Pure grappling — BJJ, wrestling, judo, sambo. 24 sources + 9 channels, aggregated from around the world.
You're stalled at purple belt because you're drilling the wrong *version* of the right submissions
The IBJJF holds ultimate authority over its ranks, yet the prospect of stripping a black belt over a single match remains one of grappling's most debated theoretical scenarios, with almost no documented precedents
The Mendes name echoes through jiu-jitsu history, but understanding the family's competitive branches and their entangled legacies requires a deep dive into the sport's highest echelons
The spread of Gracie Jiu-Jitsu across the globe birthed many branches, but some lineages, like Yoshiaki Yagi’s, maintained a discrete and profound path largely separate from the art’s mainstream evolution
The search for Helio Gracie's 1932 fight footage with Antonio Portugal is less about finding a film reel and more about understanding what history preserves and what it asks us to infer
The BJJ Stars 15 middleweight final saw Mica Galvão secure a controversial armbar finish over Roberto Jimenez, leaving fans and officials debating the precise timing of the referee's intervention
Marcus "Buchecha" Almeida didn't just win; he carved out an entire era in the IBJJF heavyweight division, a reign of dominance that reshaped the landscape before his pivot to MMA
Rolls Gracie’s written curriculum, a synthesis of diverse grappling arts, presaged the evolution of modern submission grappling by decades
In the vast tapestry of jiu-jitsu lineage, some threads are vibrant and well-known, while others, equally crucial, remain quietly woven into the fabric of the art
The twin stars of featherweight jiu-jitsu, Rafael and Guilherme Mendes, now chart separate courses, a schism often felt but rarely discussed
The half-guard lockdown is not a stall tactic for the unathletic; it is a complex, misunderstood control system that has been dismissed, then resurrected, and refined
The armbar was clean, but the referee’s delayed intervention at BJJ Stars 15 sparked a post-match firestorm that questions the very safety standards of professional grappling
The Kade vs Tye Ruotolo WNO 2022 match was a clash of twin brothers and training partners, a rare spectacle with unique competitive dynamics
The superfight between Lachlan Giles and Gordon Ryan was once the grappling world's dream, but Lachlan's strategic refusal closed the door
The colored-belt ranking system, now ubiquitous in martial arts, did not originate on the sandy beaches of Brazil but in the refined halls of the Kodokan in Japan
Your guard isn't collapsing because you're not shrimping enough; it's because your passing game, even as a black belt, is trying to solve modern problems with an outdated algorithm
You've been told your berimbolo just needs more repetition, but the real issue isn't your reps, it's the meta that killed your entry
In 1994, Rickson Gracie stepped onto a mat in Japan, and in that moment, the raw, brutal crucible of Brazilian Vale Tudo began its transformation into a globally recognized martial art
Your guard collapses, you turtle, and the immediate advice is to "shrimp more" – but nobody tells you the *real* problem is that you missed the one chokehold entry that ties wrestling to jiu-jitsu and underpins ADCC dominance
Your coach told you to "shrimp more" when your guard collapsed, but that advice is a misdiagnosis of a problem that's already two seconds old
Your closed guard keeps getting stacked and passed, not because it's outdated, but because you're fighting position without meaningful hand architecture
You’ve been told to pull harder on your cross-collar, but the problem isn't your strength; it’s the forgotten axis of your wrist
The BJJ Stars 15 final saw Mica Galvão claim a R$100,000 prize, but a controversial armbar finish against Roberto Jimenez ignited an immediate firestorm over referee intervention and athlete safety
Before his arrival in Brazil, Mitsuyo Maeda, the legendary Conde Koma, had already forged Kodokan judo into a system profoundly altered by a decade of combat realism across three continents
Grappling's elite talent pool increasingly converges on three academies, reshaping the competitive landscape
The ghost of controversies past haunts ADCC, especially when the sport's most dangerous submission meets its most ambiguous rule application
Grappling's biggest weekend saw Craig Jones drop a million-dollar bomb that detonated ADCC's long-standing prize structure
The narrative of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu often begins and ends with one family, but beneath the surface lies a parallel lineage that reshaped the art's trajectory and accessibility
The "blue belt" isn't a universally recognized standard, it's a postcode lottery for competence and curriculum
You’ve been told to shrimp more, frame harder, or simply be stronger, but your guard collapses anyway — it's not you, it's your underhook
Carlson Gracie's daring decision to democratize jiu-jitsu instruction laid the economic and social foundation for every modern academy
You've spent years collecting isolated techniques like trading cards, yet your guard still collapses under pressure, leaving you wondering why nothing "works"
Your pressure pass is crumbling because BJJ never taught you how to *stay* heavy; it taught you where to go once you were already there
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu's genesis is often misattributed to Helio Gracie alone, obscuring a lineage that begins with Maeda and found its first Brazilian teacher in Carlos Gracie
Rolls Gracie's brief life reshaped jiu-jitsu, integrating diverse grappling arts and laying the groundwork for the sport we recognize today
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is the only major martial art on Earth without a standardized black belt test. The result is a system where 97% of starters never finish, the average finisher spends over a decade and tens of thousands of dollars, and no two black belts are remotely interchangeable. That's not tradition. That's a structural failure dressed up as culture.
Every BJJ sweep is a two-beat motion — pull one corner of the opponent's base toward you, push another away. Helio knew it. Marcelo proved it. The Mendes brothers built a featherweight dynasty on it. Coaches teach 100 sweeps without ever naming the one principle underneath them all.
The triangle isn't a strength technique. It's an angles technique. Four angles separate a tap from a stalled lock — head, hip, leg, finish — and most gyms still drill the squeeze instead of the geometry.
Your guard collapses because no one taught you frames the way Roger Gracie, Priit Mihkelson, and Lachlan Giles actually use them. Three frames, three failure modes, four weeks of drilling — the difference between a blue belt who plateaus and one who earns the purple.

How Craig Jones' $1M purse rewrote pro grappling economics, broke ADCC's leverage gap, and reshaped what athletes can demand for the next five years.
The cross-collar, collar-sleeve, and back-control wrist pin — the three grips that separate purple belts from blue belts, with drills.
A position-by-position breakdown of Mica Galvao's armbar finish of Roberto Jimenez in the BJJ Stars 15 Grand Prix final.

Mica Galvão's case for the best 77kg grappler in the world: Super Grand Slam, ADCC gold, the doping year, and what his game actually looks like.