocked?
I didn't, I don't see you getting blocked.
I was just joking.
Honestly, we had a disagreement about athlete compensation.
I said, let's do a podcast and talk about it because I'm a big fan of
transparency. If you think I'm an idiot for thinking athletes should get paid more, tell me it.
Show it to me. And I've made public statements. Other people have asked why we don't get paid
more money. You can both tell me and the world at the same time, the grappling world at the same
time, but was not interested in doing a podcast.
Again, maybe thought I was going to hit him with some gotcha questions or something,
but really at the end of the day, I personally believe you've got nothing to hide.
If you are confident in the business decisions you've made, then there's no gotcha
moment that I could actually do.
I could easily, I would have done the podcast if I looked like a complete idiot, would have
released it anyway, because it would be a good message to where we are in the sport.
But again, considering what I know about Thomas and Max price, which I believe we're paying
$200,000 for, and T-Mobile's $2 million, how do you justify no increase in athlete pay while we have a 1.8
million increase in venue cost?
So you're saying that there could potentially be poor business decisions, poor allocation
of money that could be reallocated better to support the athletes?
I've never once thought this was some organization where Moe's like stealing money for himself.
I'm just saying that.
And again, the road to hell is paved with good intention,
so he might fully think that what he's doing is going to grow the sport.
I'm going about it in a completely different way.
I don't think we need T-Mobile.
I don't think we need a behind the paywall.
I think we need cheap venue, still maintain good quality production, release
it for free. If you want something to grow, present it for free.
Is there a future where the two of you talk?
Yeah, for sure. He keeps insisting on talking face to face. I don't have a problem with
that, but my argument is this is a public feud. The public, like this is, this is a, we're having a disagreement.
Let's settle the disagreement in a way
that answers the question to the fans.
Because if one of us is a complete idiot,
then I believe the world of people following this story
are entitled to know which one of us is an idiot.
If you talk to them, would you be good faith?
Like would you turn off the, or turn the troll down from 11 to like a three?
I don't even think I need a troll.
I might just say, Hey, why, like, like show us the books.
You know what I mean?
Like, honestly, when our event's done, we're going to be pretty transparent.
Obviously we are ran as a nonprofit.
We're going to be pretty
transparent about everything. And I mean, obviously, ultimately all the views we
get when flow grap, when an event on flow grappling or fight pass or any other
streaming provider, unless it's a paper view, you're not going to know how many
people watched. So that's one aspect of what we're doing is we're going to have a visual
sort of guide to how many people are fans of grappling.
Yeah, transparency in all of its forms. That's what bothers me about the ILC with the Olympics
is that there's this organization that puts on an incredible event, but it's completely
opaque. It's not transparent. And the athletes don't get paid almost at all.
So it's usually from sponsorships and they, they sell distribution,
broadcast distribution.
And so like it's mostly paywalled after, after the fact, it's very,
unless you're a super famous athlete or a famous event, it's hard to watch.
I don't know the, the, uh, the early rounds of the weight lifting or the judo or the, all of the competitions where most of those
athletes get paid almost nothing and they've dedicated their whole life.
Like they've sacrificed everything to be there and we don't get to watch them
openly and you can't, in many cases, you can't even pay for it with, with IOC.
I've got to experience this because I'll have podcast conversations
with like, Judoka for example,
and I put a little clip in a podcast
and the Olympics channel takes it down immediately.
So they have all the videos uploaded private, they're private.
Oh, to flag the copyright.
They just flag the copyright automatically.
From the private videos they could release, they could release somewhere somewhere even if it's paywall, which I'm against but paywall it but make it super easy
Accessible so the flow grappling model is still okay. I'm against it
But if you do a really good job of it, okay
I can kind of understand a membership fee, but like it should be super easy to use
But in the case of the Olympics first of all in the case the Olympics, the whole point of the Olympics is for it to be accessible to everybody. So
paywalling goes against the spirit of the Olympic Games. And I will say the same is
probably true for many sports like grappling, especially for major events like ADCC, that
I feel like they should be openly accessible to everybody, like on every platform. But you, what was the decision like for you to, to make it accessible on YouTube and X?
Well, I mean, just because basically it's going to grow the sport, you know what I mean?
Like it's, if you have to subscribe to a platform to watch something you have a mild interest in,
a mild curiosity in, there's a financial barrier there.
So I want to open it up because again, we have an investor who's contributing and is happy for it to be spent this way.
Happy for us not to be held hostage by these sort of streaming providers and really like again,
I'm not making accusations,
it's flow grappling or UFC fire pass.
They are making the right business decision by not providing streamer numbers because
that's leverage that those people can use against the streaming provider.
But for me as an individual athlete, they really want to understand the metrics of how
many people actually watch this sport to leverage that in my own sponsorship negotiations, then if I'm in a position to
have this out free and also give every athlete involved the same metrics and information,
like you will literally be able to see the spikes when you compete and you'll be able
to take that and present it for opportunities for sponsorships, for businesses to say, look, look how many views this got.
I was one of the most viewed moments of this event.
So I want to put the power back in the athlete and take it away from the host.
And it creates a lot of incentive for the athlete to make it exciting.
Yeah.
This is your time.
It might never happen again.
I fully intend to run this every year.
That's the goal.
But again, it might never happen again. I fully intend to run this every year. That's the goal.
But again, it might never happen again.
Is there a possible future where the 2026 ADCC is run by Craig Jones?
Could I take over ADCC?
I think from an ADCC perspective, it would make a lot of sense. I think it would make a lot of sense to wait to see if this event turns into
Fire Festival first before you commit to something like that.
But I think a more modern approach to the promotion of the event.
Again, I keep going back to the comedians.
You know, I mean, if you want to grow your brand, whatever that may be,
provide content for free.
And you can pay wall eventually you can grow the audience, create the audience free.
You know, I think the, again, if your goal is to create a huge sport here, then
it's like, if we're already a niche sport and competition aspect of that, is it
even smaller niche, then we need to grow that for providing this content for free.
Well, having just chatted with Elon Musk,
who fundamentally believes that the most entertaining outcome
is the most likely, that to me,
if the universe has a sense of humor,
you would certainly, Craig Jones would certainly be running ADCC,
which would be, I mean, it would just be like
beautifully hilarious.
It would be a poetic ending.
It'd be a underdog story from a man
that could never win the event
to running the event on behalf of the Shakedown.
So I saw a B-Team videos of the CJI camp,
people training super hard.
So you aside who don't seem to do things in a standard way, what does it take to
sort of put yourself in a peak shape, peak performance for a huge event like
the CJI or the ADCC?
I mean, psychologically, it's really, really brutal. Like for me, anytime I'm leading up to any event of any meaningful
significance, it's, it's horrible on a psychological level because
you're always thinking about, are you training enough?
Are you doing enough?
If you feel any signs of sickness, injury, the stress levels increase,
your sleep quality decreases.
It's all those little subtle things.
They're so hard to mitigate. So like whether you feel like you're training, your sleep quality decreases. It's all those little subtle things.
They're so hard to mitigate.
So like whether you feel like you're training hard enough, you're over training.
Those to me are the most difficult aspects.
And I think really those are an individual thing.
And that's really something where a coach can provide
what he thinks to you is the right amount of work.
You know, and I think that's different for different people.
I think Nikki Rod could do eight hours a day.
You know what I mean?
I think Nikki Ryan, eight minutes.
I saw a video of Nikki Ryan, like with the trash can throwing up.
Yes.
And the top comment is like, that's him doing the warmup.
That is satisfying to watch.
Yeah. But yeah, so you're supposed to train hard enough to where you have this confidence that
you're prepared.
Yeah.
I mean, it's an impossible thing to grasp.
It's like some of the best performances I've had, I've been caught up last minute or I've
been sick or my camp's been horrible.
And for me personally, I've gone in there and thought, relaxed, almost like,
Oh, well, you know, like you got caught up a week ago, you're injured, you
missed four weeks of your camp.
And I went in there super relaxed and accepting of the result and performed much better.
Sometimes when I know three months out, I've got an event coming up and that
event only happens every two years.
It just the stress of that alone.
Like I personally on an individual level, more of a I'd rather wing it.
I'd rather be in the stands and just roll down like Gunnar Nelson.
I remember he had a brilliant performance in an ADCC absolute and he was out drinking the night before.
He had no idea he was competing the next day.
He was in the stands eating ice cream and they called his name out for the absolute.
And he went out there and I believe he got bronze.
I believe he beat Jeff Munson.
So it's like it's different for different people.
Obviously, you don't want that to be the standard.
You've got to be putting in the work at all times.
But even now, in my crazy travel schedule, where I don't train
anywhere near like I used to.
As long as your game is technical and as long as your body's in good condition,
I believe you can still train well against world class guys. You might not be able to do
an hour straight, but if you're technique orientated, you're just losing fitness.
So is it possible to out-cardio Craig Jones?
Is your game fundamentally a technique-based game?
For sure, for sure. Yeah. I've never wanted to win anything bad enough to train properly for it.
Right. But isn't that the secret to your success? Being lazy?
I think so. I think that's the only logical explanation, you know?
And I also use it as mind games too.
Like, again, no one knows whether what I'm saying is true or not.
Right.
And I'm not saying this story to say anything bad about my opponent at the time, but I booked two matches and two consecutive weekends.
And I've been traveling. I think I just got back from one of my trips.
I've been over international snow.
I didn't even know where the fuck I was.
But you're in Texas right now, by the way, just in case you forgot.
Texas, just for you.
Thank you, man.
It's an honor.
But I hadn't really even trained.
I couldn't train.
Like I was traveling, just had no ability to train.
I trained for like a week, had the full road match.
And I said to myself, I was down in Mexico City.
And I said, you know what?
If you win this match, you got to face Lovato next week.
Don't go out and party.
Don't celebrate the victory.
But as a 32 year old man at the time
hitting a flying triangle submission,
I thought that deemed a worthy after party.
And we got out of control that night. And it wasn't until the next day I woke up,
I was like, Oh, I have Lovato next weekend. But I'm also,
people don't know whether I'm telling the truth or not, but it's also,
I'm almost too honest because I'll be like doing interviews saying, yeah,
I was out partying and I barely trained.
The opponent looks into that and they question it. Is he telling the truth?
Is he baiting me?
Is he really that unconcerned?
You know what I mean?
It's almost a psychological battle in and of itself, but for the most part it's true.
So to you being psychologically relaxed is extremely important.
Just not giving it to him.
I wonder what that is.
Not too much pressure.
I don't want pressure.
I don't like the pressure.
But you like the pressure when it comes to internet shit talking.
I mean, you got to silently sit back and think about a good response, you know?
Yeah.
How important is it to just go crazy hard rounds leading up to competitions like that?
You said sort of Nicky Rod, but like on average for like athletes at world-class level, do
you have to put in the hard rounds? Yeah,, do you have to put in the hard rounds?
Yeah, I think you have to put in the hard rounds.
It depends at what point in your career you are, you know, like I think like
someone like Nicky Ryan might almost train too technically too often.
And when he comes to competition, it's a confronting experience
when someone hits him hard and he feels that pressure.
So I think different people require different things.
When Nicky Rod is breaking the spine
of a 37 year old father of three bus driver,
it might be time for him to train in a more technical manner.
So it's like, you got to cater it to what they need.
And again, depending on the opponent,
it's a game of strategy, you know?
Like for me, when I was more active,
I look at an opponent
that I want that I could steal some clout from, of which the cloud you can make money.
And I think to myself, what's the best rules that I can beat them in.
That's the strategy.
And then how would I beat them in that rule set?
So there's so many strategic layers to, to go above and beyond just the training for me.
But nowadays I like to, if I train short duration, high intensity,
that's the best of me. I don't like this six, like 10, six minute rounds, whatever. Like
I don't like this long training. I don't like it's, it's for me, it's too much toll on the
body. I think, um, I go to the gym, we bank, maybe the first round, slightly
light and then just banging out two hard rounds, tops, a little bit of
problem solving, get out of there.
Cause you want to feel the, a little bit of the competition intensity
that feels the best on my body.
Oh, when you're traveling, you're doing seminars and just doing
Jiu Jitsu with folks, are you training with them?
I'm sure there's like from everything I see, people wouldiu Jitsu with folks. Are you training with them?
I'm sure there's like, from everything I see,
people would love to train with you.
Yeah, they wanna, they wanna,
I mean, I don't know what it is.
Obviously, you, I guess you,
it's like people wanna play basketball
with like a basketball star or something,
you know what I mean?
But I guess if you played one-on-one with a basketball, there's no great risk of injury. You know, that's the real problem is like,
if you don't roll at your seminar, the seminar participants don't feel like they got the full
experience. But there's snipers at these seminars, there's these sharks that are circling, wanting to attack you.
And you have to look at it, look at it from both perspectives.
I think you should provide excellent technique, excellent question and answer
time. And I think you should roll a little bit. For the most part, these days,
I'll just roll 30 minutes straight. I'll just do 10 guys, three minutes, no break.
30 minutes straight. I might even get the guy to pick.
Because again, some of these guys come in hot.
Yeah, it's terrifying, man.
Because the thing is, like with Anthony Bourdain,
sort of analogy here, you're exploring
all parts of the world.
You just want to be there in the culture,
teach good techniques, and just socialize.
You don't want to like, there's just a bunch of killers there trying to like murder you.
Yeah, that to them they're like, I get to test myself against a world class athlete
today.
And to you, you're like, oh, I'm in Odessa, I'd like to get to know the people, try some
food, have a couple of drinks and enjoy the place.
But to them, it's time, it's time to go.
You got to rope it open a bit. If I meet pressure with pressure, I get tired. But if I don't provide
resistance where they think there should be resistance, now it slows their pace down. They
get shocked a bit. But 100%, if I'm at a seminar and someone's rolling too hard with me, if I feel like
I might get hurt, I will 100% rip a submission on them. You know what I mean?
Like it's like you're confronted with a threat. You have to meet it with a threat.
It's like, I've spoken about this with Ryan Hall. Ryan Hall, give him a warning
and then gone. And I think it's perfectly acceptable. Like I won't endanger them for no reason, but if you're coming
hard, you better tap fast.
If I feel a threat, you better tap.
I'm not going to break, break it for the sake of breaking it.
But if you're, if you do some crazy shit and that might potentially hurt me
and I get a submission and I'm tired, if you're fresh, you can catch a heel hook, hold it tight.
The guy tries to wiggle out.
You got it.
Yeah.
If you're tired and you've been nice with a heel hook and then they slip out and
club you in the head, then next time is going to be the last time.
Well, last time, see you're another level, you and Ryan Hall just world class.
But like, for me, I'm trying to find, navigate through this because I'd like to
be able to roll, you know, like 10 rounds for fun, for cultural.
Oh, but they're coming for you too.
And unfortunately, ripping submissions or like, you know, knee on belly, some kind
of dominant position, people don't like hear the message at all.
Or if I let them submit me a bunch of times, they don't calm down either.
So it's, I've been trying to figure out, uh, how to solve that puzzle.
Cause I'd like to keep rolling with people across the world for like, for
many more years to come, but it's tough.
You can't do it.
If you, if you've reached any level of notoriety, whether it's in the sport or just as a celebrity, you're better off to just have three, four trusted training
partners and train privately.
That's the sad situation.
People used to say, Oh, you could be such as such a good anti-gymnast.
Those days are over now.
Now, if you show up and you have any sort of name that come in a kill, you're
better, honestly, you're better off.
It's so much safer.
Training is about trusting.
Trust is built from safe rounds.
Yeah.
Strangers are scary.
I don't know.
I'm trying to develop a radar when I look at a person trying to like figure out.
Are they, are they from Eastern Europe?
I'll tell you what, the most dank.
That's a good one.
You know what?
Anyone that wears a pitbull sports rash guard
or anyone from the country of Poland, be ready.
Oh, Polish people go hard.
People go hard.
I've never had a flow roll with a Polish person.
Somebody on Reddit asked,
how many legs did you break in Eastern Europe?
Three or four.
To send a message or just for your own personal enjoyment?
I don't enjoy it.
You know, they don't enjoy the violence.
It is humorous after the fact though, but I mean, it's just like, Hey, like,
bro, I'm jet lagged, I'm tired.
I'm here for you guys.
Why are you trying to hurt me?
I'm tired. I'm here for you guys. Why are you trying to hurt me?
You know, like if I get a submission, tap.
Don't hesitate at all. Don't hesitate.
You know, like it's like, it's, I mean, you just use dangerous.
It's a dangerous thing.
And when strangers going crazy, it's that show.
They think they're getting invites to CJI if they tap me.
It's just wild.
So speaking of which, just for the hobbyist,
for a person just starting out, what wisdom can you provide? Like say you were tasked with coaching
a beginner, a hobbyist beginner, how would you help them become good in a year? What would be
the training regimen? What would be their approach,
mental, physical in terms of practice?
I mean, honestly, picking safe training partners and trying to understand the positions and not
just freaking out. Like you might escape if you freak out, but you also might be stuck in something
and you injure yourself. So it's like, I think if you can, it's just about
longevity. You know, like, if you can train, find a pace to train at and like sort of intensity
and the right people, you could potentially train five years without injury. It's really about how
you move. If you are always moving in an explosive way, eventually you're
going to do that from a position in which you can't move and then something's going
to tear. And you also want to be able to trust training partners to not go too crazy and
inflict too much pain. You know what I mean? It's like, yeah, I think I've managed to
avoid a lot of injuries because I just never roll too athletically, explosively. I think I've managed to avoid a lot of injuries because I just never roll too
athletically, explosively.
I think I'm probably incapable of moving at that rate of speed.
So that's part of it is you, the way you move,
but I guess you also don't allow anybody to put you in a really bad position in terms of hurting you.
I let them put me in bad position, but I try to stay relaxed at all times. You know, that's the, that's the key here is like, uh, I mean, yeah, obviously
you got the cheesy keep it playful, but it's like, if you really keep, if you
can remain calm in bad positions, that is a skill that's your confidence, not
in yourself, but that the other guy's incapable of submitting you.
That's the ultimate confidence.
You can give them whatever you want.
So the thing you want as a beginner is to focus
on minimizing injury by relaxing,
by not going, by not freaking out.
Yes, keeping it at a pace so you can understand
what just happened.
The thing is, like, how do you know
if you're freaking out or not as a beginner?
It feels like a...
If you're panicking.
Yeah, if you're, that's a good,
if you're, I mean, I see a lot of beginners kind of breathing, starting to breathe hard.
There's a tense up that's probably underneath that is panic.
Yeah.
If you can make someone panic, you fatigue them.
It's the same.
It's like, if you're, even if you're a higher level and you're worried about
getting your guard passed, it's the panic that leads to fatigue and your guard
retention, but if you're, if you're so flexible, you remain calm. I think it's cause you're not panicked.
Fear is the mind killer, but also you have one of the more innovative
games in Jiu-Jitsu history.
How'd you develop that?
How do you, how do you continue throughout your career?
How, how are you innovating?
What was your approach to learning and figuring positions out, figuring
submissions out?
I mean, financial motivation.
If you can hit moves and no one else knows how to do, you can sell those
instructionals, but also it keeps it interesting because it's like, I mean, it
can get stagnant and boring, you know, like a lot of people get to blue belt.
They go to one thing, they only do that one thing.
I think it's finding creative ways to beat people.
And sometimes creativity is in how they respond to it.
So if you can find a humiliating move to do to someone,
we're not even necessarily humiliating, but a move that is unexpected.
When you get here with something you don't expect,
I think that is sort of really one of the most fun aspects of it.
You know what I mean? Like you train to stay better than the people you're better than.
That's what keeps you in the game and finding creative ways to beat those people
is some of the most entertainment.
So that's just something that brings you joy, uh, is by doing the unexpected.
Yeah.
Trying to, if you get swept with some of the, you don't think should work.
I think that's fulfillment.
So your, your game is even a bit trolly.
Interesting.
So like, but what's the actual process of like, like with the Z guard, all the
innovative stuff you've done there, how do you come up with ideas there?
I mean, you just studying tape, just study, study tape and try to reverse
engineer, like if I see a, if I see something or I train with someone and it feels,
you know, when you have those moments where you're like, Oh,
I didn't even know what they're doing here.
And if you can put someone in a position that don't understand,
that's also where they panic.
So it's like creating different ways to make people panic. But also, I mean,
just innovation, like having fun with it, you know, like,
I guess the artistic aspect of it is fun.
You can be creative in how you can beat people.
Did you say artistic or autistic?
Both.
Okay.
Just checking.
What's like the most innovative thing you've come up with?
What's like some of the cooler ideas you've come up with on the mat?
I don't think I've come up with anything, but I've popularized things, you know, like
certain styles of leg entry.
I definitely didn't invent them, but I popularized them.
Octopus guard, playing more from turtle, sort of the pinning style of game.
Like, as a, because of my jokes online, put me in a position of power in the sport so
that when I post content, it can popularize a move or at least an instructional popularize a game.
But it's still, I'm not trying to sell inauthentic products.
I'm still, I want the technique to work.
Be functional.
But put some humor on top of it.
Like power bottom, your instructional names are pretty good.
And B, you changed that one.
I saw the name of that.
I mean, unfortunately, meta, the ads, we're not appreciating some of that humor. So we had to
soften, soften the titles a bit. You got a, you got a phone call from the man said,
change this. I didn't, allegedly the company hosting it.
Right. What do you think about Zuck in general? Like the fact that he trains Jiu-Jitsu.
Have you got a chance to train with him?
Cause you've trained with Volk.
I haven't trained with him.
I met him when Volk's fought Ilya.
We've spoken briefly.
Interesting guy for sure.
Loves Jiu-Jitsu, loves MMA.
He's really intending to compete in something.
I think.
Competing in Jiu-J, intends to compete in MMA.
Has a beginner's mind, is humble about it.
It's interesting.
Was he ever in consideration for CJI?
Oh, I mean, we would love to have him.
We'd love to have him.
But he's coming off of ACL surgery.
I think he's returned to sport, he's August.
So I think he'll be back training again soon.
Yeah.
What's your relationship has been like with Volkonovsky?
Like what have you learned about martial arts, about grappling and different domains, just
training with him?
I mean, for me personally, what's so interesting about Volkonovsky is his, I guess where he
came from, you know, like it's like you have pre-existing ideas of what a UFC champion is.
Again, I would say it's similar to when I started training Jiu-Jitsu and I first
traveled to America and got to train with some really famous people.
You realize how relatable they are in some aspects.
Volkonoski trains a freestyle and it is humble beginnings, humble origins.
Like it's like a, it's a small gym in a small sort of beachside city.
They run in puzzle mats. You know what I mean? When you think UFC champion, you don't think puzzle
mat gym. You know what I mean? Like he's not training at a American top team. He's not at one
of these big gyms. So to me, it just shows what you're capable of through hard work and sort of
what you're capable of through hard work and sort of self-educating in such an isolated place.
It's insane to me that he's still considered probably the pound for pound best featherweight ever in my opinion. And he's basically come across and started late from a rugby background.
But also in terms of what I've learned on a technical level, I picked up a lot of stuff
from him and sort of grappling exchanges, how to get back up,
obviously wall wrestling, in terms of how hard he trains, how hard he works.
The cardio aspect is insane.
His cardio workouts are absolutely insane.
So he's the opposite of you.
Complete opposite of me, probably publicly and privately as an athlete.
Yeah.
The amount of work he puts in and just his, uh, sheer sort of mental willpower.
I remember there's been a couple of times where I've watched him do weight cuts where
like that's horrible.
You watching your, your friend, you know, obviously we started as like basically I would
help him in certain jujitsu aspects and then becomes a close friend
of yours.
But the whole process of the MMA fight is horrible, especially when you care about the
person fighting because some of those weight cuts you see are awful.
Like you're basically seeing guys eyes rolled back in their head, like him just powering
through a five kilo, 10 pound cut and just constantly
talking about how easy it is. But while clearly, I mean, these guys look like they're dying,
you know, like to push through that and then to push through some of the moments in his
in his fight to watch him be completely relaxed until like five minutes before the fight.
And then he starts talking about, you're never going to take this belt away from
my family.
Like he's thinking about his family before he fights his kids.
You know, you see the character change.
It's just absolutely insane to watch.
On the other side of that is obviously watching the ups and downs.
There's been so many ups.
The last two have been downs.
So you see in the full spectrum of the highest highs and the lowest lows.
How's he able to deal psychologically with loss?
I don't know. Obviously still hungry, still motivated.
Yeah. Obviously I thrive in a losing environment, but him, him on the other
hand, I'm not sure we don't talk too much on that level.
Obviously we check in his friends,
see what he's up to, see what he's planning. We were trying to get him a grappling match at CJI.
I won't say the reasons it fell through, but we were setting one up with
Mike Musumichi, but we couldn't get it done. And you can't say the reasons why.
I'll say the reason, but would have been,
would have been awesome.
You think you could have set that up if you had more time, like set something like,
like part of the challenge here is for some of these gigantic matchups.
I feel like it takes time. Yeah, that, that being the promoter tournament,
not as bad, the superfights really, really difficult.
I don't think we could have set it up with more
time that particular match, but that was the dream. That's what we're hoping to do.
There's a lot of other interesting matches you could have possibly gotten through
if there's more time. Yeah, I'd love to see, I mean,
personally, I really want to see Valks and Ortega have an actual grappling match.
Because we saw him get out of those deep submissions and apply a ton of ground
and power. I'd love to see him just have a grappling match. I'd love to see more of the UFC
stars have grappling matches, especially if they've had any head trauma in a fight. It's like, hey,
let's keep them busy. Because as you see, some of those guys go crazy if they can't train.
What about the fights against Makachev? You think Volk can beat him?
I think the first fight showed he could beat him for sure, showed it's possible. Even in the
second fight when he reversed the grappling exchange, I wish he'd tried to take Makachev
down. I really think he has a huge strength advantage against Makachev and I personally
believe he has a fence wrestling advantage. You might not see it in a sense of the technical hip tosses and things like that.
Like really, but I do believe Vox one of the best, if not the best cage
wrestler in the world.
Who do you think wins in a grappling match?
That would be interesting.
Right.
It'd be interesting.
The problem is to almost to, while you, while you are champion like Islam is you could just never book them.
You could never get it.
What do you think makes the Dagestani wrestlers and fighters so good?
I mean, I think personally, those guys are just like, they just love it.
It's just about like, it's how they train.
Like it's a fight to the death.
You know what I mean?
Like it's just built in them.
They don't want to concede an inch ever. It's how they train. Like it's a fight to the death. You know what I mean? Like it's just built in them.
They don't want to concede an inch ever.
I think for MMA and wrestling, that can be very, very good.
I think sometimes when those guys come over to Jiu Jitsu specific events, they get leg
locked, they fall into traps, overly aggressive or overly evasive.
But I think the way they train just is perfect for a fight.
A fight they can just forward pressure, eat some shots, grind a guy against the wall.
Fencing is technical.
Jiu-Jitsu is far more technical.
There's way more things you can do in a grappling scenario
from top and bottom than I think against the wall.
So a grinding nature of how they train works really good
to walk a guy down and take him down
against the wall.
And then obviously with ground and pound, very good to hold a guy down.
So I think just never conceding an inch in training is just, they've done that since
they were born basically.
So you learn how to grind somebody down.
Yeah, like they're just trying to break each other at all times, trying to have some dominance
over their friends and they train with.
But you think in the grappling context that will not always translate?
Not when you can pull guard and submit from your back.
I think that sort of negates some of that grinding pressure.
I think that has to be met with more slow, technical, lateral movement.
I think that's the way you would like, that would be the dream for me is a guy just comes
straight forward into my God.
So that grinding approach works well if he's taken me down and got already close to me.
But if I'm laying flat on my back and he's standing and he has to engage, he has all
that danger at range.
Yeah.
But if he can connect to my body before we go down, now we're in his world again.
I think.
I wonder if it's like, you know, at his prime could be versus you, for example.
Who do you think wins there?
Buggy choke for sure.
Well, he choked.
No way.
I know you're joking.
We get him with a buggy.
I can really, so you, you can get a buggy, I can really see you.
You can get the buggy joke on it at the highest, at the highest level.
Can you educate me on that?
I get that legitimately can work at the highest level.
Buggy joke for sure.
Yeah.
Catch anyone.
Really?
Okay.
You're not a buggy believer.
I, I'm not, I'm not a buggy hater either.
I'm just, I'm agnostic on the buggy choke.
Khabib would go to sleep for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's no way he would tap to a buggy choke.
I try, who was it I faced recently?
I faced the Russian guy from Tatar.
I couldn't buggy him.
I was trying to close guard one though.
Sort of like a, it is harder to pull off. But he, I had to put him to sleep twice
at the end of the match with a triangle,
but he was just willing.
Like, I don't know, Eastern European guys,
it's like, what, like, they're fighting,
they're treating it like a real fight, you know?
Have you ever, like, gone hard with a Dagestani person?
Like, grappling, wrestling?
Any of the fighters, any of the MMA guys?
Have I, have I, have I? I mean, they do train hard. They do train hard. When I did the seminar
in Odessa, it was at a school, but another school in the city brought like 10 Dagestani
guys. All of them went insanely hard. I was like, guys, it's a small sample size, but they all
wanted to be broken.
What do you think you as the wise sage of Jiu Jitsu, if you look 10, 20 years out, how
do you think the game is going to evolve?
The art of it.
The art of it.
I mean, I think obviously people are going to keep innovating, perfecting certain things,
throwing out information, bad sort of techniques, bad sort of, but I mean,
it's so hard to predict. It's like, that's the game of making money with the instructionals,
is predicting where we go next. It's so, so difficult.
What do you think is going to be the most popular submissions,
CGI and ADCC this year? Is it going to be footlocks or are we are naked?
I think, actually, CJI, I think there's going to be a lot of guys that don't tap,
that take injuries.
Yeah.
A small concern is that a guy wins the match, but is so injured.
He can barely go onto the next match.
Yeah.
Win the battle, lose the war.
We are going to see that, aren't we?
People refusing to tap.
We're actually, we did the walkthrough yesterday and we were like, one ambulance is not enough.
Get a second one here. Cause if they take one guy injured to hospital, we can't continue until
an ambulance comes back. So these guys are going to go, everyone will be daggers standing for a day.
That's what I think this tournament will achieve. But progression, it'll just be the integration of
wrestling into Jiu-jitsu.
You know, I think that would be the most exciting way the sport could progress is basically
folk style wrestling, but an integration of submissions from the standing position to,
if you just follow the rules of you should always be fighting to get on top, whether that's a
submission that leads to a sweep or a sweep, and you should be trying to avoid being pinned.
And as long as the game revolves around that and guys engage each other
offensively on the feet, that would be the most exciting, best way to watch the
sport.
Yeah.
When I show the sport as you did, so the most exciting stuff is whenever both
people want to be wrestling, scrambling wrestling,
they both want to get on top.
That looks like fighting versus guard stuff.
I'm a guy that totally agrees with you, but if I think the guy's a better wrestler, I'll
concede.
You know, like it's like, that's the hard part.
But then the whole crowd will then mock you ceaselessly as they should for conceding.
That's what the million should be.
We should have a tournament or a round robin thing where it's like the million goes to
the most exciting man who took the most risks.
I mean, in a way that's what's going to happen because this is quite open.
So the benefit of being exciting is you're going to be glorified on social media.
And if you're going to be boring and stale, you're going to be glorified on social media. And if you're going to be boring and stall,
you're going to be endlessly sort of willified.
And forget about medals.
Social media glory is all that matters.
Well, in a certain sense, on a basic human level, yeah.
I mean, not all that matters, but it's...
You're not gonna...
If you're gonna stall, you're gonna become a meme,
I feel like, especially with CGI.
And so, are the refs gonna try to stop stalling? Yeah, you're going to become a meme, I feel like, especially with CTI.
And so, are the refs going to try to stop stalling?
Yeah, we're going to penalize them hard, hit them hard, get that boring shit out of here.
So what percentage of athletes would you say are on steroids?
Is it a hundred percent?
Anyone that's ever beaten me.
They're taking more steroids than me.
I don't know.
I wanted to test them, but not to do anything bad, but just in the name of science to see
what people are running.
It's so hard to say because you train with people and they don't even tell you what they're
on.
I tell the world what I'm on and they go, look at you.
You're not taking any steroids.
It's such a a secret secret thing. I personally think it's almost impossible to say, but that, but
occasionally you look at a guy and you're pretty certain, you know.
Yeah.
The looks of it, but you could also go the other way.
Certain people are just genetic built it and they look like they are.
And then there's probably others like yourself.
It's a, it's a self-defense mechanism mechanism because you'd rather assume that that guy was on steroids
than his genetics is so far superior to yours. You're like, no, it must be steroids.
Yeah, that's the part of accusations of people being on steroids that I hate.
It's like without data, people are just like, it's a way they can say that somebody's cheating
without because I like celebrating people.
Sometimes people aren't on steroids and they aren't cheating and they're just fucking good.
What about Gabby Garcia?
I think she's beautiful, strong, and you're a lucky man to share the mat with her.
I should be honored.
I'm betting a huge amount of money on her.
So either way you're going to get paid.
She's paying 11 to one.
I bet on love as well.
So we are aligned in that way.
Love will prevail.
Okay.
You put Alex Jones to sleep.
Uh, just to reflect back on that.
What was, he was too woke.
He needed it.
So that's you fighting the woke mind virus or whatever.
I think it was on the pulse too much.
What was that like?
I didn't, I didn't see the full video.
I just saw a little clip.
I thought he was dead for a second, but I, for some strange reason, couldn't
stop laughing.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I was like, please wake up.
There's something, there's something funny about it.
I was like, his blood pressure's higher than mine.
I hope that didn't cook him.
Yeah, that would be quite sad.
It's so crazy.
He's-
Murder somebody.
Yeah.
He's probably the most just entertaining human being ever.
He just says the crate, like off air, he's always on.
It's like that's just, he's always ready
to say some wild shit.
The craziest shit possible.
What's it like going to sleep?
I somehow have never gone to sleep.
I went to sleep one time, Lachlan Charles
was demonstrating a technique on me,
but I woke up straight away.
But for 10 seconds, I didn't know who I was,
where I was, what I was doing.
But that's it, that's the only time I went out.
Sorry, Andy. Didn't feel good though. Some people say it feels good. It did not feel good.
Because you were like, what, panicked? Lost?
Yeah. I just didn't know what was going on.
Yeah. And then you load it. That must be a cool feeling to load it all back in,
like realize where am I? I feel like that sometimes in a hotel when I'm like traveling.
It's like, where the fuck am I again? When when you wake up, maybe that's what it's like.
Some people push it too far.
David Carradine, you know, what, what, I'm too, I'm too dumb to get that joke.
What a erotic asphyxiation.
Oh, good.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Now I know.
Uh, so given all the places you've gone, all the people you've seen recently, what
gives you hope about this whole thing we've got going on about humanity, about this world?
We start war sometimes, we do horrible things to each other sometimes. I missed all that.
What gives you hope?
That you can still make fun of anything as long as it's funny.
That's what I'm, that's what I'm fighting for.
People talk about cancel culture. I just think the joke wasn't funny enough.
Had poor delivery.
Well, thank you for being at the forefront of making fun of everything and anything.
And thank you for talking to me, brother.
Thank you, bro.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Craig Jones.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now let me leave you with some words from Anthony Bourdain.
Travel changes you.
As you move through this life and this world, you change things slightly.
You leave marks behind, however small.
And in return, life and travel leaves marks on you.
Thank you for listening.
I hope to see you next time.