TODAY's GUEST IS Roger Gracie!

Guest Spotlight: Roger Gracie – Jiu-Jitsu’s Legendary Champion

Today’s guest is Roger Gracie, one of the greatest Brazilian jiu-jitsu athletes in history. A retired mixed martial artist and renowned BJJ competitor, Roger has shown the world that you can create a unique fighting style by staying true to yourself, not just following trends.

As the son of coral belt Mauricio Gomes and grandson of BJJ founder Carlos Gracie, Roger’s journey in jiu-jitsu is rooted in legacy. Known for his ability to submit black belts with foundational “white-belt” techniques, his effortless skill has earned him a place among the legends of the sport. His remarkable accomplishments include 10 IBJJF World Championship titles from 2004-2010, making him the first athlete to claim the open weight division three times.

Inducted into both the IBJJF and ADCC Halls of Fame, Roger is also a European and Pan Champion. His 100% submission rate at ADCC—winning gold in his weight class, the open weight, and the superfight divisions—is unmatched. Roger retired in 2017 after a memorable victory over world champion Marcus Buchecha, closing his competitive career with zero submission defeats.

Now, he’s focused on teaching and inspiring the next generation of BJJ practitioners, guiding students to discover their potential at any age or skill level. In this interview, we dive into his journey from novice to legend, his unique training philosophy, and his advice for maximizing your growth in BJJ.

In this interview, we discuss:

  • The mindset that helped him become the GOAT!
  • How he trains for competitions! 
  • How his game-plan is designed for him and not his opponent! 
  • The way he approaches training and its still as fun today as it has always been! 

#RogerGracie #BrazilianJiuJitsu #BJJLegend #MartialArts #ADCCChampion #IBJJFWorldChampion #GracieLegacy #SubmissionGrappling #MartialArtsTraining #BJJ

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KEY POINTS, Links & Actions

Here are some key points that I would advise you to concentrate on

  • You can follow any path in life, not just one that your parents or family expect for you. If you cannot find a path, you can make one!  
  • You can create a life out of your hobbies, you just need to find the way to make a living out of it. 
  • Roger puts his motivation as the key part from him going from meh to GOAT. He found the motivation to transform himself, to become dedicated and focused on his end goal. 
  • Roger approaches training by having specific end goals for each training session and would rep attacks etc from specific positions a high number of positions to grow his skills and abilities.
  • A great teacher and coach are worth their weight in gold! They allow to ask questions, and push you to look to learn by self-learning, express yourself and not be spoon fed to develop. He should be a mentor not someone that makes you a copy of them. 
  • Roger highlights the importance of being relaxed in BJJ, to avoid being swept etc, and to truly use your body to control your opponent and win without falling back on the use of strength. 
  • Build your confidence by repping again and again, to gain the experience, the subtle weigh shifts and balance needed for a strong base. Learn to relax, switch off the power until needed and ab and flow and let your technique develop.  
  • BJJ can be learnt and used by everyone, you just need to learn the fundamentals and technique and learn to believe in  yourself. Roger was smaller than the partners he trained with, so instead of seeing that as a negative, he saw it as an opportunity to learn how to truly control someone and use technique and not strength.
  • The worst thing to bring to a BJJ gym is ego. Ego and the inability to lose or not do as well as they could are the biggest roadblock that stops people from progressing in BJJ. 
  • Training should be fun, about you and self-growth and learning about yourself, and not about if you win or not. 
  • BJJ is a great sport on how learning how to overcome obstacles, learn how to deal with people, and to stay positive in situations that feel unwinnable, remaining calm and thinking of how to work yourself out slowly, securely, using technique and control. The skills learnt from the sport are great to use also in life for better work, relationships and life in general. 
  • You need to focus on your weak areas and the bad positions, and learn how to defend, stay calm, and await the correct time to try and escape etc. Roger learnt this by being tapped hundreds of times, but he kept going, learning and growing so he improved each time. He let go of his ego and focused on learning each day, every session. 
  • Roger doesn’t go to competitions thinking of what he will do, as he knew no plan ever follows the rules after first contact. As he said, if it goes the opposite of what you thought, it can go wrong and you panic. He instead focused on leading them to his preferred places and techniques. 
  • Roger’s competition pre-fight routine is like he approaches life – gets to nature, slowly warms himself up, enjoy the beauty and get himself centered.
  • The hardest thing in life is knowing when to stop, when you need to stop doing something. Enjoy it now but have a plan for when you need to change. Roger knew he wanted to go into coaching more when he retired from competition, but so few men plan ahead, they fall back to chasing old victories and glory. Know time will pass and you will eventually have to stop things you do now and find others. Keep changing, keep evolving and keep living! 
  • Roger realized that for him the fight started well before the ref signals go – he learned about his opponent, watching how they act, how they behave and how they interact, to feel out his opponent. 
  • Roger found he struggled when he tried to match his opponents aggression or pace-setting, he stayed relaxed and found his rhythm and timing and took advantage by bringing the fight to his strengths. 
  • Roger changed his training methods to suit his health and ability to keep training. He listened to his body and adapted his training to suit. He left his ego at the door and changed his training to a style that would work for him, not to impress others, but to help him be healthy enough for life and training on the mats for a long time, not just a session like ego lifters do! 
  • Roger looks at losing as a need to improve, as a motivational tool to keep himself moving forward, growing and learning from it. He noticed though that his fix was to grow and mature rather than focusing on certain positions, he just needed to work on his ability to grow his ability to remain calm, and cool and not rush in.   

LEVEL UP Time WITH THIS KEY LESSON!

Key lesson from this interview 

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About the Author
I’m a podcaster who interviews great examples of people to discuss and highlight the methods, hacks, tips and procedures you can use in your own life to help you develop and better your life. I would definitely not consider myself an expert, so to improve, I ask them and action it in my own life! My personal journey has been marked by awkwardness and awesomeness, OCD and ‘OMG’. I have suffered with depression, shyness, unhappiness and lack of focus and motivation so I know what’s it like to feel lost and hopeless. Back then, I wished I had a podcast to listen to and find actual fixes and concrete action steps and not just unobtainable suggestions and promotion of their products but couldn’t find it … so I made my own!

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