Master Rickson Talks about his worst fight in the rings
More at: https://rickson.academy April 25, 1980 is an important date in the history of martial arts in general, and jiu-jitsu in particular. That was when Rickson Gracie, then a young man with talent for BJJ and a passion for surfing, owner of a pretty new black belt, tested himself for the first time in a no-rules duel in a ring in Brasília. The lessons that 19-year-old was about to learn in the Brazilian capital would change his life forever, and would be branded on his mind as by a hot iron. Rickson's opponent was heavier, stronger and more experienced. Casimiro Martins, known as Rei Zulu ('King Zulu'), was a colossus of 32 years, 1.9m, about 100kg and only one loss in his career of over 100 vale-tudo matches. Rickson was prepared for his biggest challenge. But how he would come down from the ring was a different story. The fight lasted 11 minutes and 55 seconds. Rickson remembers: "Around the start of the fight, I threw a very powerful knee that caught him squarely in the face. I had never hit anybody that hard, and in that moment I thought, 'Bullseye — I win'. It seemed impossible for someone to resist a big knee strike like that. But Zulu shook his cheeks, spat out a tooth and came charging." Rickson ended the first ten-minute round exhausted, bereft of strength. He thought of giving up, but his father Helio and brother Rolls pushed him back in, with a bucket of ice to the head and some efficacious words. Rickson took a breath and returned. "After going to his back and finishing, I learned perhaps the greatest lesson of my life. I realized that our biggest opponent, the most powerful enemy of all of us, is inside our mind. If it were up to me, I would have stayed seated on that stool in the break. And, starting that day, I promised that I would never feed enemies in my own head, and that I would never give up when my head ordered me to. And that dying would be more acceptable than retreating." Learning became part of his essence, and nowadays Rickson endeavors to teach students a jiu-jitsu focused exactly on this: refusing to retreat or hesitate in the face of a great challenge. Creating enemies inside your mind means going against jiu-jitsu. "To beat a great challenge, and they occur daily in the life of any person, it is mandatory that you not be divided in two — that is, your heart ready to confront the problem and your mind in doubt, walking backwards,” he says. “Daily, with daily practice of good old jiu-jitsu, adequate breathing and good nutrition, you will see that your emotions and desires are in harmony, and you will be in control to make the best, and wisest, decision.”

The time Rickson beat the undefeated pain doctor

The Legendary Life of Rickson Gracie

The MMA Monster They Tried to Forget | WHO IS IVAN GOMES?

How Bad Was Steven Seagal Actually?🥋❌

Carlos Gracie VS Helio Gracie VS Carlson Gracie

The Pescatarian Diet of Kron Gracie, MMA Fighter

Warning: Bas Rutten is TERRIFYING

Rickson Gracie Red Belt Ceremony With Interviews

The Truth About Rickson Gracie vs. Mark Schultz

How GOOD was Royce Gracie Actually?

The Day Rickson Gracie Exposed Judo’s Weakness in Front of Everyone (1987)

Rickson Gracie - Mark Schultz / BJJ vs Wrestling

Mark Coleman on Don Frye

Americana(Part 1): When American Wrestling met Brazilian Jiu Jitsu - Bob Anderson vs. Rolls Gracie

He Won 200 Fights And Invented Kickboxing

Rickson Gracie's Philosophy...

Rigan Receives His Red Belt

John Danaher defines Jiu Jitsu as a four step system.

1987: When Rickson Gracie sparred with a Japanese judo master Hayward Nishioka

