Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1520: B.J. Penn
Episode Date: March 29, 2021In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin speak with MMA Superstar B.J. Penn. What made him choose fighting as a career? (1:33) Is there a fighting culture in Hawaii? (3:58) How before desire and dedication... there is love. (5:26) Did he become a different person when he stepped into the cage? (6:29) How the antidote for anxiety is confidence. (8:30) His stand-out fighting moments. (10:55) Why every workout is working your confidence. (12:50) Enemies to friends. (14:11) Who hit him the hardest in a fight? (15:33) The master of training and overtraining. (16:20) Working out for your mental health. (17:50) The importance of knowing when to hang it up. (21:25) Who were the best jujutsu practitioners he rolled with? (22:15) How would 25-year-old BJ Penn do in the UFC today? (23:40) Losing your identity after your fighting career is over. (25:00) The history of RVCA. (26:48) BJ Penn x UFC Gyms. (28:29) BJ Penn, the King of Hawaii. (29:33) In hihttp://jonnybones/s own words, how the infamous bar fight came about. (30:25) Who are his favorite fighters to watch? (32:45) Building the ultimate fighter. (35:16) Featured Guest/People Mentioned BJ Penn (@bjpenn) Instagram BJ Penn Website José Aldo Junior (@josealdojunioroficial) Instagram Matt Hughes (@matthughes9x) Instagram Jens Pulver (@jens_pulver) Instagram Chuck Liddell (@chuckliddell) Instagram Tito Ortiz (@titoortiz1999) Instagram Mike Bisping (@mikebisping) Instagram Jason Parillo (@parilloboxing) Instagram Khabib Nurmagomedov (@khabib_nurmagomedov) Instagram Stipe Miocic (@stipemiocic) Instagram BONY (@jonnybones) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned Available for Pre-Order TODAY! – The Resistance Training Revolution – Book by Sal Di Stefano March Specials: Get in Shape for Summer! MAPS HIIT, MAPS Spilt, and the Bikini Bundle all half off! – Promo code “SPRINGBREAK” at checkout Free Fight: BJ Penn vs Matt Hughes | UFC 46, 2004 | UFC RVCA - Wikipedia BJ Penn Knocked Out In Hawaii Street Fight, New Video Shows | TMZ Sports Gym & Fitness | MMA Training | UFC GYM Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
Alright, in today's episode, we have a special guest.
This is actually somebody that I've followed for a very, very long time.
BJ Penn, one of the best mixed martial arts fighters of all time.
It's a great episode.
We have a lot of fun.
By the way, you can find them on Instagram at BJ Penn.
You can also check out his website shop BJ Penn dot com.
This episode is brought to you by the book, The Resistance Training Revolution.
I wrote this book.
It's coming out soon,
you can pre-order it.
Now in this book, I talk all about why resistance training
is the best form of exercise for most people.
You can go check it out at theresistancetrainingrevolution.com.
Also, we have three days left for our current promotion.
This one's going crazy, people are loving it.
We have two programs that are 50% off
and a bundle that's 50% off.
Here they are.
The first program on sale is Maps Hit.
That's high intensity interval training.
The second program that's on sale is Maps Split.
That's a body part, body building split routine.
And then the bundle that's on sale is the bikini bundle.
All of them again, 50% off.
You can go find them at maps fitness products calm
Enter the code spring break with no space for the discount
Question I have for you BJ is because when you read about fighters and I followed you for a long time huge fan
And when you read about fighters
Typically they had there's like this kind of stereotype, like they grew up in a bad home, you know, bad family life,
grew up on, you know, bad neighborhood,
and that's why they chose that a fight.
Your story's a little different, right?
How did you grow up and then what made you decide,
because you're one of the most, in my opinion,
natural fighters, in the sense that you could tell,
you love fighting, how did you grow up
and then what made you choose to fight as a career?
I was born in Honolulu.
I was born on that island when I was three.
My mother moved us to the big island in Tahilo and grew up over there.
Went to Hilo High School.
And I was just kind of like fighting.
Thought it was cool.
I would ask my uncle, like,
oh, who's that, they would play Rocky Ball.
I'd be like, who's the toughest guy here?
Is it you?
Is it this guy?
And I was just, yeah, I was always into it.
And love the wrestling.
I loved Rocky Ball Boy.
I loved Hulk Hogan.
I loved all that WF.
I loved all that stuff., I loved all that stuff.
And, you know, I just, I got into Jiu Jitsu kind of, some guy moved on, on my road.
And he did a couple of Jiu Jitsu lessons with how greasy.
And then he saw, he saw his kids walking around the road, walking on from school
and stuff. And he asked my dad, he was like, hey, have your kids come down
and I'll work out, do Jiu Jitsu with us and stuff. And I was like, hey, can I have your kids come down and I'll work out, do you jitsu with us and stuff?
And I was like, oh, it's a waste of my time.
I'm already the toughest guy in the world.
That's where, you know.
So you already had that attitude?
Yeah, I was already, I was already always,
you know, thinking I was tough.
I was still a small kid, 16 or 17.
And then my dad was like, just go down one time
so this guy stops asking me.
But my dad was a judo black belt,
so he was kinda like glad that I was asking,
but he was just like, you know what,
you don't wanna do it, just go down one time
or tell the guy you don't like it.
And then I went down and wrestled around
with the guy at the rec center over there.
And I was like, he choked me out and he I'm locked man.
I was like, you know this is,
cause I saw UFC and stuff that I didn't care.
You know, I was just kind of more into boxing
and different things.
And I just kind of thought, man, with this,
I could kick everybody's butt in the middle.
You know, it's funny.
So I have a friend that I went to high school with
and he grew up in Hawaii
and he used to tell me about the the fighting culture in
Hawaii where he'd say like oh yeah if you have a problem with with somebody you could just fight it
out and people will let you fight and whoever wins there's respect there and nobody's trying to
shoot each other or whatever is that true is there like a is there like a a fighting kind of
honor culture there and did that contribute to, I guess, the way you fight?
Yeah, as soon as the fight would break out,
always in high school, everybody would start yelling,
one on one, one on one, like, no jumping in,
you know, just, and people would fight and stuff.
And then when UFC came in,
all that just kind of changed everything, right?
Everybody started choking each other and all kinds of stuff.
But do you remember your very first fight as a kid?
Do you remember the very first one you got into?
You know, it was I went to my uncle came to my hall of fame.
And I made sure to put him at the beginning.
And I said, I needed to talk about my uncle there because it was
he's the one who told me he said, go get your toys back right now.
So he's so he's back.
How old were you? How were you? Oh, I was just a little kid. Yeah, I was just
5 or 6 and you say go get your toys back
I go oh, but he bit me and he goes well, then you know what to do
Get your toys back, but now I'm right here. I'm assuming you got your toys back
I'm assuming you got your toys back. You got them back.
All right.
Now, when you did jujitsu, you were the prodigy, right?
You were the phenom.
You entered into jujitsu, and at the time, no American had won a major jujitsu tournament,
and you did it and you trained in...
I think in three years or something like that, like, were you just a natural when you
first started training, or were you just obsessed with with it and so you studied it all the time?
You know, I didn't know. I didn't realize. I didn't know what I was going to be when I grew up.
I didn't know if I was going to be hanging down at the beach drinking beer like my older brother
or what kind of things I'll be doing. So, you know, when I got into Jiu Jitsu, I just, I just,
it was just something fun. I think before desire before desire before dedication it just starts with love and and I just love what I was doing and I always wanted to be a tough guy
I loved watching Hulk Hogan Rocky Balboa all those things and
Just wanted to you know wanted to be somebody and people asked me how you got into fighting and I'm like
Well, I wanted to be on TV, but I couldn't sing I couldn't do anything
This is the best thing I could do.
Wow, it worked out for you.
Yeah, so when you were training,
and when you did some of those first tournaments in Brazil,
how did they react to this American
that was kicking everybody's ass?
Were they cool about it or were they very, were they me?
You know what?
I came from a good, I had a good gym,
a good team behind me.
It was Andre Petaneras, that's where Jose Aldo and Leo Santos and Shaolin
and many other great jujitsu athletes come out of that school.
Yeah, you know what?
I think it was a good thing that I had a big group of people
behind me while I was there and a bunch of Brazilians.
They were pretty nice.
They're especially the group that I was from,
they always supported me, always helped me out.
And everybody was always pretty nice
and pretty respectful, actually.
One memory I have of one of your fights
that I'll never get out of my head.
And I think it, because I almost feel like
there's some fighters that are, you know,
they're fighters and then there's fighters that are like,
whether they get paid or not,
this is what they're supposed to do.
And there's something, I don't remember who you fought,
I can't remember off the top of my head,
but at the end you won, and you lick the blood off of your,
you know what I'm talking about?
You lick the blood off of your,
the other guy's blood off your own glove,
and you were like, and I'm like, this guy,
if this was a thousand years ago,
you'd just be in the, he lives for this.
Yeah, if it was a thousand years ago,
you'd be in the Colosseum.
That's this is what you were meant to do.
Did you know this about yourself that when you get enough, how do you feel when you get in these fights?
Do you become a different person?
I always say no that wasn't me doing that, but no, I always, we always make a joke.
There it is, I guess that was me. That was the reason.
You know, we always would make different jokes, because that's what they were doing.
The old Hawaiian days, we would hear the stories that the sacrifices would be long-legged
fish.
So they call them long-legged fish.
But yeah, I'll be just...
That's when you just... You're intense, you'll be just, that's when you just your intense
you're into it, right? You're just in the moment right now. Now, were you were you were
you ever scared? Did you ever enter a fight scared? Yeah, for sure, you're scared and nervous,
but with I was talking to Adam a few times and then and adult for anxiety is confidence. You never got to worry about it. Anxiety wants you to start being confident and you know just kind of remind yourself about
what's going to happen. You can sit there all day but no amount of anxiety is going to
help anything. Just know what you're going to do whether you're walking into a fight or
walking into a business meeting or walking into it anything.
I imagine though it's's gotta be like anything else
where some things you have a lot more confidence
and others like are there times, can you recall
like certain fighters that you were like
ultra confident about, like maybe because of their style
or maybe whatever and then other guys were,
you were like, fuck, this is gonna challenge
everything I got at me.
Yeah, I'm more nervous sometimes when, when you're, um, overlooking the guy
or not thinking about like, when you're nervous and I cry, like, oh, I'm about
to fight Matt Hughes and I'm actually in the back kind of tearing a little
because I could get sent to the hospital or something. And then when you're
not as worried as that, and then you're just kind of going out and then
somebody, because anybody can kick your butt, right?
At any moment, you know, anything can happen.
So I think it's the ones you worry about the most is the best for you.
Yeah.
And then when you get in there, right, like, you know, there's always that kind of first,
especially with a very experienced fighter like you, there's always like that first minute
of like posturing and feeling each other out.
What's going through your brain in that time in that moment?
Yeah, like I call it sometimes people say like, how is it when you're walking to the cage?
I'm like, there's turbulence, but just like in airplane, you're not gonna stand up and start screaming.
There's turbulence, but yeah, you go, you kind of want to just get it on, get it going.
Kind of even, it's the same thing as even when you're a kid and you're standing there on the soccer
field and they're like, come on, start the game already.
It kind of all feels the same.
I guess you could say your first amateur fight could be this same feeling as your world
championship fight.
I mean, there's different stakes on the line, but nobody wants to get their butt kicked.
And the worst thing about fighting is, right?
I mean, there's different sports.
I mean, a big wave could smash you and this and that,
but the worst part is that guy's gonna go around
and tell everybody kick your ass.
Yeah.
Now, you've had so many great moments and fights.
I wanna know which ones, what stands,
which ones stand out the most like for you?
Geez, for sure, it's that first time I won the,
I would say it's the first time I ever fought in the octagon,
my first time walking in because I wasn't just some
street punk or just some troublemaker,
thought he could fight, I actually put,
when they're and did it, put it on the line,
and then when I beat Matt Hughes,
the first time I won the belt.
I think that was the last time.
That's when I think my prime was 25 years old and that's when I just really loved it,
loved the whole thing.
I mean, your education is based on your appetite and that's when I really enjoyed what I was doing.
What was the most challenging fight for you?
Was it also that?
I think it's always comes back to that,
it's yourself, is why and how you're feeling that day
and how you're walking, because you have all these
grand dreams of, okay, I'm gonna do this fight
with this guy on this day and I'm gonna feel so great
when I get there, I'll be so ready, but when you get there,
like I didn't feel as good as I thought I was gonna feel
right now.
Right.
So it's kind of just psyching yourself up and keep your
minute getting into it.
But all the guys are tough and all the guys, everybody feels the same
strength. It doesn't matter what weight class or because everybody's just
going at it, going after it.
And I have heard sometimes that even in the weigh-ins, you can kind of look
into your opponent and you can see fear or you could see a bit hesitancy there.
Did you ever have moments of that where like,
oh man, I got this, I have this over them.
Oh, 100% all the time.
You should be able to, if you're the real champion
and you're in touch with yourself,
you should be able to have him feel your presence
the whole time, you're anywhere near him.
He can just know you're there
and have to, because you can just feel it. That's how strong you're always at whole time, you're anywhere near him, he can just know you're there and have to, because you can just feel it.
That's how strong you're always at that time, you know?
I saw in one of your, I guess, training montages,
you did something that later I see other fighters do,
but I think you're the first one that I saw do this.
I don't know, I don't under water with the stone.
Yeah, I'm sure you didn't invent this,
but yeah, but I saw you were running under water holding like a the stone. Yeah, I'm sure you didn't invent this, but yeah. But I saw you were running underwater holding like a big stone.
What is that for?
I'm assuming you're holding your breath
and you're building stamina.
Like what was that for?
You know what's good about that one is because we sit
out there in the middle of the ocean and run the rock.
So when you do it, there was actually a pretty heavy rock.
So by the time you pick it up, a lot of your anaerobic
starts to go already, you're ready for your muscle start burning. So then you start running and your
black to gasset filling up and then kind of going up to the top and just staying out there,
staying calm and then just keep going. It's a fun workout.
Yeah, it looks brutal.
I would imagine it trains like you did not panic because you can't breathe, lack the
gassets, you got to stay calm while you're working out. So it's probably...
Gotta be a similar feeling as being choked out, right?
Maybe. I would think I was talking about it the other day, every workout,
whether you're doing chest or running or boxing or everything,
every workout is working your confidence. That's what you're actually really working,
right? Your confidence to do that motion, that nervous system motion or whatever it is. And I think that's just one more thing to
work your confidence.
How often did you fight somebody that you really wanted to punch in the
fucking face?
She's, you know, even even if you're a nice guy, you're a nice guy.
If I didn't want to punch them, then I'd try to make up some reason.
You know, to're a nice guy. If I didn't want to punch him, then I'd try to make up some reason. I'd try to get something to get into it.
There's gotta be guys though.
There's gotta be guys that there's gotta,
and all the fights you've had,
there's gotta be some that you were really looking forward
to punch him in.
No, there is, but there's all kinds of walks of life.
There's like people who are assholes
and no matter how much time they get their butt kicked,
they're still the same guy, so you gotta respect them
to your life man. You know what, you're just true.
You're a romantic asser.
You're a true punk, yeah.
You know, it doesn't change them.
Not a lot authentic.
How about favorite people?
Are there other athletes that you've become
really good friends with through the fight game?
Yeah, I would say Matt Hughes, Jen's Paul,
I've got tons, Chuck LaDale, I would say Matt Hughes, Jen's Paul, I got tons chocolate,
Dell, T-Doratis, Michael Biss being, I mean, the list goes on and on forever.
Oh, that's interesting. So I didn't know that you just...
Jo Stevens and yeah, bunch. So a lot of guys you fought in being good friends.
Yeah, I guess you share things. I know even sometimes in your kid you get into it with somebody
and later on in high school, You guys are friends later or whatever, you know.
Yeah, you guys share a moment in time
that just you two share.
So a lot of respect there.
Who hit you the hardest?
Who punched you the hardest?
The hardest.
She's, you know, I think it's had to be matter,
matter George, both when they told you on the ground
and they started elbowing.
I remember one time when Elb, It had to be matter, matter George, both when they told you on the ground and they started elbowing.
I remember one time when Elb with Fat Matt, he was the second time after beating him and
I kept running my mouth, talking in the media and this and that.
And when he finally got me on the ground and he stood up and he threw his elbow down
and it just missed me, hit the ground and I thought, oh my God, this guy was to kill me
for all this stuff I've been seeing.
Man, he, yeah, there's some, those two, like, as far as, if I ever got concussions or anything,
it was from those guys.
Yeah, man.
It was from them.
What about when you're training for fights?
Whether things that you were the mistakes that you made, I would imagine I know a lot of people I've trained or worked with, some of the biggest mistakes
is that they over-trained, they over-do it, getting ready.
Did you ever encounter any challenges like that, getting ready for a fight?
Oh man, I was a master of overt training and a master of under-training, trying to figure
out which one is right and it just went so long.
I mean, when I first started training like right before the Jiu Jitsu World Championships,
I was there when CrossFit was,
when they made the CrossFit in Santa Cruz,
great glassman, and he just had that little area
right on the side.
It was in Claudio Franco's Jiu Jitsu gym.
They actually made a workout for it,
it was called like, Fight Gone Bad or something like that.
I even had to, like,
I remember that I trained at Claudio,
that's where I got, that's right.
Did you do that?
Yeah, yeah, so, so I'm fight gone bad.
And then I remember I had to,
I had to write something for him
because somebody tried to take the fight gone bad workout
and he was like, no, we made it.
This and that, I had to write a letter for him for court
or something, but it is amazing watching,
watching how big that went.
But as far as the training, yeah,
overtraining because what would happen as a kid is
you have so much energy and then you're like,
you got your own routine already from the Jiu Jitsu day.
So I got what I do.
Then I meet Frank Sharmark, and I'll be like,
okay, let me add your routine to my life.
I need to do my routine to look here.
Okay, let me add, now I got three routines in one,
and I'm overtraining every day, you know. That's gotta be with the. Now I've got three routines in one and I'm over training every day.
That's got to be with the hardest thing.
Speaking of that, I mean, you must have seen quite the evolution of the sport in general,
over the years and the way that they now train.
What would you say were some of the biggest epiphanies they've found in training and preparing
fighters for their fights. And you know what? I don't know. Really, honestly, an honest question. I don't know how much further along
they are. Like, I know their techniques are because they can kick all of our butts now. But
I'm sure they're still making the same mistakes, I think. I think that's a tough one. And different
trainers. And I mean, when you, I was talking about it the other day because I get a chance to look
from the side and I saw some people trying to put together a fight camp in Costa Mesa
and I thought, what a big cluster F this whole thing is.
Now, now that you're getting ready for a fight, which should be the most relaxed, now you're
bringing 10 people who don't know each other and trying to make them all work together
and do all these things, you know, and and it's right, it's a big cluster
Fuck you right you think about it, right? How would anybody manage that right?
It seems like you like they're trying to have their athletes learn a way too many things at once instead of really highlighting their strengths
Do you think that that's something that you know you've seen too?
Yes, I have I have I've seen that a lot. And I, one coach, I always hang out with
Jason Peralo. He talks about that because I could be like telling a fight. I'm not a coach, right?
I don't have any Jiu Jitsu world champions. I don't have any UFC champions. I really coaches much.
I love to be a training partner and train with people in the gym though. I love that stuff. But,
you know, I kind of watch him and watch different coaches and it's like, true, you gotta see what they start
doing good while they're sparring and then you start going, okay, that, do that again, do that
because if I go jump up and go, okay, now start punching him now, start, you know, that's not what
they do. That's not what they do. That's not what they do. They do their own thing. It's interesting.
Do you still train a lot in the G?
I do, I do train in the G, because I think it's great.
Almost like juggling for your brain
to like grow brain cells type thing,
because there's only like so many moves without the G,
but there's thousands of moves with the G.
So, makes you slow down too.
Yeah, it's awesome, it's awesome.
But now at this age and being involved
with the UFC gyms in everything,
what really clicked to me was,
we're in Honolulu at one of the gyms
and a woman, older woman comes up to me and goes,
hey, thank you for having this gym here.
And I go, no, thank you for being here.
And she goes, no, I really want to thank you
because I gave back my anti-depression medicine.
And that's when it hit me that, because this was only working out, was only for fighting
for me, my whole life.
I've only thought about trying to fight with people that I want to work out.
And then I realized, no, that's for your mental health.
That's what this thing is, it's all about your mental health.
You're in there, you're working your physical, but this is, that's the whole thing.
That's why you never want to stop
Yeah, and because I look at this today, I'm like
It's easy for me to go. Oh, I did this for the last 20 years
I don't want to do this. I want to do something else
But no, it's for my mental health get back in there and go do it for fun
Feel a lot better later get my endorphins get everything smiling
I can actually walk around the gym and see people who just got there
and see people who have the natural high.
Like they're almost drunk.
Where they are, they're having such a good time
talking after the workout.
I can totally see that difference.
The people who just walked in
are still in there trying to get out of that depression
and all the other people are laughing,
jumping up and down, joking around.
So true.
Talking about stopping.
How hard was it for you to hang it up?
Yeah, it is hard.
I mean, you always think about it.
Because I've just been hanging out at the Ruka gym
and I've just been giving out their young fighters fits
and working out with them and stuff.
You know what I mean?
And you're just like, but you know, it's about your hunger.
It's about who wants it the most.
And that's all, it doesn't matter who's the best.
It's about who wants it the most.
And then that's when you got to know that your kids are more
important or this is more important and other things.
And then you just realize like, well, that's right.
My kids, taking my kids to Disneyland is more important than then walking around with
My ankle count work because I broke my leg last night in the fight or whatever
I'm some a big Jiu Jitsu fan and I trained for years and so I wanted I wanted to ask you because I consider you one of the best
Jitsu guys in MMA but also just pure Jiu Jitsu
Phenomenal who are some of the best Jitsu guys you've rolled with
and who had the easiest time?
Or who did you find could tap you out?
Cause there's some guys out there
that are just, you hear legends, right?
Your story's about them.
Yeah, so the, of course,
Health Grace, he helped teach me,
he was amazing, unbelievable.
Just, he's just a, just a, I kind of emulated my style
after his, like when I first get into the UFC
and just be ready to fight it,
kind of emulated after my teacher at the time
was half-gracy.
And then I went to work out with his cousin one day
who's Higgin Machado, and he really impressed me.
It was unbelievable.
He was huge, but he just didn't use any power.
Just used all technique and just tapped me out
like a baby, played around with me.
And I remember when I got older one time,
I was fighting Hanzo Gracie,
and so I had Alan Gohaz come down and hang out.
So I did a training where I was like,
okay, I'll use this Olympic restaurant
and you and I'll go back and forth.
And during that training,
Alan Gohaz tapped me out three times.
So the next day I said,
no, just me and you.
And then he tapped me out three times. So the next day I said, no, just me and you. And then he tapped me out three times again
and I go, not master, nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you.
Oh, that's awesome.
It's so awesome.
But yeah, he's still around.
I always still see him, but there's always,
there's always new people coming up.
I just can't imagine how good the people are now.
Now watching the prime fighters now going,
how do you think a prime BJ would do?
How do you think 20 you said 25 year old BJ how do you think 25 year old BJ would do today in
in the UFC? Yeah, I would I would make sure to learn everything I need to know to beat these guys.
I would crush these guys. What are the things things you think you would add or would you change anything?
You know, Jason Peralo, my old coach, he was talking to a Russian thing yesterday and they're
talking about that all the Russians were upset because he was saying that I'm the greatest
lightweight, not Kabeeb and this.
And now he was talking to them and then I was on the side and saying he was
he heard me say and that's why I didn't know who he was talking to. I'm like 25 year old BJ
panel killer killed these guys. I stand by why he's only got the 155 not the 172. We all know why
then then I find out it's live over there. I'm like oh you know but but it is what it is right? I mean
But it is what it is, right? I mean, if he could get the 170, why would it be,
why would it be, go get it if he could?
Why would it be loose and if he could?
I think we all know why.
Now a lot of fighters and a lot of athletes,
in general, after they stop their sport,
they start to lose their identity,
they sometimes go through depression, trying to find themselves again.
Did you experience any of that?
You know what, as far as identity, I think I'm much more well known today,
I think because the sport's growing so big, so more people know who I am,
or now, because of the television and stuff.
But the identity that I lost was, what do I do?
You know, what do I do?
No camp.
What do I do in this time?
And trying to put everything together, put all the pieces together from, right?
Because I would go, just hang out for a few months and then I'd go to fight camp for two
or three months.
And I had my year always set for the last 20 years.
So now sitting around, I do miss certain things
and I try to figure out how to replace them
with different things.
I mean, that stuff is real.
Are you pouring yourself into any other athletes
or are you kind of like, what does your training look like
these days as well?
Now I just trained for my mental health
and because I love it and I feel good in there,
you know, feel good sparring out with the other kids,
but I try to put other things like now,
doing these other thoughts and stuff with the UFC gym
and my kids and just try to put other things
in those areas.
How old are your kids?
12 and nine are they Jiu-Jitsu? I'm trying to get them into Jiu-Jitsu. So
They they like it here and there but yeah, yeah, but it's kind of a it's not too bad of a thing for me because I've been around
Jiu-Jitsu so much it's not bad if they want to be at the soccer field or somewhere else
You know because I've been around that so long, but, you know, I guess.
Hey, PJ, I want you to school me on the history of Ruka.
Okay.
I know that you're very close to them.
I believe that you're a big part of what helped blow them up because before that, before
you, I didn't know of Ruka.
Obviously everybody rocks RBCA now.
So do I school me on the history of that and how that happened with you.
Okay, so Ruka, this guy, Pat Tenori,
his name is Pat Tenori and he had a partner.
His name was Kona and he's a professional surfer
from the Big Island of Hawaii.
So Pat saw me doing Jiu Jitsu at the Bren event center
down here in Santa Clara.
He thought I was Filipino, but then,
so all that time he thought I was Filipino but my then, so all that time, he thought I was
Filipino, but my dad's Irish and my mom's half native Hawaiian half Korean. And so, but he
thought I was Filipino and then kind of had a connection. He just kept, he talked to me a few times
and then he gave me a shirt actually that the back then, it said, jujitsu, we fight. It wasn't Ruka
yet or what and then he kind of made Ruka in his garage and it just kind of
got bigger and he just made the coolest clothes you know just the coolest art and the different things
and he just had a great idea and here we are together and he was one of the first guys of the
any brands or whatever who kind of like did a sponsorship thing and kind of stuck it out because
other brands were like tap out and all the different brands but he was like a real brand that was kind of out there like a quick silver type
thing right and and he really supported this part and he's a jujitsu black belt under Alan Gohaz
and yeah so so now can you share like what is your are you still a sponsored athlete through them
or do you have some sort of a partnership or stake in the company at all? No, still a sponsored athlete to them.
Okay.
That's awesome.
That's a good deal.
Now, talk about you and UFC gyms.
I know you have some gyms in Hawaii.
How did that all get started?
How did you end up working with them and starting some gyms out there?
Yes, so Dana Lorenzo came to us and talked to us about that they were going to do UFC gyms.
And from day one I was on board, I thought it was a great idea.
I wanted to be involved and we jumped in right away.
And it took a little while about a year maybe and then we started moving on construction.
Adam came down and gave me a sledgehammer myself and let me smash the place down.
Right? We did that. Yeah, and then it was the place where we put the gym is a legendary nightclub
place that I used to frequent all the time. So it just was perfect at the gym.
This was called Pipeline. Yeah, it was called Pipeline. It was called Pipeline. And a nice little transition that's actually the gym now.
That's great.
That's wild.
And now, I know Hawaiians are very proud of their heritage.
You're like a, I know you're a celebrity anywhere,
but are you like a king over there?
You must be like the biggest, you know,
when you go over, how do the people,
how big deal of it?
Yeah, how are people with you in your, where you're from? Oh, everybody's
very nice. Everybody's always very, always have nice things to say and just, it's good, it's
good to see everybody and it's good because where I am in Hilo, it's not really that many people,
so we always say where everybody's famous in Hilo
because we're all always out the window,
all of us, right?
Waving at other people.
But yeah, on the main island,
the city, the island with the city, Honolulu,
it is it's good to go over there and see everybody
and be an inspiration in whatever I can
or do whatever I can.
Well speaking of people being nice, and everybody is nice, and I would being inspiration, and whatever I can, or do whatever I can. Speaking of people being nice,
and everybody is nice, and I would be mad at myself
if I didn't hear your full side of the story
because I don't think you commented much on it,
but they're not that long ago, you got into a bar fight,
and you could tell in the video
that you were wanting nothing to do with it,
and then end up whooping the guys ass afterwards.
I wanna know how that all transpired.
Like how did that happen?
Where were you at?
Yeah.
What was going through your head?
Yeah, I don't know why.
The guy was my friends was sleeping in my house
for weeks before that.
But he was sleeping at your house?
Yeah, we all know each other.
Oh, you know the dude.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, we all know each other. And, you know, you know the dude. Yeah, yeah, yeah, we all know each other. Um, and then
I don't know if he got mad. He got jealous. I don't know if
Girls are giving me too much attention in the place or what?
Just starts talking shit after I mean, I'm sure there was drinking involved, right? Yeah, yeah, and then yeah
Just I don't know. I don't think he thought he obviously didn't think it through because the last person
of the world, right?
He's got to know he's got to know your skill set.
You can I can tell in that this short clip that I've seen, you can tell you're
like you can tell you don't want nothing to do.
Like you're not you don't want to put the guy down.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it just it's sad because he always wants to like be my friend now or whatever right
But it's better. We keep each other's distance because he he actually after that he went to the police and tried to put
Restraining the beach and they're just like what you attacked him
You know me wow, why is that does that happen often?
You know being a professional fighter who's well-known? Is that happen often that people want to test you? Yeah, try to mess with you or is it more or do you get more respect?
Because of it. Yeah, no, no, you get a lot of it. Everybody's nice. Everybody's nice. Just yeah
Just everyone's well a drunk friend wants to fight you. That's all. Yeah, yeah, exactly. That's so crazy to me. So are you still based that a Hawaii?
Yes, I am. Yeah, yeah, so you not, you're never gonna move out of there.
You know, we were talking about maybe doing some different things
or stay up in California to work with the UFC gym
for a little bit out of the year.
Because actually my kids are up here right now with their mother,
their mother's married to someone else.
So they're up here with that family.
So be nice to me to be around and I just want to be around
with my kids hiring.
Now, BG, are you are you following the UFC closely?
Do you watch all the UFC fights and you know all the fighters that are fighting right now?
Or do you kind of like whatever?
You know, my favorite ones that I know and and I like and I want to see the big fights and stuff.
But I can't it's so big now this sport.
I just I can't I can't keep up.
That's how I felt.
I was I was a huge, back away from me.
Back when you were fighting, it was like, how often do we have a UFC fight?
It was like once every few months.
Yeah, once every three months, right?
Yeah, so it was, you could follow almost every fighter.
Where now, I mean, I, there's so many names I don't even know.
So who are your favorite people to watch right now?
My favorite to watch right now.
Who's, who's in in but the last fight was
Adesanya right yeah. No all of the champs I always I maybe not the bottom guys I don't know but
I always know who the champs are at the top. So it's steep here. Who's who's in the 205 now?
Is it steep here? Yeah it's that guy who just beat out his son. Yeah, um, yeah, I'm block away.
Oh, right, right, right.
But the last fight I got really excited about was John Jones versus Daniel Cormier,
because that was like the two top guys, right?
The two best guys and then John Jones won that one, but she's that's a couple of years
now, time flies.
Yeah, yeah.
Any, now you're also a fan of boxing.
Did you have any, any favorite boxers throughout history that you used to like?
Yeah, man. I remember when I was a kid. My favorite fight is
Evander Holyfield in Riddick Bull 2. I remember that so it was a great
Fiberidick Bull beat him the first one and then he came and he beat Riddick Bull back the second one.
I loved boxing out. I liked Evander Holyfield. My Tyson of course.
All the guys, he up Gerald Mc my Tyson of course all the guys
Yep Gerald McLean or all the different boxes. I remember who you say is our chavés
Oh, those guys I remember them any styles that you would try to because you were also an exceptional
I mean your hands were exceptional in the octagon as well. Did you read any boxers that you would emulate? I would try to
Do things that I saw Ivan the Holyfield do I try to do things all
all the guys anybody I could pick about Aaron prior I would always watch that guy
for boxing she's just yeah I would try to relate as much as I could to MMA and
just kind of like because it's all right there right it's what do you think
here what do you believe is true. And yeah, I try to emulate
there because they always overburtled the round. They just wanted to beat people up. Okay, I just want
to beat people up. So many MMA fighters today, I feel like they have so many disciplines now
underneath them. If you were to build like the ultimate fighter,
like what would be the three disciplines
that you would make sure they trained in?
She's well, oh yeah, right,
because you got judo, now there's all of that.
Yeah, because before we always used to just think
jujitsu, wrestling and mui tie or kickboxing,
but then now there's judo.
There's so many now.
And then everybody forgot about the spinning kicks
and then people started using them
and knocking everybody out.
Right.
She's, I don't know.
I try to tell people when they say,
I wanna get involved with the sport, I say,
well, what do you love the most?
Do you like boxing?
Do you like, what do you mean?
I go, do you like boxing?
Do you like grappling?
You like wrestling?
What do you like?
And when they tell me and then I tell them,
go as far as you can in that.
And then after, yeah, first, the boxing,
maybe try to go to the Olympics or do whatever,
or Jiu Jitsu, try to go, see how far you can go
in Jiu Jitsu tournaments or whatever.
And then later on, try to add all that stuff in.
And still till today, because people ask me about Jiu Jitsu.
And I tell them, no, it's not all all, you can't just have Jiu Jitsu anymore
to be a UFC champion for offense.
It won't work, but I still believe that Jiu Jitsu
is still the best self-defense because you're not
supposed to be fighting, you're supposed to be running.
And if they do catch you and grab you,
and then you can protect yourself from Jiu Jitsu
and choke them out or
Bombard them and get up and run away again. So I still think Jiu Jitsu is a great is the best self-defense form
I agree. Well, I mean, I feel like we saw that when the I mean before U.S.
He became really popular and it was underground style versus style and we saw graces
You you mean they were they were beating up dudes twice their size.
Right.
Well, I know for me, it's the one full contact martial art.
So like, you know, boxing is full contact,
kickboxing, Muay Thai, wrestling, jujitsu.
Jujitsu is the one where you see a lot of times,
small guys, big guys.
If I'm not mistaken, it's probably the only one
that has absolute
categories where there's no weight class and oftentimes the winners like you know like
160 pound guy 170 pound guy you don't see that with boxing
You know you get a big boxer against a small box a small box you can be good big boxer might kill him right?
Jitsu not so much or you don't see that just even in today's UFC with like a bee being a wrestler and then Usman being a wrestler
He just kind of already thinks like, well, maybe I can't beat him because in wrestling you don't think about that as much
Right and Jiu Jitsu we were always used to having the absolute division
Yeah, you do your weight class
You see how you did and just for fun you'd go jump in the absolute division
So I think we're always used to that
You know and Jiu Jitsu is made so the small man
can beat up the big.
Absolutely.
You ever roll with some of the legends, like Hixin.
You ever roll with Hixin?
I never got to roll with Hixin.
Because I was out there and then I fought with Hanzo
and different things.
So they probably like, no, we can't fight with Hixin.
So but can come out and hang out with all friends,
but as far as the training goes.
What about Mark Seller Garcia?
You ever roll with it? I've neveregar? See, I never know.
Oh man, I would have loved to see that man.
He was the all-came after.
Yeah.
I'm a cello and all the guys.
Excellent man.
Well, I'll tell you, I've been watching you since forever and it's been honored to have
you in the studio.
I'm happy to hear you doing what you're doing with UFC Jim so you can just take your
energy and direct it towards helping people. Great partnership. Yeah, great partnership, improve their
fitness and health and so thanks for coming on man. Oh, thank you guys for having me.
Awesome. Thank you. Awesome. Look, you can go to MindPumpFree.com and download all of our
guides. They cost nothing. So we got a bunch of them for free. You can also find all
of us in social media, Instagram. You can find Justin at MindPump Justin. You can find
me at MindPump Sal and Adam at MindPump Adam. Thank you find Justin at Mind Pump Justin, you can find me at Mind Pump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump. If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically
improve your health and energy and maximize your overall performance, check out our discounted
RGB Superbundle at Mind Pump Media dot com. The RGB Superbundle includes maps and a ballad, maps performance and maps aesthetic.
Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by Sal Adam and Justin to systematically
transform the way your body looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having
Sal Adam and Justin as your own personal trainers,
but at a fraction of the price.
The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money bag guarantee
and you can get it now plus other valuable free resources
at MindPumpMedia.com.
If you enjoy this show, please share the love
by leaving us a five-star rating and review on iTunes
and by introducing
Mind Pump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support and until next time, this is Mind Pump.