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UFC Hall Of Famer Forrest Griffin: Knowing Jiu-jitsu In 1999, You Felt Like You’re Magic

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UFC Hall of Famer Forrest Griffin recently sat down with Dominick Cruz on the Love & War podcast to discuss his career in MMA. During the conversation, Griffin offered a glimpse into what it was like to know jiu-jitsu in the late 1990s.

When describing his early days as a police officer in 1999, he stated: “I went to the police academy, and I was like the only one. There’s like three of us that had actually done jiu-jitsu. This is 1999. And it was like so cool. I just felt like, I can’t explain this to you, but you felt like a ninja. Nobody else knows then,” Griffin explained.

During the conversation, Griffin also discussed his training partners during that era. He painted a picture of how limited the sport was.

“My best training partners were all like a buck 60 a buck 70. So even though I would go do gi jiu-jitsu with legit black belts, I was 235 lbs. I would just throw them away,” he said.

Griffin acknowledged the reality of weight classes, noting that even skilled practitioners couldn’t overcome significant size disadvantages. “They’re weight classes for a reason, you know,” he admitted, though he did credit one training partner who “had a wicked good choke.”

Griffin also described the reactions of his coworkers when they witnessed his grappling skills. “The guys I worked with in the club with were like, ‘Dude, what? You got to show me that.’ And I was like, ‘It’s kind of hard to learn. Like, it kind of takes a while. Like, like I’ve been doing this for a couple years now.’ Like I do this like 10-15 hours a week.”

Griffin also talked about of the general population’s knowledge of grappling at the time. He said, “Nobody knew how to defend a choke. Nobody knew how to do anything at all.”

This lack of understanding gave practitioners like Griffin a significant advantage, both in competition and in his work as a law enforcement officer.

Even decades later, Griffin works to develop the next generation of athletes through the UFC Performance Institute programs in Mexico City and Shanghai.

Upfront Tony
Upfront Tony
Senior Editor, CEO, BJJ Black Belt, Muay Thai Kru, Entrepreneur

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