The Grappling Monthly Podcast

Why Do People Quit Jiu-Jitsu? Professor Rodrigo Freitas on The Grappling Monthly Podcast

49 min · 29 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Why Do People Quit Jiu-Jitsu? Professor Rodrigo Freitas on The Grappling Monthly Podcast

Descripción

A lot of beginners do not struggle in jiu-jitsu because they are untalented. They struggle because they go too hard, too soon, and never learn how to pace themselves. In this episode of The Grappling Monthly Podcast, Rodrigo Freitas talks about growing up in Brazil, discovering jiu-jitsu through the early UFC, competing for years at a high level, moving to the United States without speaking English, and building InSpirit Jiu-Jitsu in the greater Los Angeles area. We also get into longevity, discipline, opening an academy, balancing competition with business, how to introduce beginners to training safely, and why consistency matters more than intensity for most people. About Rodrigo Freitas Rodrigo Freitas is a Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt, longtime competitor, and academy owner based in Los Angeles. Originally from Belo Horizonte, Brazil, he trained from white to black belt under the same instructor, competed extensively in gi and no-gi, and now leads In Spirit Jiu Jitsu while continuing to teach and compete. Sponsors: Interested in sponsoring The Grappling Monthly Podcast? Email: grapplingmonthly@gmail.com Follow Grappling Monthly: Instagram: @grapplingmonthly YouTube: @grapplingmonthly Website: grapplingmonthly.com #bjj #jiujitsu #grappling #brazilianjiujitsu #nogi #ibjjf #grapplingmonthly #martialarts #bjjpodcast #losangeles About Grappling Monthly Grappling Monthly is an independent editorial media brand covering the culture, people, and business of Brazilian jiu-jitsu and the grappling arts. Based in Los Angeles, the brand produces in-depth conversations with the coaches, gym owners, competitors, and practitioners shaping the sport.  The Grappling Monthly Podcast is the flagship property. A weekly long-form interview series hosted by Sébastien Maniatopoulos, a BJJ black belt establishing roots in the Southern California grappling community. The brand's editorial focus is on the human stories behind the art: how academies are built, how practitioners evolve, how the culture of jiu-jitsu intersects with identity, business, and community.

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45 episodios

episode From Shizuoka to the World: How Shoya Ishiguro built a career in BJJ before the market existed in Japan artwork

From Shizuoka to the World: How Shoya Ishiguro built a career in BJJ before the market existed in Japan

Professor Shoya Ishiguro is Japan's top black belt competitors and a fixture at the highest levels of IBJJF competition. He joins the podcast in Los Angeles, where he has been training for three weeks ahead of the IBJJF World Championship, preparing for rematches with rivals Diego "Pato" Oliveira and Rerisson alongside coach Isaac Doederlein. The conversation covers ground that goes well beyond competition. Shoya started jiu-jitsu at 12 in Shizuoka, at a time when most people in Japan had never heard of the sport. His father brought him to the gym hoping he would become an MMA fighter, a generation raised on Pride and Sakuraba. Shoya chose jiu-jitsu instead, and stayed with it for seventeen years through a period when there was no real market for full-time athletes in Japan. He trained, taught, and waited for the sport to grow into something that could sustain a career. It did. The episode gets into what high-level preparation looks like without a dedicated personal coach, how Shoya studies his own mistakes during and after sparring, why he added strength and conditioning only recently and what changed when he did, and what his mindset is in the seconds before a match begins. He talks about the cultural thread that runs between Japanese martial arts and Brazilian jiu-jitsu, a connection he says Brazilian practitioners often feel more clearly than Japanese ones do today. There is also a conversation about fatherhood, about the difference between how classes run in Tokyo versus Shizuoka versus Los Angeles, about why he tells every student to compete, and about what he actually wants to show Pato the next time they meet on the mat. Shoya teaches at Arta BJJ in Minato-ku, Tokyo, near Tokyo Tower. If you are visiting Japan and want to train, visit: https://arta-hiroo.com/ [https://arta-hiroo.com/] or reach out on Instagram at: www.instagram.com/shoya_artabjj [http://www.instagram.com/@shoya_artabjj]   About Grappling Monthly Grappling Monthly is an independent editorial media brand covering the culture, people, and business of Brazilian jiu-jitsu and the grappling arts. Based in Los Angeles, the brand produces in-depth conversations with the coaches, gym owners, competitors, and practitioners shaping the sport. The Grappling Monthly Podcast is the flagship property. A weekly long-form interview series hosted by Sébastien Maniatopoulos, a BJJ black belt establishing roots in the Southern California grappling community. The brand's editorial focus is on the human stories behind the art: how academies are built, how practitioners evolve, how the culture of jiu-jitsu intersects with identity, business, and community. Grappling Monthly publishes across YouTube, Instagram, Substack, and major podcast platforms. Subscribe and turn on notifications. IG and TikTok: @grapplingmonthly For sponsorships and collaborations: grapplingmonthly@gmail.com

27 de may de 20261 h 9 min
episode Like A Phoenix, Reborn | Prof. Tayane Porfìrio of Alliance Jiu-Jitsu Huntington Beach artwork

Like A Phoenix, Reborn | Prof. Tayane Porfìrio of Alliance Jiu-Jitsu Huntington Beach

Tayane Porfírio joins The Grappling Monthly Podcast at Alliance Jiu Jitsu in Huntington Beach for a conversation about her start in Brazil, the Alliance competition team, winning early, returning to high-level competition after years away, motherhood, mental health, teaching, women’s jiu-jitsu, and the pressure of competing at the highest level. Tayane is a multiple-time world champion and one of the most accomplished competitors in women’s jiu-jitsu. In this episode, she talks about starting jiu-jitsu as a teenager, earning her first major opportunity through competition, moving into the Alliance athlete house, training mostly with men, and eventually building a professional life through the sport. The conversation also covers her return to competition after a difficult chapter in her career, how becoming a mother changed the way she thinks about competing, why mental preparation now matters more to her than changing her jiu-jitsu, and why she approaches every match as 50/50, no matter how many times she has faced the opponent before. We also discuss women’s jiu-jitsu, athlete identity, social media, teaching kids, abuse of power in martial arts, and what healthy academy structures should consider as the sport continues to grow.   Guest: Tayane Porfírio Academy: Alliance Jiu Jitsu, Huntington Beach Instagram: @tayaneporfiriobjj Topics covered: * Starting jiu-jitsu in Brazil * Winning early and traveling for competition * Alliance, sponsorship, and the athlete house * Training mostly with men * Returning to competition after years away * Motherhood and mental health * Preparing for Worlds * Why every match starts at 50/50 * Women’s jiu-jitsu and competition culture * Social media and athlete identity * Safety, boundaries, and academy responsibility * Teaching kids and becoming more technical * Rapid-fire questions * How to learn from Tayane Follow Grappling Monthly: YouTube: @grapplingmonthly Instagram: @grapplingmonthly TikTok: @grapplingmonthly Substack: Grappling Monthly   #jiujitsu #bjj #brazilianjiujitsu #grappling #alliancejiujitsu #tayanePorfirio #womensjiujitsu #bjjpodcast #grapplingmonthly

20 de may de 202650 min
episode What Women's No-Gi Jiu-Jitsu Looked Like Before Anyone Was Watching | Prof. Lila Smadja-Cruz 10th Planet Pasadena artwork

What Women's No-Gi Jiu-Jitsu Looked Like Before Anyone Was Watching | Prof. Lila Smadja-Cruz 10th Planet Pasadena

Professor Lila Smadja-Cruz is a second degree black belt from 10th Planet under Eddie Bravo. She started at the Bomb Squad in West Hollywood doing Muay Thai at fourteen, watched Eddie Bravo and a group of no-gi practitioners take over the mat after her class, and thought she would never do that. She eventually did. She never left. In this conversation, Smadja-Cruz traces the full arc: from Muay Thai at Legends MMA to her first jiu-jitsu competition at NAGA, from EBI 5 against Talita Alencar to EBI 12, the first all-female EBI card, where she submitted her first opponent in nineteen seconds and made it to the semis against a then-unknown eighteen-year-old named Erin Blanchfield. She talks about the Japan Quintet — cherry blossom season, a handmade medal from Sakuraba, an all-10th Planet women's team and what it meant to compete on that stage before any of it was considered history. Prof. Lila also shares tales from the competition arena, and talks about the anxiety that made her body physically shut down before Muay Thai fights, twice, before she ever set foot in a ring. How jiu-jitsu gave her a different relationship with those same nerves, not by eliminating them, but by giving her a context where she could push through rather than freeze. The second half of the conversation shifts to 10th Planet Pasadena. the school she and Professor Erik "Compella" Cruz opened in 2017, the same week they returned from their honeymoon. What it means to build a gym around community rather than performance. The LA fires and what happened when half the membership lost their homes. How a school's culture is set entirely from the top, and what happens when it isn't. The kids program, the toxic parent dynamic, and why she thinks losing in front of other people is one of the most important things a child can learn to do. Prof. Lila also runs Femvasion, an all-female camp taught by 10th Planet black belt women. Their fourth camp is June 5–7, 2026 This episode was recorded at 10th Planet Pasadena.   Sponsors: Interested in sponsoring The Grappling Monthly Podcast? Email: grapplingmonthly@gmail.com [grapplingmonthly@gmail.com]   Follow Grappling Monthly * Instagram: www.instagram.com/@grapplingmonthly [http://www.instagram.com/@grapplingmonthly] * YouTube: www.youtube.com/@grapplingmonthly [http://www.youtube.com/@grapplingmonthly]  * Website: http://grapplingmonthly.com [http://grapplingmonthly.com]  #bjj #jiujitsu #grappling #brazilianjiujitsu #nogi #ibjjf #grapplingmonthly #martialarts #bjjpodcast #losangeles   About Grappling Monthly Grappling Monthly is an independent editorial media brand covering the culture, people, and business of Brazilian jiu-jitsu and the grappling arts. Based in Los Angeles, the brand produces in-depth conversations with the coaches, gym owners, competitors, and practitioners shaping the sport. The Grappling Monthly Podcast is the flagship property. A weekly long-form interview series hosted by Sébastien Maniatopoulos, a BJJ black belt establishing roots in the Southern California grappling community. The brand's editorial focus is on the human stories behind the art: how academies are built, how practitioners evolve, how the culture of jiu-jitsu intersects with identity, business, and community.

13 de may de 20261 h 27 min
episode Who Made Your Gi - Professor Mike Dytri of Vanguard Kimono on The Grappling Monthly Podcast artwork

Who Made Your Gi - Professor Mike Dytri of Vanguard Kimono on The Grappling Monthly Podcast

Mike Dytri is the founder of Vanguard Kimono. He is also a third-degree black belt under Chris Haueter, a former MMA fighter, a longtime designer in streetwear and skateboarding, and the design consultant behind Gracie Barra's GB Wear program. We sat down at the Vanguard studio to talk about how a kimono actually gets made, and what that process reveals about the people wearing it. The conversation starts with Carlos Gracie Jr.'s recent red belt and moves into what Mike sees as the real legacy of Gracie Barra: the infrastructure that made it possible for the rest of us to make any kind of livelihood from jiu-jitsu. From there we get into the question that sits underneath every gi design decision, which is whether jiu-jitsu is a team sport that calls for uniformity or an individual art that calls for expression. Mike has lived on both sides of that question. He consults for one of the largest team organizations in the world and runs an independent boutique brand whose first release was a selvege denim gi. We get into the technical history, the shrinking of the silhouette in the early 2010s. The IBJJF rule changes that responded to what Storm was doing with double-layered ripstop and reinforced collars. Why a black gi fits tighter than a white one in the same size. Why your pants wear out faster than your jacket. What separates a jacket cut for judo from a jacket cut for jiu-jitsu, and why the difference shows up in the kinds of grips you can actually get. Mike also talks about his own path through martial arts, which started in judo as a kid in Michigan, moved through wrestling and MMA in the early 2000s, and eventually landed in jiu-jitsu. The episode closes on the upcoming Adidas x Vanguard Jiu-Jitsu launch. Mike has been working with Adidas for over a decade across MMA and combat sports, and he describes the long road to bringing the new line to the U.S. market through a vertically integrated factory in China, beginning with a Vanguard x Adidas collaboration on the Evolution uniform. Recorded at Vanguard Kimonos. Sponsors: Interested in sponsoring The Grappling Monthly Podcast? Email: grapplingmonthly@gmail.com [grapplingmonthly@gmail.com] Follow Grappling Monthly Instagram: www.instagram.com/@grapplingmonthly [http://www.instagram.com/@grapplingmonthly] YouTube: www.youtube.com/@grapplingmonthly [http://www.youtube.com/@grapplingmonthly] Website: http://grapplingmonthly.com [http://grapplingmonthly.com]  #bjj #jiujitsu #grappling #brazilianjiujitsu #nogi #ibjjf #grapplingmonthly #martialarts #bjjpodcast #losangeles About Grappling Monthly Grappling Monthly is an independent editorial media brand covering the culture, people, and business of Brazilian jiu-jitsu and the grappling arts. Based in Los Angeles, the brand produces in-depth conversations with the coaches, gym owners, competitors, and practitioners shaping the sport. The Grappling Monthly Podcast is the flagship property. A weekly long-form interview series hosted by Sébastien Maniatopoulos, a BJJ black belt establishing roots in the Southern California grappling community. The brand's editorial focus is on the human stories behind the art: how academies are built, how practitioners evolve, how the culture of jiu-jitsu intersects with identity, business, and community.

6 de may de 20261 h 30 min
episode Why Do People Quit Jiu-Jitsu? Professor Rodrigo Freitas on The Grappling Monthly Podcast artwork

Why Do People Quit Jiu-Jitsu? Professor Rodrigo Freitas on The Grappling Monthly Podcast

A lot of beginners do not struggle in jiu-jitsu because they are untalented. They struggle because they go too hard, too soon, and never learn how to pace themselves. In this episode of The Grappling Monthly Podcast, Rodrigo Freitas talks about growing up in Brazil, discovering jiu-jitsu through the early UFC, competing for years at a high level, moving to the United States without speaking English, and building InSpirit Jiu-Jitsu in the greater Los Angeles area. We also get into longevity, discipline, opening an academy, balancing competition with business, how to introduce beginners to training safely, and why consistency matters more than intensity for most people. About Rodrigo Freitas Rodrigo Freitas is a Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt, longtime competitor, and academy owner based in Los Angeles. Originally from Belo Horizonte, Brazil, he trained from white to black belt under the same instructor, competed extensively in gi and no-gi, and now leads In Spirit Jiu Jitsu while continuing to teach and compete. Sponsors: Interested in sponsoring The Grappling Monthly Podcast? Email: grapplingmonthly@gmail.com Follow Grappling Monthly: Instagram: @grapplingmonthly YouTube: @grapplingmonthly Website: grapplingmonthly.com #bjj #jiujitsu #grappling #brazilianjiujitsu #nogi #ibjjf #grapplingmonthly #martialarts #bjjpodcast #losangeles About Grappling Monthly Grappling Monthly is an independent editorial media brand covering the culture, people, and business of Brazilian jiu-jitsu and the grappling arts. Based in Los Angeles, the brand produces in-depth conversations with the coaches, gym owners, competitors, and practitioners shaping the sport.  The Grappling Monthly Podcast is the flagship property. A weekly long-form interview series hosted by Sébastien Maniatopoulos, a BJJ black belt establishing roots in the Southern California grappling community. The brand's editorial focus is on the human stories behind the art: how academies are built, how practitioners evolve, how the culture of jiu-jitsu intersects with identity, business, and community.

29 de abr de 202649 min