Wednesday, May 31, 2017

Danis, Internet Celebrity, and Fake it Til' You Make it?

I've been watching the rise in visibility of Dilon Danis through primarily Instagram: I've seen the clips posted of post-match threats and arguments with the Danaher Death Squad guys, Gordon Ryan challenging basically the whole squad to a murderer's row one after another style match, winner take all, and the Marcelo-Danaher Peace accord, then to see his MMA debut with Bellator unveiled, to his ousting from Marcelo's with Mansher as well.
After a disappointing showing at the IBJJF Pans, and with his looming Bellator debut, he faced Jake Shields (training with, among others, the Danaher Death Squad under the tutelage of Danaher at Renzo Gracie Academy in NYC) at Submission Underground's most recent event and lost on ride time/taking longer to escape the the overtime positions.

It's been quite a wild ride for a guy who a few months before he was working wtih Conor McGregor was a virtual unknown outside of sport Jiu-Jitsu, an admittedly niche sport.
Danis was known to those of us who follow the big, well known name recognition academies, and was part of Marcelo's "Dream Team" of American black belts, Matheus Diniz and Mansher Khera alongside.

Enter Conor McGregor and his recruiting of Danis to work with him on his grappling acumen for the Diaz bout. It didn't take 20/20 vision to quickly spot the transformation in Danis's online persona. With each increase in likes, and access to notoriety, the persona amplified. Early on, I found it hard to fault the guy for doing what works. Sizzle sells well and so does flash. Years of doing Jiu-Jitsu and competing and training had done little for his public visibility, and arguably his bottom line financially. While I doubt he's raking in as much as he claims, I also find it hard to believe his connection to McGregor and his subsequent increased fandom/stardom didn't improve his monthly income be it directly or indirectly through sponsorships et cetera. The topic of notoriety and how it translates directly and indirectly into dollars and cents within the grappling-centric world is a topic for its own discussion at another time.

I was at work, bartending, with the Belllator card on one of our TV's and I look up and lo and behold, Dilon Danis is walking down the gangplank and his Bellator debut was announced. This was aired and shown on Cable TV. Say what you want about Bellator, but their formula has worked thus far and it has come a long way from its earliest incarnations. While Bellator semi-rebranded from its tournament-centered days, at current with Scott Coker at the helm it has found its MMA niche with a nice balance of freakshow fights (Kimbo vs DaDa and Chael vs Ortiz), its own legitimate B-Squad level champions, fading UFC stars/veterans, and cross promotions with organizations in Europe. Again, to laugh and scoff at Bellator's efforts would be to discredit a company that more often than not does in fact have its fingers on the pulse of what fans want to see, no matter how much purists want to decry it otherwise. It remains to be seen if PPVs are converted with their upcoming NYC show in late June.

I doubt Danis will fare as well as he expects, because my own 2-3 amateur record tells me a couple things: training is simply not the same as winning fights, a seasoned pro is always tough when you're learning on the job as a professional with no amateur background, and above all else, Jiu-Jitsu acumen or other grappling style background  is no sure fire guarantee of MMA success (ask the countless jiujitsu practitioners, judoka, wrestlers, sambo guys et cetera).

What he has done, however, it parlay training with McGregor for a couple fights into a much, much larger stage and far more money than he would have made going the tried and true path of fight some amateur fights for a few years, turn pro, work his way up the regional circuit, then knock on Bellator, WSOF, or the UFC's door.

In a lot of ways it reminds me of the Brittney Spears Southpark episode (which also references the American fiction short story, the Lottery) that satirizes our perverse joy in watching the successfeul crunble and decay under the scrutiny of fame and success and all its accompanying trappings. At any rate, with a debut coming in relatively short order, in the meantime we'll have to settle for watching him perform at the Worlds this weekend and any other invitational Jiu-Jitsu matches along the way to his MMA debut. 

Tuesday, May 30, 2017

I Dream of Kneebar - Gabriel Arges

I'm always looking for kneebar setups in the Gi as my next belt will be brown and that means toe holds, kneebars, & calf/bicep slicers become legal in the Gi below the waist.

From NoGi I've been spending a lot of time working my transition from the sankaku/leg lace to pull the far leg across and when they defend the near leg kneebar, lace the legs and attack the far leg kneebar.

At any rate, a guy who I've been perusing his matches and set-ups to attack the kneebar is Gabriel Arges. He first came to my attention when he caught the defending world champ, Claudio Calasans early in their match with a beautiful kneebar. He also caught former world champ, Otavio Sousa in similar style at the ACB Gi event/grand prix. Arges begins with inverting to the inside with what looks like a not very quick inversion from the Reverse De La Riva hook, and from the 50/50 kinda backtake threat but not really, he seems to have a lot of bait and traps because in both matches you can see him kinda baiting the guy but all the while he seems to be hyper aware of what to do depending how his opponent reacts. Against Otavio, he posts the far leg away after breaking/peeling the ankle cross apart, and hits the rotation to full knee behind the armpit. Against Claudio he spins/rotates what seems further distance but catches Claudio in an attempted backtake and goes almost belly down on it.

AND:

Inside the Octagon - UFC 212: Aldo vs Holloway

Fresh off that night of finishes that was the UFC in Stockholm last weekend, we have a long awaited Aldo vs Holloway unification title bout. I gotta say, as it gets closer, I am more and more excited. Aldo looked positively on point in the Edgar rematch, and Holloway is definitely at his peak as he has is own streak he's put together since the loss to McGregor. It's also a nice little side narrative that McGregor was the last man to beat either of them. Holloway has done literally everything to deserve this fight and Aldo if he can't get a rematch with McGregor, there's no doubt Holloway is the best test for him at featherweight.

Monday, May 29, 2017

IBJJF/USADA Testing & Ban Timeline

March 2013 - IBBJF Begins USADA Testing at the Pan-Ams
Black Belts who medal (10 total) are eligible for testing at the event. Athletes for testing are chosen at random.

Gabi Garcia - March 2014 - Clomiphene - ingested without fault or negligence - loss of results for that event, but no ban from active competition, primarily used by women to treat infertility. USADA accepts her claims.

Braulio Estima - November 2014 - methylhexaneamine - 2 year ban, loss of results. Interesting in that the substance is known to be commonly unlabeled in pre-workout OTC drinks/powders et cetera but Estima still receives a considerably lengthy  (full) ban. Non-steroidal substance by definition but banned substance nonetheless.

Felipa Pena - May 2015 - testosterone cream - 1 year ban, loss of results. USADA accepts his claim that a health care provider instructed him to use it. His ban was announced with 4 days left remaining on what would be his "ban" from competition.

**Breno Faria - athletic advisor - May 2016 - 4 year ban - in his role as adviser to an athlete, provided the testosterone cream to an athlete who tested positive.  (see above).

Leo Noguiera - March 2017 - Clomiphene - 2 year ban, loss of results

-- Clomiphene - among others, what Jon Jones was popped for most recently. Frequently used to kick start the body's Testosterone production (in males) following the use of anabolic steroids.

Paulo Miyao - May 2017 - Clomiphene - 2 year ban, loss of results. Miyao argues that not only does the USADA not have jurisdiction over him, but that in part his test failure is due to the lack of complete translation in the Portuguese version on the IBJJF's website/translation of information for competitors.

--

Thoughts as of late: The IBJJF's desire to not be a signatory, but rather contract the USADA to conduct testing once per year is simply the effort at a semblance of cleaning up the sport. The brown belts, and I'm sure even purple belts are juiced these days. I suspect, perhaps even more in the Master's divisions which don't even get tested at black belt level. With the notoriety that can come from winning Worlds, to not test more than once per year is like leaving the door open to steroids the vast majority of the training and competitive year. The ADCC doesn't test at all, nor does the UEAJJF. I don't even know what to say but to acknowledge that this means steroids are a current mainstay in our sport. I could pretend like many do that the sport is about time and effort and work ethic, but to think that it's some kind of level playing field with virtually nothing but a once a year test to ensure cheating doesn't occur is simply naive at best and willfully ignorant at best. If this number have been popped with athletes aware of the once per year they might be tested, imagine what would happen if the USADA showed up for out of competition tests a few months after worlds, or midway through the year......


Friday, May 26, 2017

Video: Absolute Championship Berkut 75kg/85kg Grand Prix

Looks like the posted virtually all of the match-ups HERE. 
Everyone from Davi Ramos to Marcio Andre to AJ Agazarm to Victor Silverio. A ton of awesome match-ups to watch and scout. Enjoy. I forgot just how many big name guys were in this.
It's arguably the biggest and best pool of guys at a Pro event or otherwise in recent memory if not in modern Jiu-Jitsu. As usual, I'm late to the party.

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

Leandro Lo vs Erberth Santos - Curitiba Fall 2017 Open (deep kneebar)

Tough match. Leandro dives on a foot and gets the kneebar counter from Erberth Santos. I don't even want to imagine what it feels like to have Erberth tuck your knee behind his armpit for the prime kneebar position leverage. Jesus. Leandro pulls out the win here but damn. Gotta wonder how many times Leandro will beat him before Erberth has his day. Especially with Worlds coming up. I remember at Copa Podio (with significantly shorter match times) Leandro quickly secured the back off a pass attempt and while Leandro is now bigger than before, Erberth has faced Leandro a number of times since then and really seems to have lost any tentativeness he might have shown at times early on when facing Lo. I can't wait to see them face one another at Worlds with the Gi portion of the sport's biggest title on the line.
Despite the specter of steroids and the like, it's still a great time to be a Jiu-Jitsu fan.


Demetrious Johnson Wants Money Fights Unless it's TJ Dillashaw

Not long ago Demetrious Johnson was talking money fights and complaining about his lack of perceived value as a lower weight class fighter. TJ Dillashaw wants to come down and Might Mouse is inventing all kinds of thin arguments why he should face a guy who's not a former champion and with far less name recognition (sorry Ray Borg, it is what it is).