Final Hughes Vs. Gracie Thread?

[quote]TheBodyGuard wrote:

You’re nitpicking and it’s just silly as they internet debates become…just nitpicking…no offense.

I merely used football and basketball as an example of great athletes. An example nothing more.

And a guy like Mike Tyson would have wrecked shop had he trained MMA at an early age. He still would have ended up with world class hands. I don’t see any world class hands in UFC and my god, they do still stand up and swing crazy at each other like two drunks in a bar fight. You be impressed - I am not.

And you might have a point about overseas. I don’t follow the so called sport that closely. I just know enough to see all of Hughes flaws - technical and personality. I’m rooting for Gracie and we’ll all just have to wait until the fight.

And I stand by my statement - top to bottom, the UFC and MMA in general is not filled with elite athletes. And yes, I believe skills being equal, the “stuff” that makes a good football player or basketball player (removing for obvious things like extreme body types like too much height you nitpicker) has absolute transfer to MMA and any other sport for that matter.

[/quote]

I don’t know, I guess I got hung up on the basketball player portion because I’ve seen a few basketball brawls in person and on TV…if Ron Artest or Jermaine Oneal had been charging me in the stands with that big ass windup and looping punches, their respective careers would be over right now due to some well-placed front kicks to their knees.

Also, all things being equal, athleticism is a huge advantage, but as many who practice BJJ know, two different individuals can train together for 4-5 years and end up with completely different skill sets…if the more athletic guy is not on par with the more skilled guy, he will be the one getting tapped routinely.

[quote]eqpfunk wrote:
MattFarlick wrote:
Gracie wins, not even debateable.

Hughes’ strength is great until you compare it to some of Gracie’s other opponents like Kimo, Severn, etc. Hughes is easily submitted and is really outmatched against an opponent like Gracie (i.e., he is weakest against Gracie’s fighting style).

Gracie would not have agreed to come back and fight somone he didn’t already watch, study, and know he could dominate. Gracie is a true student of the MMA, he will know Hughes better than Hughes knows himself tomorrow night.

You don’t watch much MMA do you. Of course Gracie beat Kimo, Shamrock, Severn etc… They had never heard of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. Hughes trains in BJJ, wrestling and lately stand up striking. He’s tapped out his last 3 opponents with submissions.

BJJ is no big secret these days and Hughes will know exactly what Gracie is coming with. The Gracie’s don’t have that great of records. And lately they’ve been on a slide. Royce hasn’t beaten anyone significant in 11 years. This is a gimme for Hughes. If Gracie even does any damage, Hughes should hang his head in shame.
[/quote]

Not that great of records? Rickson won over 400 fights. He never lost a MMA match, only one shootfighting match in his entire career. That’s a decent record. Royce has beaten several opponents from Pride in the last 11 years. And to compare a guy who has done BJJ for a few years, what, 5-6 at the most, to someone who not only grew up with it, but rolled with the best people in the world on a daily basis is ludacris.

Matt Hughes will not “know what’s coming” any more than anyone who has trained a couple years of BJJ will. If Hughes wins it’ll be because he’s smart, patient, and keeps his elbows in and his head up. You can rest assured my friends that if he screws up even once in Royce’s guard that he’ll be submitted, helped up, and sent home. Royce wins in 3rd round after frustering Matt through 3 fairly uneventful rounds to the untrained eye. Triangle choke.

All this talk about Royce being the best MMA fighter ever, how Hughes doesn’t stand a chance, how Royce will arm bar him or triangle him, blah, blah, blah.

Hughes is stronger, faster, more than likely better conditioned, better striker, is keen on BJJ and can take a hit.

Did you notice how the highlights shown on that Countdown to UFC 60 were replays of Gracie’s early days and not what he has done recently? Don’t tell me what the guy has done in the long ago past, tell me what he’s done and is capable of now.

I’ll be able to eat my words if by some fluke Gracie pulls a rabbit out of his ass but I doubt it. Face reality boys, Gracie is in Hughes’ sights and about get to be taken down off his pedestal.

[quote]BSims wrote:

Did you notice how the highlights shown on that Countdown to UFC 60 were replays of Gracie’s early days and not what he has done recently? [/quote]

Do you think the UFC is going to get the rights to show clips from Japan?

[quote]ZEB wrote:
Valor wrote:

You want Gracie to kickbox with hughes? You have to be nuts. That is beyond question the worst anlaysis of this fight…ever.

The fight is a mismatch, but the only way Gracie wins is if he can pull a sub out of his ass. Thinking Gracie should stand up and slug is just stupid. You play to your strengths…

You don’t play to those strength when they are also the other guys strengths!

My point was this: It will go to the ground anyway. We have two men who are most comfortable on the ground. But prior to it going on the ground, or when both fighters are on their feet Gracie could indeed rack up some points by striking with Hughes. While the punches and kicks may not stop Hughes they will score with the judges. And it will impress everyone including the judges that Gracie is actually striking. It will show that he has advanced in his thinking and training.

In addition to this:

Gracie is 6’ 1" with very long arms. Hughes is only 5’ 9". Height and reach favor Gracie by a wide margin. Gracie can use that advantage on his feet by striking. Since we know that Hughes weakest point is striking why not try this strategy?

Anyway…there is a more in depth explanation for you.

[/quote]

If Gracie stands and punches with Hughes, the only person going to the ground is Gracie.

[quote]doogie wrote:

Do you think the UFC is going to get the rights to show clips from Japan?[/quote]

Hadn’t actually thought about that, but, IMO it’s kinda misrepresentation to a bit. It would be like showing Shamrock in his prime compared to what he has recently done in the UFC.

I’m not taking away from Gracie, he’s great at what he does. The problem is back when he was submitting everyone it was like he was driving in a car and everyone else was bicycling it cos he knew those methods. Guess what, all the guys now are driving cars and personally Hughes is more well rounded than Gracie is. It is not a poor analyzation to say Gracie is 1 dimensional. He is.

Not that it would happen, but would love to see Hughes submit Hoyce.

[quote]danew wrote:
eqpfunk wrote:
MattFarlick wrote:
Gracie wins, not even debateable.

Hughes’ strength is great until you compare it to some of Gracie’s other opponents like Kimo, Severn, etc. Hughes is easily submitted and is really outmatched against an opponent like Gracie (i.e., he is weakest against Gracie’s fighting style).

Gracie would not have agreed to come back and fight somone he didn’t already watch, study, and know he could dominate. Gracie is a true student of the MMA, he will know Hughes better than Hughes knows himself tomorrow night.

You don’t watch much MMA do you. Of course Gracie beat Kimo, Shamrock, Severn etc… They had never heard of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. Hughes trains in BJJ, wrestling and lately stand up striking. He’s tapped out his last 3 opponents with submissions.

BJJ is no big secret these days and Hughes will know exactly what Gracie is coming with. The Gracie’s don’t have that great of records. And lately they’ve been on a slide. Royce hasn’t beaten anyone significant in 11 years. This is a gimme for Hughes. If Gracie even does any damage, Hughes should hang his head in shame.

Not that great of records? Rickson won over 400 fights. He never lost a MMA match, only one shootfighting match in his entire career. That’s a decent record. Royce has beaten several opponents from Pride in the last 11 years. And to compare a guy who has done BJJ for a few years, what, 5-6 at the most, to someone who not only grew up with it, but rolled with the best people in the world on a daily basis is ludacris.

Matt Hughes will not “know what’s coming” any more than anyone who has trained a couple years of BJJ will. If Hughes wins it’ll be because he’s smart, patient, and keeps his elbows in and his head up. You can rest assured my friends that if he screws up even once in Royce’s guard that he’ll be submitted, helped up, and sent home. Royce wins in 3rd round after frustering Matt through 3 fairly uneventful rounds to the untrained eye. Triangle choke.[/quote]

Since 1995 the only people Royce Gracie has beaten are Akebono (a sumo wrestler) and Nobuhiko Takada (a can from Japan’s pro wrestling). So exactly one person in Pride and one in K-1. Here’s the source:

We’ll just have to wait til tonight to find out if the mythical Royce can take beat the welterweight champ.

[quote]MattFarlick wrote:

It would not be a disaster for the UFC you moron. Gracie was/possibly is the best MMA fighter ever, talent like that comes along maybe once every few generations. If he wins the fight that won’t mean shit except that he is still the best. “Desaster” give me a break, it would be a hell of a story and further solidify the greatness of Gracie.
[/quote]

You’re one of those people who think Paul Anderson can squat over a thousand raw, and that Bruce Lee could breeze through all weight divisions of modern MMA, aren’t you? Where is the evidence of Royce’s greatness? He beat a few MMA fighters who didn’t know much about the sport and never did very well (a possible argument could be made for Shamrock).

He also lost to Sakuraba, who is a decent fighter, but nothing amazing. In fact I believe the Gracie’s themselves don’t even consider him the greatest fighter among them.

I really don’t understand your opinion.

[quote]eqpfunk wrote:
danew wrote:
eqpfunk wrote:
MattFarlick wrote:

Not that great of records? Rickson won over 400 fights. He never lost a MMA match, only one shootfighting match in his entire career. That’s a decent record. Royce has beaten several opponents from Pride in the last 11 years. And to compare a guy who has done BJJ for a few years, what, 5-6 at the most, to someone who not only grew up with it, but rolled with the best people in the world on a daily basis is ludacris.
.[/quote]

Can you prove this? Rickson has NOT won over 400 fights… he can document something like 12 fights… and that is mostly cans… Get over it.

For three years now I have heard relentless bantering back and forth discussing the greatness of Rickson Gracie. Many of times I have found myself scratching my head over the loyalty of his followers. Worshipping of this nature is usually only reserved for super stars such as American Idol?s Clay Aiken or Christianity?s Jesus Christ. In the beginning, being the typical ignorant American, I first asked myself, ?how many Super Bowl rings has Rickson won?, as football is the only sport that matters. None, as I soon realized from reading people?s quotes. This Rickson character is a bjj ?artist?, the best ever and also pound for the pound the world?s greatest fighter of ALL TIME. Wow. ?that?s really impressive? I thought.

Over time though, doubts started creeping into my head. Rickson, curiously enough, had a fight record of 400-0, that was thrown around more often than a dirty pair of socks. Being a somewhat numbers obsessed guy, I quickly busted out my hp financial calculator and did some match. He?s 45. He fought nine ?recorded? matches from 1994 to 2004. Fair enough as 1993 was the birth of modern day MMA. So that means from Rickson?s age of 18 (1975) to 1993, 18 years, he must have then squeezed in roughly 391 recorded fights. ?GOD DAMN? I shouted and scratched my head, amazed at his level of activity. That?s almost 22 fights a year! One fight every 16 days, consistently, over the time span of 18 years. That?s unmatched and to think he never missed a beat due to sickness, injury, being married, or funerals. The man just kept fighting and fighting and fighting. He must have actually snuck in a fight or two while on his honeymoon to boot. ?hey honey, no sex tonight, I have to keep my fight streak intact. Will be back in three hours after I put beat down on kids in bar?

Now really twisting my head trying to comprehend this, a few weeks ago more doubts came to the surface. Just as Jesus Christ had Mathew, Mark, Luke and John (nice jewish names to note) Rickson also had followers?JeffP, Compridough, and Rickson4life, the last person consigning his entire personality to that of another mans name. Interesting. What caused these doubts? A thread on the ADCC forum. This thread discussed legendary achievements by athletes. Wrestling?s John Smith came up, how he won an Olympic Gold medal and four World Gold medals. Alexander Karelin?s name come up next; multiple Olympic Gold Medals and decades worth of World Championship Gold?s. Surprisingly enough, the ?fellowship of rickson?s nuts?, jeffp, compridough and rickson4life swarmed in to comment.

Rickson first chimed in with this;

?I am not a huge fan of gable or smith, both asholes in my book, But I respect their acheivements even if gable was using roids during the 72 games???..there is proof that Rickson is great. he beat Funaki, ya know the guy that beat frank sham, bas, kondo and a few other mellons that are legends of this forum and Rickson was undefeated and won the absolute in every bjj tourney he competed in from black belt on, by sub?

Hmmm…i scratched my head. He then followed up with this comment?

?Rickson has more documented titles of bjj then the wrestlers do in wrestling and bjj IMO is harder from doing both?

Wow?I was shocked as I didn?t know that. I suppose I learned something new that day. Little did I know that more was on the way. The second apostle of Rickson?s nuts, JeffP, immediately countered with more facts to back the Rickson story?

?Now if Rickson counted every guy he ever really tapped into his record, he would be about 4 million and something, not 400-0. Rickson and Felix Heredia tapped 200 guys in Japan in one day back in the early 90’s. I’m also sure Gokor has tapped more guys than he can count with an adding machine?

I felt stupid. Here I was, shortchanging Rickson for the past few years, thinking his record was only 400 ?documented? wins, when in actuality, I was failing to consider all the practice room victories he had secured. I felt foolish for disagreeing with JeffP. Utilizing my calculater again, I crunched the numbers. From age 16 to age 44?that?s 28 years of fighting. 4 million divided by 28 equals ? GASP!!! 391 confirmed victories every single DAY, over the span of 28 years. Was that possible? That?s 16 beat downs every hour, 24 hours a day, over 28 years. Rickson must be tapping people in his sleep, while he takes dumps on the toilet, while he eats. This is incredible, I thought. But catching my breath and trying to relax, I soon realized that I was played for a fool, the above is simply not possible. I posted the above thought trying to rationally reason with these followers. I asked, where can this humble man known only as ?the wrestler? find such facts you are now sharing. I too would like to nutride some day and if so, there cannot be a greater set of nuts to suck than the man who taps people while eating and sh*ttting.

Nonetheless, the man known only as ?rickson4life? politely informed me next that:

?hey there jerknutz, I neva promised you nuthin, but I did at one time have those facts and another source that had at least 127 matches listed

Rejected. I was quite despondent.

Therein lies the beginning of my story. The 7 day pilgramidge to the holy land of ?rickson? to search for the truth. To attempt to find the holy covenants that lie out there, also known as ?Rickson?s fight record? Over this time span, I would actually send one of my employees to go to California, try to ask Rickson himself for the ?supposed records? Others in my office would also help as we scoured the internet three times over, pouring over every record and fact available. This is what we would find.

Using our trusted allies ?google.com? and ?booble.com?, we got to searching. The first two web sites were of no use in terms of actual accomplishments. Instead, much of those Rickson sites spent all their time discussing Rickson?s looks. The actual words we found?

?The blankness of the supremely confident. Rickson is 29, as muscular as a bodybuilder, with a Marine’s crewcut, the high cheekbones of an Inca Indian and a square jaw?

and

?If Rorion is amiably handsome, Rickson is devastatingly handsome. Noted photographer Bruce Weber?

?Was he a bjj guy or a gay film star?? Carol, my secretary asked. Looking at his beach pictures, Rickson, to the untrained eye looking at his sites, looked like a romo We decided to press on with our search, moving on down the list of google?s rickson sites.

The next site we found the mystical source of the 400-0 record. Our eyes were ablaze. There it was, a bio on Rickson.

?Rickson is a 7th Degree Black Belt Open Class Champion of the Gracie Family, whose technique is considered to be the finest expression of Jiu-Jitsu in the world. His innate talent and early mastery of the sport have resulted in an impeccable undefeated record in more than 400 fights, Jiu-Jitsu tournaments, free-style wrestling, Sambo, open weight free-style competitions, and no holds barred challenge matches. Rickson is a two time Brazilian Champion in free-style wrestling, a Gold Medal Winner of Sambo, and for the last sixteen years he has been the middle-heavyweight and no weight division World Jiu-Jitsu Champion. Most recently, he conquered Japan’s elite fighting in a tournament, the Japan Open Vale Tudo, winning both in 1994 and 1995. At this time, Rickson was acknowledged by the Japanese for possessing the Samurai Spirit.?

This was something to sink our hooks in on. Moving fast now, we found three more sites that referenced Rickson?s MMA career records. Ah ha!!!?but unfortunately, they all just linked right back to Sherdog.com, where Rickson?s nine fight career is noted. A far cry from the fabled 400-0. Looking at the nine fight career, Russ, an associate of mine at work, mumbled??who are all these Japanese no-names he beat, these guys are all lame, there ?combined? career MMA record is only 18-27-2 and not a single one was ever ranked in the top 30, at ANY time. What the hell is up with that? David Levicki? Yuki Noiki? Bud Smith? Yoshihisa Yamamoto? There all ?cans?? I chuckled out loud, at the sound of a man who has watched one MMA event in his life recognizing a tomato can when he saw one. Nonetheless, we were all frustrated. 9-0 versus eight ?cans was not that impressive, surely there was more.

YES!? We shouted, as we found a good link.

http://bjj.org/tournaments/outcomes.html

This page read as follows?

?This page attempts to record some of the more significant matches fought by legitimate professional BJJ lutadors against other styles, in the seventy year history of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu?

Since Rickson is THE most significant bjj fighter of all times, surely we would find numerous transcripts and results of his fights. This site would hold the answers we seek. Unfortunately, of Rickson?s 400 documented wins, these two ‘WINS’ would be the only one the site listed:

  1. Sometime in the 80?s, Rickson apparently beat up Brazilian fighting legend Hugo Duarte on some beach somewhere, location was not specified as I suppose a beach is just a beach. Could this be the same Hugo Duarte that used his face to bruise Tank Abbot?s hand back in UFC-Brazil? Then added insult to injury by bleeding all over Tanks arm?

  2. Sometime in 1980 and then again 1985, Rickson beat down a monster known only by the name of ?Zulu? Ahhhhhhhh?we had heard of this man. This is the first sighting of a ?significant? Rickson Gracie victory. YES. From what we had heard, Zulu was Brazil?s version of ?Paul Bunyan?, a giant amongst men, 450lbs of raw muscle who shot flames out of his arse. A present day ?Bob Sapp? Unfortunately, backchecking Zulu?s record, very little could be found. His weight was listed at only around 220lbs and his discipline was listed as ?no formal training? Hmmm. Who was Zulu? After hours of searching, the best and only documented ?anything? on this man was that he was from the town of S?o Luis and his real name was ?Rei Zulu?. To sum up a lot of nonsense, Zulu was basically the local ?toughman?, a bully who beat up locals. His record of 140-0 was puffed up on fat, drunk American tourists and neighborhood kids. We were perplexed as to why Rickson would define his career on this man?

Frustrated immensely, we searched over 45 more sites but more of the same. One site intereviewed Rickson, asking him his greatest fighting achievement. He listed his Pride 1 victory over Japan?s greatest fighter of all time, Nobuhiko Takada, who sported a lofty lifetime record of 2-6-2.

http://w3.blackbeltmag.com/bbkids/yourage/gracie/gracie.asp

Another site that had Rickson apparently had a movie review of a movie he was in.

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/p/RicksonGracie-1128279/

That was interesting until we noticed the site was ?rottentomatoes.com?. LOL at the irony of his jump into movies getting the same review as the opponents that he has taken on.

?hey, not fair? cried my associate Russ. We should use Rickson?s greatest movie, ?choke? as a more unbiased review of his opponents. Surely an actual documentary on his fighting career will show who he beat and give footage of at least some of his 400 wins. Russ was right and I moved onto the next site…

http://www.dvdverdict.com/reviews/choke.php

Unfortunately again, the site had nothing good to say about the video. The actual words in the review?

?My biggest complaint about Choke isn’t the violence, however, but the lack of competition that Gracie faces at this event. Maybe it’s that Gracie is just that good instead of these other competitors being wussies, but he wins in complete squashes. That does not make for great drama?

Note. The video apparently showcased Rickson beating down Todd Hayes who is a ?famous? kickboxer from Texas, who apparently won Steak and Shake’s Beerfest toughman contest in 1990 and Koichiro Kimura, the Japanese heavyweight shootfighting champion. Sherdog?s fight finder said Todd had a career record of 1-0. Kimura was 1-2, but wait, this was the fight that was already listed on Sherdog. Nonetheless, Todd Hayes became documented win number 10. Moving on.

The next 47 links all just linked up with either forum boards or video reviews of his video ?Choke? This type of search was going absolutely no where. Using Google as a reference, it just looked like Rickson was a good looking gay gay from the beach who made videos and beat up a black beach bum bully in 1985.

We decide to focus our search on the original source of documents. It stated Rickson was a gold medal winner in Sambo. Onward we searched at this link.

http://bjj.org/interviews/rickson-1998-04.html

Apparently Rickson had competed in Sambo tournaments and this interview showed he got beat by United States sambo rookie, Ron Tripp. The interview:

?FF In our last interview, you claim that you did not know the rules when you fought in a Sambo tournament in the U.S. against Ron Tripp, therefore it should not be considered a loss, but I see on your record that you had competed in other Sambo events prior to this.

RG You must understand that each tournament was not the same. Not every Sambo tournament has the exact same rules. If I had known that getting thrown on your back was a loss, this would not have happened. If Mr. Tripp would like to fight NHB, I’m sure the promoters could set this up.

Hmmm…upon further review, that tournament was not fair to Rickson. Even though he was a lifelong Sambo competitor, in this particular tournament, Rickson WANTED Tripp to toss him and slam him on his back, so that loss was not actually a ?loss? The 400-0 is now 400-0-1*

Nonetheless, another person documented this mess quite accurately…

?He(rickson) claims the rules to Sambo can vary with the tournament, and that if he had known falling on his back was a loss it wouldn’t have happened. I find that a little suspect. No major sambo tournament refuses give big points [or an outright win] for a powerful hip throw that lands the opponent flat on their back. Further, there is almost always a rules review session for competitors before a competition of this size.

It was a sambo event, in EVERY sambo event there is “total victory”, an auto win if you throw a person who then land with their head at your feet while you remain standing. Ron Tripp threw Rickson with Uchimata in under a minute and Rickson landed flat on his back at Ron’s feet. Supposedly the owner of century martial arts co has video of it? What does it mean? It means that Ron Tripp is a serious grappler with great skills. It means that Rickson lost to Ron Tripp under the rules of Sambo and knew the rules before hand having already done sambo many times before so no excuse.

Hmmm. Why is Rickson lying like that? Regardless, we did find something useful from this site. The first official ?sighting? of a documented Rickson factual title. Apparently, back in 1977, Rickson won an actual gold medal in Sambo at the Pan Am games, at the age of 19. Unfortunately, a problem arose. There were no ?Pan Am Games? in 1977. They were in 1975 and 1979 and worse yet, the official site for the Pan Am games does NOT list ?Sambo? as an event. Freestyle, Greco and Judo are listed, but no ?Sambo? Very strange that Rickson would tout himself as a gold medallist at the Pan Am games when the official site of the Games does not even list his event. The link:

http://ourworld.cs.com/eblibrarian/myhomepage/sport.html

Our frustrating search continued. Rickson claimed to be a two time Brazilian National Freestyle wrestling champion but that was a lost cause search. A database of Olympic and World championship qualifying teams quickly showed that he NEVER represented Brazil in either a the World Championships or the Olympics. No links could be found to verify Rickson?s claim. Perhaps the two times he won, those were the two odd years that Brazil didn?t send competitors out to compete versus the world. Convenient.

His last claim, that he was a sixteen year middle-heavyweight and no weight division World Jiu-Jitsu Champion. Maybe this would be the holy grail. Every other search for verfiable evidence came up short, but maybe this one would be different, as jj was his specialty. There is also such as thing as the ?Brazilian Jui-Jitsu Worlds? too. Unfortunately, Rickson would again make things difficult. He never mentions anywhere on any of his sites the actual year he won the event. While he endlessly touts a victory against a local bully Rei Zulu, he shortchanges everyone on what might be a legitimate title he holds in JJ by not providing a single source of evidence as to what year he did this.

Looking over this hopeless cause, reality set in. Rickson had little to nothing to verify or document any of his ?JJ world title? accomplishments. ?If? he had actually won a world JJ title, being he had nothing else on his resume, surely he would have touted and boasted of the victories. Since he was not listing the years or dates, we were left to assume that those titles were similar to the others, a figment of his imagination.

Standing over a wasted two weeks of work, our office behind on our regular jobs, we sadly looked at each other with astonishment. How could this ?muscular bodybuilder, with a Marine’s crewcut, the high cheekbones of an Inca Indian and a square jaw? fool so many people for so long. How could someone with such a loyal and massive following go year after year ?claiming Pan Am games medals, Freestyle wrestling titles, World JJ titles and an incredulous record of 400-0, without a single peep from anyone asking him to verify it? His followers recite the 400 and ?oh? mantra without any asking ?where?s the win?s? Documented records from the last 10 years of his life turn up only 10 victories. The sad truth is that there is no verifiable proof of anything with this man. Time has come and gone and most records are now conveniently lost, never to be proven. Those that can be attempted to be proven, some backchecking proves the claims to be lies. Where there is one lie, others are most likely to follow. The saying, ?where there is smoke, there is fire? is appropriate here. All we can go by now is second hand heresay talk of ?behind closed doors? victories. Practice room beatdowns. Secret societies and endless rumormongering. Debating Rickson?s accomplishments alongside other MMA goofballs like Matt Furey.

I?m tired and after the above two week search, not much more can be said on Rickson. The links and facts are all up there to see. Please feel free to correct or build upon what is written. At this point, after exhausting review, my opinion is that his ?nuts? are not worthy of being sucked.

Rickson “followers” are the same as the legend of Miyamoto Mushasi. Where he is famous and has a cult like following, if you dig a little deeper and find the other side of the story, you will find accounts that a lot of the duels miyamoto is famous for are disputed completely by the other party.

Even to the point where people often say Mushasi ran from fights that he is accredited for winning.

History is still someones version of the truth.

[quote]danew wrote:
eqpfunk wrote:

Not that great of records? Rickson won over 400 fights. He never lost a MMA match, only one shootfighting match in his entire career. That’s a decent record.[/quote]

400 wins?

That’s nothing!

My record is 700-0!

Oh…I better tell you that all of those 700 “fights” were against my kids. and my small nephews.

:slight_smile:

I guess it matters who you fight when bragging about a record.

I take nothing away from Ricksons ability in Jiu-Jitsu. But he fought “tin cans.”

In the world of boxing they call them “bums.”

Rickson had the opportunity to either come to America and face the best in the UFC. Or fight the best in Pride.

Instead he looked the other way…

Don’t bring him up as someone who is unbeatable…please…

He fought only ONE really good fighter; sakurba. And he got his head handed to him! Incidentally Sak’ beat four Gracies, including Royce!

If they were going to have a Jiu-Jitsu match, with sport Jiu-Jitsu rules I think Royce would win. But this is MMA and Hughes knows enough Jiu-Jitsu to negate most of Royces bag of tricks, unlike the fighters that Royce beat in the 90’s who knew nothing of Jiu-Jitsu.

[quote] Matt Hughes will not “know what’s coming” any more than anyone who has trained a couple years of BJJ will.
[/quote]

How long do you think it takes to obtain a Black Belt in Jiu-Jitsu for the average guy who trains hard three days per week?

Five or six years, maybe seven years?

Matt Hughes is a profesional fighter who was already a champion collegiate wrestler.

He has been studying submission for about five years. Trust me when I say that while Royce may be more proficient at Jiu-Jitsu the gap is not wide enough to make up for other talents that Hughes brings to the match.

One mistake huh?

I don’t think that’s the case at all. I have seen fast powerful guys like Hughes make several “mistakes” and be able to “power out of them.”

The “one mistake” myth lives on …Just as the Rickson 400-0 record…

Silly…

[quote]BSims wrote:
All this talk about Royce being the best MMA fighter ever, how Hughes doesn’t stand a chance, how Royce will arm bar him or triangle him, blah, blah, blah.

Hughes is stronger, faster, more than likely better conditioned, better striker, is keen on BJJ and can take a hit.

Did you notice how the highlights shown on that Countdown to UFC 60 were replays of Gracie’s early days and not what he has done recently? Don’t tell me what the guy has done in the long ago past, tell me what he’s done and is capable of now.

I’ll be able to eat my words if by some fluke Gracie pulls a rabbit out of his ass but I doubt it. Face reality boys, Gracie is in Hughes’ sights and about get to be taken down off his pedestal.[/quote]

I think Gracie is actually better now than he was during the mid 90’s.

The problem is …everyone else now knows what he knows. And they are stronger and can also punch, kick and are well conditioned.

[quote]Valor wrote:

If Gracie stands and punches with Hughes, the only person going to the ground is Gracie.

[/quote]

Gracie will not have a choice but to try to stand and punch and kick.

Gracie cannot take Hughes down… P E R I O D!

It will go to the ground when Hughes wants it to go to the ground.

Therefore, hopefully Gracie, in order to make this any sort of fight at all had better of practiced long and hard at punching and kicking.

[quote]Adamsson wrote:
For three years now I have heard relentless bantering back and forth discussing the greatness of Rickson Gracie. Many of times I have found myself scratching my head over the loyalty of his followers. Worshipping of this nature is usually only reserved for super stars such as American Idol?s Clay Aiken or Christianity?s Jesus Christ. In the beginning, being the typical ignorant American, I first asked myself, ?how many Super Bowl rings has Rickson won?, as football is the only sport that matters. None, as I soon realized from reading people?s quotes. This Rickson character is a bjj ?artist?, the best ever and also pound for the pound the world?s greatest fighter of ALL TIME. Wow. ?that?s really impressive? I thought.

Over time though, doubts started creeping into my head. Rickson, curiously enough, had a fight record of 400-0, that was thrown around more often than a dirty pair of socks. Being a somewhat numbers obsessed guy, I quickly busted out my hp financial calculator and did some match. He?s 45. He fought nine ?recorded? matches from 1994 to 2004. Fair enough as 1993 was the birth of modern day MMA. So that means from Rickson?s age of 18 (1975) to 1993, 18 years, he must have then squeezed in roughly 391 recorded fights. ?GOD DAMN? I shouted and scratched my head, amazed at his level of activity. That?s almost 22 fights a year! One fight every 16 days, consistently, over the time span of 18 years. That?s unmatched and to think he never missed a beat due to sickness, injury, being married, or funerals. The man just kept fighting and fighting and fighting. He must have actually snuck in a fight or two while on his honeymoon to boot. ?hey honey, no sex tonight, I have to keep my fight streak intact. Will be back in three hours after I put beat down on kids in bar?

Now really twisting my head trying to comprehend this, a few weeks ago more doubts came to the surface. Just as Jesus Christ had Mathew, Mark, Luke and John (nice jewish names to note) Rickson also had followers?JeffP, Compridough, and Rickson4life, the last person consigning his entire personality to that of another mans name. Interesting. What caused these doubts? A thread on the ADCC forum. This thread discussed legendary achievements by athletes. Wrestling?s John Smith came up, how he won an Olympic Gold medal and four World Gold medals. Alexander Karelin?s name come up next; multiple Olympic Gold Medals and decades worth of World Championship Gold?s. Surprisingly enough, the ?fellowship of rickson?s nuts?, jeffp, compridough and rickson4life swarmed in to comment.

Rickson first chimed in with this;

?I am not a huge fan of gable or smith, both asholes in my book, But I respect their acheivements even if gable was using roids during the 72 games???..there is proof that Rickson is great. he beat Funaki, ya know the guy that beat frank sham, bas, kondo and a few other mellons that are legends of this forum and Rickson was undefeated and won the absolute in every bjj tourney he competed in from black belt on, by sub?

Hmmm…i scratched my head. He then followed up with this comment?

?Rickson has more documented titles of bjj then the wrestlers do in wrestling and bjj IMO is harder from doing both?

Wow?I was shocked as I didn?t know that. I suppose I learned something new that day. Little did I know that more was on the way. The second apostle of Rickson?s nuts, JeffP, immediately countered with more facts to back the Rickson story?

?Now if Rickson counted every guy he ever really tapped into his record, he would be about 4 million and something, not 400-0. Rickson and Felix Heredia tapped 200 guys in Japan in one day back in the early 90’s. I’m also sure Gokor has tapped more guys than he can count with an adding machine?

I felt stupid. Here I was, shortchanging Rickson for the past few years, thinking his record was only 400 ?documented? wins, when in actuality, I was failing to consider all the practice room victories he had secured. I felt foolish for disagreeing with JeffP. Utilizing my calculater again, I crunched the numbers. From age 16 to age 44?that?s 28 years of fighting. 4 million divided by 28 equals ? GASP!!! 391 confirmed victories every single DAY, over the span of 28 years. Was that possible? That?s 16 beat downs every hour, 24 hours a day, over 28 years. Rickson must be tapping people in his sleep, while he takes dumps on the toilet, while he eats. This is incredible, I thought. But catching my breath and trying to relax, I soon realized that I was played for a fool, the above is simply not possible. I posted the above thought trying to rationally reason with these followers. I asked, where can this humble man known only as ?the wrestler? find such facts you are now sharing. I too would like to nutride some day and if so, there cannot be a greater set of nuts to suck than the man who taps people while eating and sh*ttting.

Nonetheless, the man known only as ?rickson4life? politely informed me next that:

?hey there jerknutz, I neva promised you nuthin, but I did at one time have those facts and another source that had at least 127 matches listed

Rejected. I was quite despondent.

Therein lies the beginning of my story. The 7 day pilgramidge to the holy land of ?rickson? to search for the truth. To attempt to find the holy covenants that lie out there, also known as ?Rickson?s fight record? Over this time span, I would actually send one of my employees to go to California, try to ask Rickson himself for the ?supposed records? Others in my office would also help as we scoured the internet three times over, pouring over every record and fact available. This is what we would find.

Using our trusted allies ?google.com? and ?booble.com?, we got to searching. The first two web sites were of no use in terms of actual accomplishments. Instead, much of those Rickson sites spent all their time discussing Rickson?s looks. The actual words we found?

?The blankness of the supremely confident. Rickson is 29, as muscular as a bodybuilder, with a Marine’s crewcut, the high cheekbones of an Inca Indian and a square jaw?

and

?If Rorion is amiably handsome, Rickson is devastatingly handsome. Noted photographer Bruce Weber?

?Was he a bjj guy or a gay film star?? Carol, my secretary asked. Looking at his beach pictures, Rickson, to the untrained eye looking at his sites, looked like a romo We decided to press on with our search, moving on down the list of google?s rickson sites.

The next site we found the mystical source of the 400-0 record. Our eyes were ablaze. There it was, a bio on Rickson.

?Rickson is a 7th Degree Black Belt Open Class Champion of the Gracie Family, whose technique is considered to be the finest expression of Jiu-Jitsu in the world. His innate talent and early mastery of the sport have resulted in an impeccable undefeated record in more than 400 fights, Jiu-Jitsu tournaments, free-style wrestling, Sambo, open weight free-style competitions, and no holds barred challenge matches. Rickson is a two time Brazilian Champion in free-style wrestling, a Gold Medal Winner of Sambo, and for the last sixteen years he has been the middle-heavyweight and no weight division World Jiu-Jitsu Champion. Most recently, he conquered Japan’s elite fighting in a tournament, the Japan Open Vale Tudo, winning both in 1994 and 1995. At this time, Rickson was acknowledged by the Japanese for possessing the Samurai Spirit.?

This was something to sink our hooks in on. Moving fast now, we found three more sites that referenced Rickson?s MMA career records. Ah ha!!!?but unfortunately, they all just linked right back to Sherdog.com, where Rickson?s nine fight career is noted. A far cry from the fabled 400-0. Looking at the nine fight career, Russ, an associate of mine at work, mumbled??who are all these Japanese no-names he beat, these guys are all lame, there ?combined? career MMA record is only 18-27-2 and not a single one was ever ranked in the top 30, at ANY time. What the hell is up with that? David Levicki? Yuki Noiki? Bud Smith? Yoshihisa Yamamoto? There all ?cans?? I chuckled out loud, at the sound of a man who has watched one MMA event in his life recognizing a tomato can when he saw one. Nonetheless, we were all frustrated. 9-0 versus eight ?cans was not that impressive, surely there was more.

YES!? We shouted, as we found a good link.

http://bjj.org/tournaments/outcomes.html

This page read as follows?

?This page attempts to record some of the more significant matches fought by legitimate professional BJJ lutadors against other styles, in the seventy year history of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu?

Since Rickson is THE most significant bjj fighter of all times, surely we would find numerous transcripts and results of his fights. This site would hold the answers we seek. Unfortunately, of Rickson?s 400 documented wins, these two ‘WINS’ would be the only one the site listed:

  1. Sometime in the 80?s, Rickson apparently beat up Brazilian fighting legend Hugo Duarte on some beach somewhere, location was not specified as I suppose a beach is just a beach. Could this be the same Hugo Duarte that used his face to bruise Tank Abbot?s hand back in UFC-Brazil? Then added insult to injury by bleeding all over Tanks arm?

  2. Sometime in 1980 and then again 1985, Rickson beat down a monster known only by the name of ?Zulu? Ahhhhhhhh?we had heard of this man. This is the first sighting of a ?significant? Rickson Gracie victory. YES. From what we had heard, Zulu was Brazil?s version of ?Paul Bunyan?, a giant amongst men, 450lbs of raw muscle who shot flames out of his arse. A present day ?Bob Sapp? Unfortunately, backchecking Zulu?s record, very little could be found. His weight was listed at only around 220lbs and his discipline was listed as ?no formal training? Hmmm. Who was Zulu? After hours of searching, the best and only documented ?anything? on this man was that he was from the town of S?o Luis and his real name was ?Rei Zulu?. To sum up a lot of nonsense, Zulu was basically the local ?toughman?, a bully who beat up locals. His record of 140-0 was puffed up on fat, drunk American tourists and neighborhood kids. We were perplexed as to why Rickson would define his career on this man?

Frustrated immensely, we searched over 45 more sites but more of the same. One site intereviewed Rickson, asking him his greatest fighting achievement. He listed his Pride 1 victory over Japan?s greatest fighter of all time, Nobuhiko Takada, who sported a lofty lifetime record of 2-6-2.

http://w3.blackbeltmag.com/bbkids/yourage/gracie/gracie.asp

Another site that had Rickson apparently had a movie review of a movie he was in.

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/p/RicksonGracie-1128279/

That was interesting until we noticed the site was ?rottentomatoes.com?. LOL at the irony of his jump into movies getting the same review as the opponents that he has taken on.

?hey, not fair? cried my associate Russ. We should use Rickson?s greatest movie, ?choke? as a more unbiased review of his opponents. Surely an actual documentary on his fighting career will show who he beat and give footage of at least some of his 400 wins. Russ was right and I moved onto the next site…

http://www.dvdverdict.com/reviews/choke.php

Unfortunately again, the site had nothing good to say about the video. The actual words in the review?

?My biggest complaint about Choke isn’t the violence, however, but the lack of competition that Gracie faces at this event. Maybe it’s that Gracie is just that good instead of these other competitors being wussies, but he wins in complete squashes. That does not make for great drama?

Note. The video apparently showcased Rickson beating down Todd Hayes who is a ?famous? kickboxer from Texas, who apparently won Steak and Shake’s Beerfest toughman contest in 1990 and Koichiro Kimura, the Japanese heavyweight shootfighting champion. Sherdog?s fight finder said Todd had a career record of 1-0. Kimura was 1-2, but wait, this was the fight that was already listed on Sherdog. Nonetheless, Todd Hayes became documented win number 10. Moving on.

The next 47 links all just linked up with either forum boards or video reviews of his video ?Choke? This type of search was going absolutely no where. Using Google as a reference, it just looked like Rickson was a good looking gay gay from the beach who made videos and beat up a black beach bum bully in 1985.

We decide to focus our search on the original source of documents. It stated Rickson was a gold medal winner in Sambo. Onward we searched at this link.

http://bjj.org/interviews/rickson-1998-04.html

Apparently Rickson had competed in Sambo tournaments and this interview showed he got beat by United States sambo rookie, Ron Tripp. The interview:

?FF In our last interview, you claim that you did not know the rules when you fought in a Sambo tournament in the U.S. against Ron Tripp, therefore it should not be considered a loss, but I see on your record that you had competed in other Sambo events prior to this.

RG You must understand that each tournament was not the same. Not every Sambo tournament has the exact same rules. If I had known that getting thrown on your back was a loss, this would not have happened. If Mr. Tripp would like to fight NHB, I’m sure the promoters could set this up.

Hmmm…upon further review, that tournament was not fair to Rickson. Even though he was a lifelong Sambo competitor, in this particular tournament, Rickson WANTED Tripp to toss him and slam him on his back, so that loss was not actually a ?loss? The 400-0 is now 400-0-1*

Nonetheless, another person documented this mess quite accurately…

?He(rickson) claims the rules to Sambo can vary with the tournament, and that if he had known falling on his back was a loss it wouldn’t have happened. I find that a little suspect. No major sambo tournament refuses give big points [or an outright win] for a powerful hip throw that lands the opponent flat on their back. Further, there is almost always a rules review session for competitors before a competition of this size.

It was a sambo event, in EVERY sambo event there is “total victory”, an auto win if you throw a person who then land with their head at your feet while you remain standing. Ron Tripp threw Rickson with Uchimata in under a minute and Rickson landed flat on his back at Ron’s feet. Supposedly the owner of century martial arts co has video of it? What does it mean? It means that Ron Tripp is a serious grappler with great skills. It means that Rickson lost to Ron Tripp under the rules of Sambo and knew the rules before hand having already done sambo many times before so no excuse.

Hmmm. Why is Rickson lying like that? Regardless, we did find something useful from this site. The first official ?sighting? of a documented Rickson factual title. Apparently, back in 1977, Rickson won an actual gold medal in Sambo at the Pan Am games, at the age of 19. Unfortunately, a problem arose. There were no ?Pan Am Games? in 1977. They were in 1975 and 1979 and worse yet, the official site for the Pan Am games does NOT list ?Sambo? as an event. Freestyle, Greco and Judo are listed, but no ?Sambo? Very strange that Rickson would tout himself as a gold medallist at the Pan Am games when the official site of the Games does not even list his event. The link:

http://ourworld.cs.com/eblibrarian/myhomepage/sport.html

Our frustrating search continued. Rickson claimed to be a two time Brazilian National Freestyle wrestling champion but that was a lost cause search. A database of Olympic and World championship qualifying teams quickly showed that he NEVER represented Brazil in either a the World Championships or the Olympics. No links could be found to verify Rickson?s claim. Perhaps the two times he won, those were the two odd years that Brazil didn?t send competitors out to compete versus the world. Convenient.

His last claim, that he was a sixteen year middle-heavyweight and no weight division World Jiu-Jitsu Champion. Maybe this would be the holy grail. Every other search for verfiable evidence came up short, but maybe this one would be different, as jj was his specialty. There is also such as thing as the ?Brazilian Jui-Jitsu Worlds? too. Unfortunately, Rickson would again make things difficult. He never mentions anywhere on any of his sites the actual year he won the event. While he endlessly touts a victory against a local bully Rei Zulu, he shortchanges everyone on what might be a legitimate title he holds in JJ by not providing a single source of evidence as to what year he did this.

Looking over this hopeless cause, reality set in. Rickson had little to nothing to verify or document any of his ?JJ world title? accomplishments. ?If? he had actually won a world JJ title, being he had nothing else on his resume, surely he would have touted and boasted of the victories. Since he was not listing the years or dates, we were left to assume that those titles were similar to the others, a figment of his imagination.

Standing over a wasted two weeks of work, our office behind on our regular jobs, we sadly looked at each other with astonishment. How could this ?muscular bodybuilder, with a Marine’s crewcut, the high cheekbones of an Inca Indian and a square jaw? fool so many people for so long. How could someone with such a loyal and massive following go year after year ?claiming Pan Am games medals, Freestyle wrestling titles, World JJ titles and an incredulous record of 400-0, without a single peep from anyone asking him to verify it? His followers recite the 400 and ?oh? mantra without any asking ?where?s the win?s? Documented records from the last 10 years of his life turn up only 10 victories. The sad truth is that there is no verifiable proof of anything with this man. Time has come and gone and most records are now conveniently lost, never to be proven. Those that can be attempted to be proven, some backchecking proves the claims to be lies. Where there is one lie, others are most likely to follow. The saying, ?where there is smoke, there is fire? is appropriate here. All we can go by now is second hand heresay talk of ?behind closed doors? victories. Practice room beatdowns. Secret societies and endless rumormongering. Debating Rickson?s accomplishments alongside other MMA goofballs like Matt Furey.

I?m tired and after the above two week search, not much more can be said on Rickson. The links and facts are all up there to see. Please feel free to correct or build upon what is written.[/quote]

After reading this it’s easy to see how the legend of the invincible black belt had sprouted.

Great job to the original poster.

The record is exagerated and was exagerated way back before the Japan Vale Tudo to sell tickets. BUT, have you ever trained with Rickson? He’s um, really, really good. I’ve rolled with Rickson, Royce other Gracie’s and top BJJ’ers and Georges St Pierre and I can tell you, GSP is probably a better fighter but as grapplers, Rickson and Royce are just way better. Good bjj guys finish GSP when they train without too much trouble. And while that’s not fighting, it’s impressive cause he’s no slouch and he’s a SUPER athlete. So the technique works.
And the real argument for BJJ was this ‘we’re not way better athletes than you, we’re no different, the technique and strategy work’
AND IT STILL DOES…it’s just that other, better athletes now know that technique and strategy. some use it exactly against them…others use sprawling and striking.
But as for Rickson…tons of BJJ champs who’ve rolled with him just say he’s the best…So he’s not 400-0, he’s not super man, he’s not god, BUT he’s really good at BJJ and he’d waste a lot of ‘tough’ guys quicker than you could believe. And, he can teach others what he knows and that is what’s important. You should just go roll with him.
You should find out how he got his reputation!!! How do you think he got it? By rolling with the best at the time. Do you think Rigan Machado is a good grappler? What about Paulo Filho? Fabio Gurgel? Matt Thornton and his camp?
Rickson’s really good man, he has a lot of dorks worshiping him. Guys who were into karate and when it got exposed took their religious devotions and found a new god in Rickson…But make no mistake, this guy is HELL on the mat and in his day did win the superbowl of grappling.
But not for nothing…who are all the people on the internet who are tougher than Royce and Rickson??
Why do a lot of tough guys think he’s a tough guy??
Why for a long time and to this day are the Gracies a coveted win? Why, cause HUNDREDS of tough guys like you get tapped in under a minute when they train with him.
Do you think the best athletes in the world wear super bowl rings?? Maybe some do. But some were javelin throwers you never heard of. Some are decathletes, some are hammer throwers. But they’re not on MTV cribs so they’re not good athletes. You never heard of who they beat so they’re not good athletes??? Whatever man, you need to not take the early exagerations of MMA to heart as they were trying to grow the sport in the face of big sports like boxing. They were also trying to show tons of Martial artists that they are DELUDING THEMSELVES thinking that they’re style is complete fighting system. The UFC is owed to them. It would’ve been totally different if some boxer had won or some karate guy and people still may not understand how important grappling is. If some 260lb wrestler one everyone would think that it is all about size and never considered the wrestlers technique. It builds the most basic elements of fighting. Don’t believe everything you read or hear and don’t worship him and then get let down when you find out not everything is true. Tons of reputations are exagerated and what not. The good thing about the gracie’s is you can go test it and just roll with any number of decent bjj’ers in any given city in the US…thanks to them. Go talk to top bjj’ers instead of researching on the net??? That’s not even research.

But the very bottom line is this. If you have something to show Rickson Gracie about fighting, grappling or BJJ. Go show him, he’s always willing to learn. That’s why he’s good.

[quote]Adamsson wrote:
For three years now I have heard relentless bantering back and forth discussing the greatness of Rickson Gracie. Many of times I have found myself scratching my head over the loyalty of his followers. Worshipping of this nature is usually only reserved for super stars such as American Idol?s Clay Aiken or Christianity?s Jesus Christ. In the beginning, being the typical ignorant American, I first asked myself, ?how many Super Bowl rings has Rickson won?, as football is the only sport that matters. None, as I soon realized from reading people?s quotes. This Rickson character is a bjj ?artist?, the best ever and also pound for the pound the world?s greatest fighter of ALL TIME. Wow. ?that?s really impressive? I thought.

Over time though, doubts started creeping into my head. Rickson, curiously enough, had a fight record of 400-0, that was thrown around more often than a dirty pair of socks. Being a somewhat numbers obsessed guy, I quickly busted out my hp financial calculator and did some match. He?s 45. He fought nine ?recorded? matches from 1994 to 2004. Fair enough as 1993 was the birth of modern day MMA. So that means from Rickson?s age of 18 (1975) to 1993, 18 years, he must have then squeezed in roughly 391 recorded fights. ?GOD DAMN? I shouted and scratched my head, amazed at his level of activity. That?s almost 22 fights a year! One fight every 16 days, consistently, over the time span of 18 years. That?s unmatched and to think he never missed a beat due to sickness, injury, being married, or funerals. The man just kept fighting and fighting and fighting. He must have actually snuck in a fight or two while on his honeymoon to boot. ?hey honey, no sex tonight, I have to keep my fight streak intact. Will be back in three hours after I put beat down on kids in bar?

Now really twisting my head trying to comprehend this, a few weeks ago more doubts came to the surface. Just as Jesus Christ had Mathew, Mark, Luke and John (nice jewish names to note) Rickson also had followers?JeffP, Compridough, and Rickson4life, the last person consigning his entire personality to that of another mans name. Interesting. What caused these doubts? A thread on the ADCC forum. This thread discussed legendary achievements by athletes. Wrestling?s John Smith came up, how he won an Olympic Gold medal and four World Gold medals. Alexander Karelin?s name come up next; multiple Olympic Gold Medals and decades worth of World Championship Gold?s. Surprisingly enough, the ?fellowship of rickson?s nuts?, jeffp, compridough and rickson4life swarmed in to comment.

Rickson first chimed in with this;

?I am not a huge fan of gable or smith, both asholes in my book, But I respect their acheivements even if gable was using roids during the 72 games???..there is proof that Rickson is great. he beat Funaki, ya know the guy that beat frank sham, bas, kondo and a few other mellons that are legends of this forum and Rickson was undefeated and won the absolute in every bjj tourney he competed in from black belt on, by sub?

Hmmm…i scratched my head. He then followed up with this comment?

?Rickson has more documented titles of bjj then the wrestlers do in wrestling and bjj IMO is harder from doing both?

Wow?I was shocked as I didn?t know that. I suppose I learned something new that day. Little did I know that more was on the way. The second apostle of Rickson?s nuts, JeffP, immediately countered with more facts to back the Rickson story?

?Now if Rickson counted every guy he ever really tapped into his record, he would be about 4 million and something, not 400-0. Rickson and Felix Heredia tapped 200 guys in Japan in one day back in the early 90’s. I’m also sure Gokor has tapped more guys than he can count with an adding machine?

I felt stupid. Here I was, shortchanging Rickson for the past few years, thinking his record was only 400 ?documented? wins, when in actuality, I was failing to consider all the practice room victories he had secured. I felt foolish for disagreeing with JeffP. Utilizing my calculater again, I crunched the numbers. From age 16 to age 44?that?s 28 years of fighting. 4 million divided by 28 equals ? GASP!!! 391 confirmed victories every single DAY, over the span of 28 years. Was that possible? That?s 16 beat downs every hour, 24 hours a day, over 28 years. Rickson must be tapping people in his sleep, while he takes dumps on the toilet, while he eats. This is incredible, I thought. But catching my breath and trying to relax, I soon realized that I was played for a fool, the above is simply not possible. I posted the above thought trying to rationally reason with these followers. I asked, where can this humble man known only as ?the wrestler? find such facts you are now sharing. I too would like to nutride some day and if so, there cannot be a greater set of nuts to suck than the man who taps people while eating and sh*ttting.

Nonetheless, the man known only as ?rickson4life? politely informed me next that:

?hey there jerknutz, I neva promised you nuthin, but I did at one time have those facts and another source that had at least 127 matches listed

Rejected. I was quite despondent.

Therein lies the beginning of my story. The 7 day pilgramidge to the holy land of ?rickson? to search for the truth. To attempt to find the holy covenants that lie out there, also known as ?Rickson?s fight record? Over this time span, I would actually send one of my employees to go to California, try to ask Rickson himself for the ?supposed records? Others in my office would also help as we scoured the internet three times over, pouring over every record and fact available. This is what we would find.

Using our trusted allies ?google.com? and ?booble.com?, we got to searching. The first two web sites were of no use in terms of actual accomplishments. Instead, much of those Rickson sites spent all their time discussing Rickson?s looks. The actual words we found?

?The blankness of the supremely confident. Rickson is 29, as muscular as a bodybuilder, with a Marine’s crewcut, the high cheekbones of an Inca Indian and a square jaw?

and

?If Rorion is amiably handsome, Rickson is devastatingly handsome. Noted photographer Bruce Weber?

?Was he a bjj guy or a gay film star?? Carol, my secretary asked. Looking at his beach pictures, Rickson, to the untrained eye looking at his sites, looked like a romo We decided to press on with our search, moving on down the list of google?s rickson sites.

The next site we found the mystical source of the 400-0 record. Our eyes were ablaze. There it was, a bio on Rickson.

?Rickson is a 7th Degree Black Belt Open Class Champion of the Gracie Family, whose technique is considered to be the finest expression of Jiu-Jitsu in the world. His innate talent and early mastery of the sport have resulted in an impeccable undefeated record in more than 400 fights, Jiu-Jitsu tournaments, free-style wrestling, Sambo, open weight free-style competitions, and no holds barred challenge matches. Rickson is a two time Brazilian Champion in free-style wrestling, a Gold Medal Winner of Sambo, and for the last sixteen years he has been the middle-heavyweight and no weight division World Jiu-Jitsu Champion. Most recently, he conquered Japan’s elite fighting in a tournament, the Japan Open Vale Tudo, winning both in 1994 and 1995. At this time, Rickson was acknowledged by the Japanese for possessing the Samurai Spirit.?

This was something to sink our hooks in on. Moving fast now, we found three more sites that referenced Rickson?s MMA career records. Ah ha!!!?but unfortunately, they all just linked right back to Sherdog.com, where Rickson?s nine fight career is noted. A far cry from the fabled 400-0. Looking at the nine fight career, Russ, an associate of mine at work, mumbled??who are all these Japanese no-names he beat, these guys are all lame, there ?combined? career MMA record is only 18-27-2 and not a single one was ever ranked in the top 30, at ANY time. What the hell is up with that? David Levicki? Yuki Noiki? Bud Smith? Yoshihisa Yamamoto? There all ?cans?? I chuckled out loud, at the sound of a man who has watched one MMA event in his life recognizing a tomato can when he saw one. Nonetheless, we were all frustrated. 9-0 versus eight ?cans was not that impressive, surely there was more.

YES!? We shouted, as we found a good link.

http://bjj.org/tournaments/outcomes.html

This page read as follows?

?This page attempts to record some of the more significant matches fought by legitimate professional BJJ lutadors against other styles, in the seventy year history of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu?

Since Rickson is THE most significant bjj fighter of all times, surely we would find numerous transcripts and results of his fights. This site would hold the answers we seek. Unfortunately, of Rickson?s 400 documented wins, these two ‘WINS’ would be the only one the site listed:

  1. Sometime in the 80?s, Rickson apparently beat up Brazilian fighting legend Hugo Duarte on some beach somewhere, location was not specified as I suppose a beach is just a beach. Could this be the same Hugo Duarte that used his face to bruise Tank Abbot?s hand back in UFC-Brazil? Then added insult to injury by bleeding all over Tanks arm?

  2. Sometime in 1980 and then again 1985, Rickson beat down a monster known only by the name of ?Zulu? Ahhhhhhhh?we had heard of this man. This is the first sighting of a ?significant? Rickson Gracie victory. YES. From what we had heard, Zulu was Brazil?s version of ?Paul Bunyan?, a giant amongst men, 450lbs of raw muscle who shot flames out of his arse. A present day ?Bob Sapp? Unfortunately, backchecking Zulu?s record, very little could be found. His weight was listed at only around 220lbs and his discipline was listed as ?no formal training? Hmmm. Who was Zulu? After hours of searching, the best and only documented ?anything? on this man was that he was from the town of S?o Luis and his real name was ?Rei Zulu?. To sum up a lot of nonsense, Zulu was basically the local ?toughman?, a bully who beat up locals. His record of 140-0 was puffed up on fat, drunk American tourists and neighborhood kids. We were perplexed as to why Rickson would define his career on this man?

Frustrated immensely, we searched over 45 more sites but more of the same. One site intereviewed Rickson, asking him his greatest fighting achievement. He listed his Pride 1 victory over Japan?s greatest fighter of all time, Nobuhiko Takada, who sported a lofty lifetime record of 2-6-2.

http://w3.blackbeltmag.com/bbkids/yourage/gracie/gracie.asp

Another site that had Rickson apparently had a movie review of a movie he was in.

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/p/RicksonGracie-1128279/

That was interesting until we noticed the site was ?rottentomatoes.com?. LOL at the irony of his jump into movies getting the same review as the opponents that he has taken on.

?hey, not fair? cried my associate Russ. We should use Rickson?s greatest movie, ?choke? as a more unbiased review of his opponents. Surely an actual documentary on his fighting career will show who he beat and give footage of at least some of his 400 wins. Russ was right and I moved onto the next site…

http://www.dvdverdict.com/reviews/choke.php

Unfortunately again, the site had nothing good to say about the video. The actual words in the review?

?My biggest complaint about Choke isn’t the violence, however, but the lack of competition that Gracie faces at this event. Maybe it’s that Gracie is just that good instead of these other competitors being wussies, but he wins in complete squashes. That does not make for great drama?

Note. The video apparently showcased Rickson beating down Todd Hayes who is a ?famous? kickboxer from Texas, who apparently won Steak and Shake’s Beerfest toughman contest in 1990 and Koichiro Kimura, the Japanese heavyweight shootfighting champion. Sherdog?s fight finder said Todd had a career record of 1-0. Kimura was 1-2, but wait, this was the fight that was already listed on Sherdog. Nonetheless, Todd Hayes became documented win number 10. Moving on.

The next 47 links all just linked up with either forum boards or video reviews of his video ?Choke? This type of search was going absolutely no where. Using Google as a reference, it just looked like Rickson was a good looking gay gay from the beach who made videos and beat up a black beach bum bully in 1985.

We decide to focus our search on the original source of documents. It stated Rickson was a gold medal winner in Sambo. Onward we searched at this link.

http://bjj.org/interviews/rickson-1998-04.html

Apparently Rickson had competed in Sambo tournaments and this interview showed he got beat by United States sambo rookie, Ron Tripp. The interview:

?FF In our last interview, you claim that you did not know the rules when you fought in a Sambo tournament in the U.S. against Ron Tripp, therefore it should not be considered a loss, but I see on your record that you had competed in other Sambo events prior to this.

RG You must understand that each tournament was not the same. Not every Sambo tournament has the exact same rules. If I had known that getting thrown on your back was a loss, this would not have happened. If Mr. Tripp would like to fight NHB, I’m sure the promoters could set this up.

Hmmm…upon further review, that tournament was not fair to Rickson. Even though he was a lifelong Sambo competitor, in this particular tournament, Rickson WANTED Tripp to toss him and slam him on his back, so that loss was not actually a ?loss? The 400-0 is now 400-0-1*

Nonetheless, another person documented this mess quite accurately…

?He(rickson) claims the rules to Sambo can vary with the tournament, and that if he had known falling on his back was a loss it wouldn’t have happened. I find that a little suspect. No major sambo tournament refuses give big points [or an outright win] for a powerful hip throw that lands the opponent flat on their back. Further, there is almost always a rules review session for competitors before a competition of this size.

It was a sambo event, in EVERY sambo event there is “total victory”, an auto win if you throw a person who then land with their head at your feet while you remain standing. Ron Tripp threw Rickson with Uchimata in under a minute and Rickson landed flat on his back at Ron’s feet. Supposedly the owner of century martial arts co has video of it? What does it mean? It means that Ron Tripp is a serious grappler with great skills. It means that Rickson lost to Ron Tripp under the rules of Sambo and knew the rules before hand having already done sambo many times before so no excuse.

Hmmm. Why is Rickson lying like that? Regardless, we did find something useful from this site. The first official ?sighting? of a documented Rickson factual title. Apparently, back in 1977, Rickson won an actual gold medal in Sambo at the Pan Am games, at the age of 19. Unfortunately, a problem arose. There were no ?Pan Am Games? in 1977. They were in 1975 and 1979 and worse yet, the official site for the Pan Am games does NOT list ?Sambo? as an event. Freestyle, Greco and Judo are listed, but no ?Sambo? Very strange that Rickson would tout himself as a gold medallist at the Pan Am games when the official site of the Games does not even list his event. The link:

http://ourworld.cs.com/eblibrarian/myhomepage/sport.html

Our frustrating search continued. Rickson claimed to be a two time Brazilian National Freestyle wrestling champion but that was a lost cause search. A database of Olympic and World championship qualifying teams quickly showed that he NEVER represented Brazil in either a the World Championships or the Olympics. No links could be found to verify Rickson?s claim. Perhaps the two times he won, those were the two odd years that Brazil didn?t send competitors out to compete versus the world. Convenient.

His last claim, that he was a sixteen year middle-heavyweight and no weight division World Jiu-Jitsu Champion. Maybe this would be the holy grail. Every other search for verfiable evidence came up short, but maybe this one would be different, as jj was his specialty. There is also such as thing as the ?Brazilian Jui-Jitsu Worlds? too. Unfortunately, Rickson would again make things difficult. He never mentions anywhere on any of his sites the actual year he won the event. While he endlessly touts a victory against a local bully Rei Zulu, he shortchanges everyone on what might be a legitimate title he holds in JJ by not providing a single source of evidence as to what year he did this.

Looking over this hopeless cause, reality set in. Rickson had little to nothing to verify or document any of his ?JJ world title? accomplishments. ?If? he had actually won a world JJ title, being he had nothing else on his resume, surely he would have touted and boasted of the victories. Since he was not listing the years or dates, we were left to assume that those titles were similar to the others, a figment of his imagination.

Standing over a wasted two weeks of work, our office behind on our regular jobs, we sadly looked at each other with astonishment. How could this ?muscular bodybuilder, with a Marine’s crewcut, the high cheekbones of an Inca Indian and a square jaw? fool so many people for so long. How could someone with such a loyal and massive following go year after year ?claiming Pan Am games medals, Freestyle wrestling titles, World JJ titles and an incredulous record of 400-0, without a single peep from anyone asking him to verify it? His followers recite the 400 and ?oh? mantra without any asking ?where?s the win?s? Documented records from the last 10 years of his life turn up only 10 victories. The sad truth is that there is no verifiable proof of anything with this man. Time has come and gone and most records are now conveniently lost, never to be proven. Those that can be attempted to be proven, some backchecking proves the claims to be lies. Where there is one lie, others are most likely to follow. The saying, ?where there is smoke, there is fire? is appropriate here. All we can go by now is second hand heresay talk of ?behind closed doors? victories. Practice room beatdowns. Secret societies and endless rumormongering. Debating Rickson?s accomplishments alongside other MMA goofballs like Matt Furey.

I?m tired and after the above two week search, not much more can be said on Rickson. The links and facts are all up there to see. Please feel free to correct or build upon what is written. At this point, after exhausting review, my opinion is that his ?nuts? are not worthy of being sucked.[/quote]

did you see the 2nd Yoshida fight…A draw in the books but I think Royce won that.

[quote]eqpfunk wrote:
danew wrote:
eqpfunk wrote:
MattFarlick wrote:
Gracie wins, not even debateable.

Hughes’ strength is great until you compare it to some of Gracie’s other opponents like Kimo, Severn, etc. Hughes is easily submitted and is really outmatched against an opponent like Gracie (i.e., he is weakest against Gracie’s fighting style).

Gracie would not have agreed to come back and fight somone he didn’t already watch, study, and know he could dominate. Gracie is a true student of the MMA, he will know Hughes better than Hughes knows himself tomorrow night.

You don’t watch much MMA do you. Of course Gracie beat Kimo, Shamrock, Severn etc… They had never heard of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. Hughes trains in BJJ, wrestling and lately stand up striking. He’s tapped out his last 3 opponents with submissions.

BJJ is no big secret these days and Hughes will know exactly what Gracie is coming with. The Gracie’s don’t have that great of records. And lately they’ve been on a slide. Royce hasn’t beaten anyone significant in 11 years. This is a gimme for Hughes. If Gracie even does any damage, Hughes should hang his head in shame.

Not that great of records? Rickson won over 400 fights. He never lost a MMA match, only one shootfighting match in his entire career. That’s a decent record. Royce has beaten several opponents from Pride in the last 11 years. And to compare a guy who has done BJJ for a few years, what, 5-6 at the most, to someone who not only grew up with it, but rolled with the best people in the world on a daily basis is ludacris.

Matt Hughes will not “know what’s coming” any more than anyone who has trained a couple years of BJJ will. If Hughes wins it’ll be because he’s smart, patient, and keeps his elbows in and his head up. You can rest assured my friends that if he screws up even once in Royce’s guard that he’ll be submitted, helped up, and sent home. Royce wins in 3rd round after frustering Matt through 3 fairly uneventful rounds to the untrained eye. Triangle choke.

Since 1995 the only people Royce Gracie has beaten are Akebono (a sumo wrestler) and Nobuhiko Takada (a can from Japan’s pro wrestling). So exactly one person in Pride and one in K-1. Here’s the source:

We’ll just have to wait til tonight to find out if the mythical Royce can take beat the welterweight champ.[/quote]

[quote]Scrappy wrote:
did you see the 2nd Yoshida fight…A draw in the books but I think Royce won that.

eqpfunk wrote:
danew wrote:
eqpfunk wrote:
MattFarlick wrote:
Gracie wins, not even debateable.

Hughes’ strength is great until you compare it to some of Gracie’s other opponents like Kimo, Severn, etc. Hughes is easily submitted and is really outmatched against an opponent like Gracie (i.e., he is weakest against Gracie’s fighting style).

Gracie would not have agreed to come back and fight somone he didn’t already watch, study, and know he could dominate. Gracie is a true student of the MMA, he will know Hughes better than Hughes knows himself tomorrow night.

You don’t watch much MMA do you. Of course Gracie beat Kimo, Shamrock, Severn etc… They had never heard of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. Hughes trains in BJJ, wrestling and lately stand up striking. He’s tapped out his last 3 opponents with submissions.

BJJ is no big secret these days and Hughes will know exactly what Gracie is coming with. The Gracie’s don’t have that great of records. And lately they’ve been on a slide. Royce hasn’t beaten anyone significant in 11 years. This is a gimme for Hughes. If Gracie even does any damage, Hughes should hang his head in shame.

Not that great of records? Rickson won over 400 fights. He never lost a MMA match, only one shootfighting match in his entire career. That’s a decent record. Royce has beaten several opponents from Pride in the last 11 years. And to compare a guy who has done BJJ for a few years, what, 5-6 at the most, to someone who not only grew up with it, but rolled with the best people in the world on a daily basis is ludacris.

Matt Hughes will not “know what’s coming” any more than anyone who has trained a couple years of BJJ will. If Hughes wins it’ll be because he’s smart, patient, and keeps his elbows in and his head up. You can rest assured my friends that if he screws up even once in Royce’s guard that he’ll be submitted, helped up, and sent home. Royce wins in 3rd round after frustering Matt through 3 fairly uneventful rounds to the untrained eye. Triangle choke.

Since 1995 the only people Royce Gracie has beaten are Akebono (a sumo wrestler) and Nobuhiko Takada (a can from Japan’s pro wrestling). So exactly one person in Pride and one in K-1. Here’s the source:

We’ll just have to wait til tonight to find out if the mythical Royce can take beat the welterweight champ.

[/quote]

Ok, It was a very debatable fight. I too don’t think Royce tapped and that he got robbed. So let’s give him that win. That would bring his record in pride to 2 wins. Neither vs. particularly great MMA fighters (Yoshida is an olympian and Judo master, but not a great MMA fighter). Of all the people he’s fought, Sakuraba would be the closest to Matt Hughes in well roundedness, and Royce couldn’t mount any big offense after 90 minutes until it was towel time. I stand by my feeling that the Gracie family as a whole deserves much props, but no single Gracie is that great.

I haeven’t rolled with any gracies, but i have rolled with mundial winners and european championship (bjj) winners… and ofcourse these people are extremely technical on the ground, but to go from there to mma is another story… :slight_smile:

[quote]Adamsson wrote:
I haeven’t rolled with any gracies, but i have rolled with mundial winners and european championship (bjj) winners… and ofcourse these people are extremely technical on the ground, but to go from there to mma is another story… :)[/quote]

No doubt. But the high level BJJ events are a sport, and a competetive one at that, and being successful in the sport deserves respect. Same as wrestling, boxing, judo etc. Some BJJ’ers are more applicable to MMA, some less, but the idea that they are not good because they did not do well against someone in MMA is not entirely solid. They have a lot to teach. The fact is the Gracie’s started the sport as we know it. They exploited an advantage but no more than anyone else would’ve had they had the same power to do so. In fact, i think the Gracies did way more good than bad. Sure, Rorion sold the style a bit over the top and some of his speeches on , let’s say, In Action were condescending, BUT…that was him, not Royce, not Rickson, your ‘research’ has not had you meeting them or rolling with them but reading about what they supposedly said or what Rorion said. You’ll find they’re not what you think if you meet them. They are good at what they do and realize there is more to learn and are humble. They have confidence and pride in their knowledge of technique but have tons of awe and respect for the athletic attributes that have emerged in the sport. The flexibility, heart, speed, explosivness and new moves and strategies people have devised to beat them is well respected by them.