Here are the timestamps. Please check out our sponsors to support this podcast. 0:00 - Introduction & sponsor mentions: - Justworks: justworks.com - Indeed: indeed.com/lex to get $75 credit - MasterClass: masterclass.com/lex to get 15% off - Eight Sleep: www.eightsleep.com/lex and use code LEX to get special savings 4:39 - What is Judo? 12:27 - Travis's signature throw 17:52 - Fundamentals 19:44 - Throws 32:36 - Gripping 41:09 - Weight cutting 1:10:22 - Injuries 1:14:22 - Jiu-Jitsu 1:18:05 - Lex on his judo competition experience 1:21:30 - Levels of mastery 1:34:41 - Matches 1:48:42 - Travis inspired Lex to practice judo 1:54:56 - London 2012 Olympic games 2:36:33 - 2016 Olympic games 3:10:56 - Mixed team competition 3:18:21 - The value of epic throws 3:21:49 - Shohei Ono 3:28:11 - Chess 3:33:14 - The coach 3:39:50 - Advice for young people
This is one of the more powerful interviews I've ever seen. Been a big fan of Travis Stevens for a while. His level of mastery & his insights are incredible.
Thank you Lex! The Judo community in this country needs more interviews like this with Travis Stevens and other successful Judoka. I hope Travis and his systems pump out more successful American Judoka. So that, Judo can maybe as respected or more as BJJ. At least in this country.
One of the most frustrating things in my life has always been trying to explain the sport of Judo to people who have never participated. Thank you Lex and Travis for doing better than I ever could in explaining and spreading the sport!
@@kylegushue to each their own. Some sports are catered to the spectators and some are not. I would encourage anyone interested in martial arts to definitely give it a look regardless.
Hey Lex, from the bottom of my heart- thanks for having this conversation. Also, please please tell me that we are doing rehabilitation work for this gem of a human being. After listening to his injuries, I had to immediately write a comment. The worst of the injuries aren't finished while we're young- it's when we're old that time balances the scale. Another legend that embodies the phrase, "Doing whatever it takes" is Ronnie Coleman. He's had tons of injuries and tons of surgeries. And also, tons of drugs just to get through the pain of living his daily life. In his prime he was very sharp, but now with the drugs, it hurts me to see him so muddled. Your guest is tough, very much I know, but I really hope he can avoid a similar fate.
I m a stroke survivor and I was an intentionally judo fighter ….recovering from a major stroke is easier than judo , thank god for the judo mentality because I wouldn’t got through the stroke
I'm 24, & listening to Travis has inspired me to start training Judo. I have my first class 3 days from now & I hope to compete within a few months at local comps to improve and learn more about the sport. Thank you. Mr. Stevens.
Hey Lex. You bring out the most sincere expression in all your guests. Watching and listening makes me a less cynical person. Thank you for sharing your unique experiences so gracefully.
Iv only recently started judo achieving my green belt I have background in boxing and wrestling and have succeeded in both styles due to injury to the head I quite striking and have made judo my life feel privileged to watched videos from guys like Travis and all the greats Watching and practicing judo feels to me like the truest perfection of martial arts grappling system and pure art
As a former Judoka this warmed my heart. Having trained under Ole Bischoff one time his disrespect towards him kinda triggered me a bit. Great podcast though! Great guest and bloody amazing judoka! All the best from Germany
Travis actually clarified in one of his videos (rewatching the Ole fight) that there is no ill will between them. They would train together all of the time, but when it came to competition, they are both such strong personalities that they would always battle it out
DUDE two of my favorites, Lex and Travis! Thanks Lex, in any other country Travis would be a household name as an Olympian, but Judo is a fading sport in the US. I've been following his youtube page early fast forward years later and he's barely got 30K followers.
I've listened to a lot of travis stevens videos, interviews etc. Lex Fridman really has a way of interviewing people and delving deep, it really exposes a level of genius in Travis Stevens I've never seen before in other interviews. This is amazing, thanks.
This is an incredibly useful information you stated in the beginning, Lex. It is so heartbreaking that one is not able to access videos from the Olympics by any means. It is also amplified by the number of athletes one from a small country as mine can see competing on the highest stage. Imagine having literally two athletes of your favorite sport making it to the Olympics, and the whole country not even being able to see them competing except for something they could have posted on socials. Or not seeing a friend of yours, with whom you started this athletic journey, finally getting there to compete with the best. Absolutely awful, and totally agree with your introductory statement.
Lex, once again you say what a few of us wish we could. THANK YOU! How lucky can you be to have a mentor such as him!! I have been learning Judo and Jiu Jitsu for 8 months now. Thank you for all the hard work you do. Please don't stop.
I was just looking at Judo solo drills yesterday to benefit my BJJ. I don't do Judo. Never heard of this guy. But after watching two of his videos suddenly he is here on Lex. Amazing. And it has zero to do with the algorithm as I have a separate channel for martial arts.
I never comment on UA-cam videos, but feel it necessary to express this: Thank you Lex, for the wealth of knowledge and degree of authenticity in your questions I am about to enjoy. Just the other day I thought about how wonderful it would be for you to interview Travis. Just watched the Jimmy Pedro interview from years ago and am exited to see this! I hope to one day cross paths on this martial arts journey we have both embarked on.
I've done Judo myself for 10 plus years but I always wonder the auora of Koga He was never a consistent Word Champion or Olympic champion but is reguarded as a legend I'll admit when he throws people his technique looks the prettiest
I love that Travis explains the difference between a game and a fight. A lot of athletes try and talk like they're killers when they're just playing. You can see Travis knows the difference and he knows how to put real feeling into his martial arts.
Lex, this was so great. Glad I could catch it in video form on YT. Is hilarious seeing you when Stevens is talking about how he spars in judo vs jiu jitsu, lol!
Lex I love you bro, there is no podcast more consistently engaging, meaningful, insightful, and useful than yours. In fact, I would expand this comment beyond the medium of podcasts. You are the most important broadcaster working today, Lex. We thank you for this priceless content.
I have mixed feelings. I boxed for 12+ years. I started BJJ just a few months ago and I like it but I'm already leaning to starting Judo instead. I'm gonna give BJJ some more time but we will see. Judo seems so freaking cool.
Unfortunately by the nature of UA-cam and the Internet in general we are probably not in a place to help Lex with that, or at least only help minimally.
Lex, that was awesome! Travis is quite the inspiration. Lex, I would love to see you interview Madina Taimazova, the Russian judoka. She doesn’t speak English but you could translate. Just a humble recommendation. Love your podcast!!!
It is fascinating to watch Travis breaking down positions and matches. He clearly has a clinical eye and understanding of the game that most professional Judokas don't have. If you don't follow him on youtube, you're missing big time.
Dropping weight is such a part of wrestling, judo and other high school and collegiate sports that the regulators limit how much weight you can loose now. I lived in plastic suits. I remember dreaming that I would be under a water spigot freely drinking as much as I wanted…soooo dehydrated. It’s actually a yogic practice called ‘drying out’.
Thank you Lex for doing this interview. It’s something I’ve been wanting to see for years. Meaning it’s all been about MMA and BJJ for years. In America judo isn’t recognized by the populous leaving it in the dust. I have a new found respect for Travis. I regret ever having mixed words in the past as Insignificant as it may have been. I just hope someday that judo becomes recognized in the states for what it is and not just some sort of cult like it has been portrayed for the most part up here in the Midwest. Again thank you Lex I love your videos keep up the good work
i don't know why it still surprises me to find that i'm interested in one of your random interviews. This was pretty good. Lex, it's disturbing how often i awaken to the sound of your voice lately, man. sometimes it really gets on my nerves too. lol
Never clicked something so fast guys a legend of intensity and focus truly in awe of this grappling legend I love that lex is branching out and interviewing martial artists my wishlist for lex to interview is Gordon Ryan Rickson Gracie mike Tyson Conor mcgregor isreal adesanya
Travis and Lex, thank you for a meteoric rise of a conversation. Attention all humans on Earth: Travis conveys some of the most beautiful concepts and insight into training, losing, grinding, and persevering. I will never EVER complain about hurt body parts, losing, and putting work in. Thank You Travis for your titanium armored mindset 🙏🏻 🚀 🦅 🇺🇸 🔨 @arclightironworks
Hey Lex I appreciated this one as a former Judo player and fan of Travis Stevens. Kind of interesting hearing him say the IJF rulechange about grabbing/attacking the leg was the best thing for the sport. For me, I hated that rule. I despise that rule. It may open up the game of Judo and make for some bigger more plentiful throws but for self defense/MMA purposes I feel like kids will lose that valuable part of the game going forward.
I felt the same way at the time, but over the years I agree with Travis more now. It really did make judo more exciting on the whole and got rid of a lot of stalling people were doing to win matches by doing crappy leg grabs to run out the time. As for self defense and MMA people can still train those tehcniques, we do at my academy and there are comps for freestyle judo as well. I made sure we didn't lose those techniques. It sucks losing some of the more beautiful big throws like kata guruma and the guruma but I'd rather lose them in the big circuit instead of seeing people so crappy judo to win by getting a small score and then stalling out the clock. There is probably other ways they could have addressed this but none as effectively, it's pretty much impossible for a ref to tell the difference between a tired athelete trying a real attack and one just stalling with a crappy one. And they spent a lot of time with statisticians crunching the numbers and looking at matches to figure out how to solve the problem.
Ive done very little boxing and muay thai. I've mostly done TKD and BJJ and I couldnt disagree more. If your walking the streets and facing real danger, diffusing a situation or just trying to survive, every situation is like a puzzle that can call for a mirad of different solutions. Martial arts is about defending yourself not competition. If im 140 pounds im not going to try to grapple a group of three 250 pounds bigger than me. It's impossible. You have a much better chance of knocking them out. My go to move was a side kick the knee which is tkd. It's not kick boxing it's just a really useful move my tkd instructor showed me. It's where my mind goes in a street ulterication. As a kid i would pull people's hoodie over their face and go to town. In general in a closed room with just two people sports combats is going to beat traditional martial arts but that's not how life goes. The most impressive feats recorded in deadly encounters are alot of the times styles that people say dont even work. Aikijijutsu has more than a couple real life gun disarmements and they arent striking, grappling or wrestling. Imo this is all ego because some styles have higher win percentages in mma.
Here are the timestamps. Please check out our sponsors to support this podcast.
0:00 - Introduction & sponsor mentions:
- Justworks: justworks.com
- Indeed: indeed.com/lex to get $75 credit
- MasterClass: masterclass.com/lex to get 15% off
- Eight Sleep: www.eightsleep.com/lex and use code LEX to get special savings
4:39 - What is Judo?
12:27 - Travis's signature throw
17:52 - Fundamentals
19:44 - Throws
32:36 - Gripping
41:09 - Weight cutting
1:10:22 - Injuries
1:14:22 - Jiu-Jitsu
1:18:05 - Lex on his judo competition experience
1:21:30 - Levels of mastery
1:34:41 - Matches
1:48:42 - Travis inspired Lex to practice judo
1:54:56 - London 2012 Olympic games
2:36:33 - 2016 Olympic games
3:10:56 - Mixed team competition
3:18:21 - The value of epic throws
3:21:49 - Shohei Ono
3:28:11 - Chess
3:33:14 - The coach
3:39:50 - Advice for young people
Wait … what??
This is unbelievable!!!!!!!
A T shirt?
😀
Living the dream
Great podcast.
Great interview! Love when people can see the other side of the monster!!
Please post original travis interview too plz from take it uneasy
This is one of the more powerful interviews I've ever seen. Been a big fan of Travis Stevens for a while. His level of mastery & his insights are incredible.
Im grateful there are visuals for this on UA-cam. Hard to really visualize all these throws just by listening on Spotify.
"I don't see that I've damaged my body. My body can go through more than yours can...who's weaker?" This guy is on another level mentally.
Ever since I've watched this. That phrase is what I say when I'm injured and still train.
Thank you Lex! The Judo community in this country needs more interviews like this with Travis Stevens and other successful Judoka. I hope Travis and his systems pump out more successful American Judoka. So that, Judo can maybe as respected or more as BJJ. At least in this country.
Judo is far more respected worldwide than bjj
One of the most frustrating things in my life has always been trying to explain the sport of Judo to people who have never participated. Thank you Lex and Travis for doing better than I ever could in explaining and spreading the sport!
Probably because it’s boring to watch.
@@kylegushue to each their own. Some sports are catered to the spectators and some are not. I would encourage anyone interested in martial arts to definitely give it a look regardless.
@@heresy5o fair
@@kylegushue lol the fuck, its the best spectator combat sport in the olympic games
@@purplehaze557 that doesn’t make it not boring, just makes the others even more boring. Some things are fun to do, but not fun to watch.
The martial arts episodes are becoming some of my favorites. Thank you
Agreed
100%
Hey Lex, from the bottom of my heart- thanks for having this conversation.
Also, please please tell me that we are doing rehabilitation work for this gem of a human being. After listening to his injuries, I had to immediately write a comment. The worst of the injuries aren't finished while we're young- it's when we're old that time balances the scale. Another legend that embodies the phrase, "Doing whatever it takes" is Ronnie Coleman. He's had tons of injuries and tons of surgeries. And also, tons of drugs just to get through the pain of living his daily life. In his prime he was very sharp, but now with the drugs, it hurts me to see him so muddled. Your guest is tough, very much I know, but I really hope he can avoid a similar fate.
“Are you considering your mortality in this moment?” is the most Lex question I’ve ever heard.
One of my favourite podcasts of all time, a must for anyone seeking to learn what true human mental strength is about. Insane!
I m a stroke survivor and I was an intentionally judo fighter ….recovering from a major stroke is easier than judo , thank god for the judo mentality because I wouldn’t got through the stroke
Wow that’s a bold statement. I hope you are doing well now and are healthy 🥋🥋
P⁰
Hope you're doing ok Eddie
@@jessicalipa8921 never better Jessica thanks 🙏🏽
God bless 🙏🏿🥋
Thank you for calling out the IOC! Deeply disturbing loss of freedom
Corrupt as fuuuuuck!
The world games, but not for everybody. 😑
@@roman-fo2sk The IOC at its highest levels is hilariously corrupt. Go sell your "worker" fantasy somewhere else we have all seen Icarus.
I'm 24, & listening to Travis has inspired me to start training Judo. I have my first class 3 days from now & I hope to compete within a few months at local comps to improve and learn more about the sport. Thank you. Mr. Stevens.
Hey Lex. You bring out the most sincere expression in all your guests. Watching and listening makes me a less cynical person. Thank you for sharing your unique experiences so gracefully.
Iv only recently started judo achieving my green belt I have background in boxing and wrestling and have succeeded in both styles due to injury to the head I quite striking and have made judo my life feel privileged to watched videos from guys like Travis and all the greats Watching and practicing judo feels to me like the truest perfection of martial arts grappling system and pure art
As a former Judoka this warmed my heart. Having trained under Ole Bischoff one time his disrespect towards him kinda triggered me a bit. Great podcast though! Great guest and bloody amazing judoka!
All the best from Germany
Travis actually clarified in one of his videos (rewatching the Ole fight) that there is no ill will between them. They would train together all of the time, but when it came to competition, they are both such strong personalities that they would always battle it out
DUDE two of my favorites, Lex and Travis! Thanks Lex, in any other country Travis would be a household name as an Olympian, but Judo is a fading sport in the US. I've been following his youtube page early fast forward years later and he's barely got 30K followers.
Can't even count the number of times my jaw dropped.
Travis is such as badass. Thanks for sharing the story, I'm sure it inspired many.
I've listened to a lot of travis stevens videos, interviews etc. Lex Fridman really has a way of interviewing people and delving deep, it really exposes a level of genius in Travis Stevens I've never seen before in other interviews. This is amazing, thanks.
I met Travis at one of the USAJudo Senior Nationals. He’s a nice dude. He is that relatable persona yet commands utmost respect.
This is an incredibly useful information you stated in the beginning, Lex. It is so heartbreaking that one is not able to access videos from the Olympics by any means. It is also amplified by the number of athletes one from a small country as mine can see competing on the highest stage. Imagine having literally two athletes of your favorite sport making it to the Olympics, and the whole country not even being able to see them competing except for something they could have posted on socials. Or not seeing a friend of yours, with whom you started this athletic journey, finally getting there to compete with the best. Absolutely awful, and totally agree with your introductory statement.
Lex, once again you say what a few of us wish we could. THANK YOU! How lucky can you be to have a mentor such as him!! I have been learning Judo and Jiu Jitsu for 8 months now. Thank you for all the hard work you do. Please don't stop.
@46:08 Travis mentions Pringles and a Snickers bar and Lex edits in a pic. Hilarious.
I was just looking at Judo solo drills yesterday to benefit my BJJ. I don't do Judo. Never heard of this guy. But after watching two of his videos suddenly he is here on Lex. Amazing.
And it has zero to do with the algorithm as I have a separate channel for martial arts.
They guy is also a Danaher black belt.
The algorithm really did Travis dirty by not letting the clips being shown
I never comment on UA-cam videos, but feel it necessary to express this: Thank you Lex, for the wealth of knowledge and degree of authenticity in your questions I am about to enjoy. Just the other day I thought about how wonderful it would be for you to interview Travis. Just watched the Jimmy Pedro interview from years ago and am exited to see this! I hope to one day cross paths on this martial arts journey we have both embarked on.
I've done Judo myself for 10 plus years but I always wonder the auora of Koga
He was never a consistent Word Champion or Olympic champion but is reguarded as a legend
I'll admit when he throws people his technique looks the prettiest
I love it when Travis does a live stream, and I ask an honest question, and he just ignores it....what a guy. He's no hero.
Listened to this podcast. Had to watch it to. Travis is Judo. What a Legend. Thanks Lex for this one
I love that Travis explains the difference between a game and a fight. A lot of athletes try and talk like they're killers when they're just playing. You can see Travis knows the difference and he knows how to put real feeling into his martial arts.
Lex, this was so great. Glad I could catch it in video form on YT. Is hilarious seeing you when Stevens is talking about how he spars in judo vs jiu jitsu, lol!
Lex I love you bro, there is no podcast more consistently engaging, meaningful, insightful, and useful than yours. In fact, I would expand this comment beyond the medium of podcasts. You are the most important broadcaster working today, Lex. We thank you for this priceless content.
Couldnt agree more mate
I was listening to the audio, then thought I bet Lex put some videos to display the judo. Switched and so happy I did. Thanks Lex.
Thank You Brother Lex and thank You Brother Travis. Bless You Brothers.
I trained with Travis in Seattle , he is incredible :) I saw Travis drink 4 Pepsi before practice…4 …
Cans?
@@bigbaltimore yes
As a BJJ practitioner, I always respected Judo and Wrestling but never got to train Judo. This made me sooo motivated to try!
I have mixed feelings. I boxed for 12+ years. I started BJJ just a few months ago and I like it but I'm already leaning to starting Judo instead. I'm gonna give BJJ some more time but we will see. Judo seems so freaking cool.
@@Armanijesus I’d love to start Boxing too! The combination of a grappling art and a striking art is really what we need to make our skills shine
This is the most I’ve seen Travis laugh in an interview
yeah he is totally different demeaner he must actually like lex straigt up
This is one the best honest conversations I’ve listened to…. Some real, solid insight is freely dished out in this one 👍🏽
Travis Stevens looks like a sad Sean Strickland
It's just unbelievable how much of a savage this man is 😨😨
This is a beautiful episode about conquering the complete odds and staring down the monster in yourself
A conversation with David Attenborough would be fantastic Lex, make it happen my man 🙌🏽
Have there been any Climate Change Scientists?
@@amandamoore9183 I don’t believe there have been any on his podcast
This entire episode was incredible, but the final three minutes were invaluable.
In every way- what a powerful guest!
Great conversation, loved what he said about his approach to learning new things!
khabib and sean strickland fusion
Hes not a insecure child like Strickland
This channel needs to be at 5 million subscribers,
This podcast is close to reaching four million subscribers.
2:46:00 you are not proud of who you are? Well, friend Lex you should. you are an amazing human being! great podcast!
Unfortunately by the nature of UA-cam and the Internet in general we are probably not in a place to help Lex with that, or at least only help minimally.
I’m super pumped to listen to this podcast!!
this is a beautiful episode. ive watched it at least 3 times fully.
Lex.. very well put .. much love from Anaheim CA... peaceful gentle way...
Great intro Lex! Go get em!
Lex, that was awesome! Travis is quite the inspiration. Lex, I would love to see you interview Madina Taimazova, the Russian judoka. She doesn’t speak English but you could translate. Just a humble recommendation. Love your podcast!!!
What a great podcast
Never clicked on a video so fast. Lex/Travis are wonderful people!
It is fascinating to watch Travis breaking down positions and matches. He clearly has a clinical eye and understanding of the game that most professional Judokas don't have. If you don't follow him on youtube, you're missing big time.
Really great interview, really cool listen to Travis, thank you!
Dropping weight is such a part of wrestling, judo and other high school and collegiate sports that the regulators limit how much weight you can loose now. I lived in plastic suits. I remember dreaming that I would be under a water spigot freely drinking as much as I wanted…soooo dehydrated. It’s actually a yogic practice called ‘drying out’.
Weight cuts are more effective than steroid use. No meme. It's legal "cheating"
Based on what he spoke about he’s a very humble person. True judo .
Thank you Lex for doing this interview. It’s something I’ve been wanting to see for years. Meaning it’s all been about MMA and BJJ for years. In America judo isn’t recognized by the populous leaving it in the dust. I have a new found respect for Travis. I regret ever having mixed words in the past as Insignificant as it may have been. I just hope someday that judo becomes recognized in the states for what it is and not just some sort of cult like it has been portrayed for the most part up here in the Midwest. Again thank you Lex I love your videos keep up the good work
Man, I love his take on nutrition. Makes me feel better about eating McDonald's and burritos before and/or after training. lol
Same man same haha
Great podcast with amazing person! 10/10
I hoped you asked him the Tie question.
i don't know why it still surprises me to find that i'm interested in one of your random interviews. This was pretty good. Lex, it's disturbing how often i awaken to the sound of your voice lately, man. sometimes it really gets on my nerves too. lol
Foolish IOC, well said Lex, what an opportunity for us all this conversation provides, thank you 🙏
What an inspirational podcast. Thank you.
Bless you on your intro Lex!
"Your violating the principals of your center of ass" might be the unintentional funniest thing I've ever heard.
Travis is such an inspiration.
Travis Stevens...A true Gladiator !
Thank you both! Love your podcasts Lex; keep them coming please🙏🙌
what a great interview - thanks guys!
Being real is unstoppable, this is top class. Yes Martial Arts rock!
Never clicked something so fast guys a legend of intensity and focus truly in awe of this grappling legend I love that lex is branching out and interviewing martial artists my wishlist for lex to interview is Gordon Ryan Rickson Gracie mike Tyson Conor mcgregor isreal adesanya
Great interview
"Grabing the whole ******* jacket" I got so excited when you said it like that
Thank you guys for this. Very inspiring
I love so much that his dream coach is Dan Gable. That's someone who knows the importance of hard work.
Thanks
3:03:52 "The who you become along the journey is really what the prize is"
Job well done Lex thank you kind sir!
More martial artists please.I love the dynamic, more than the usual podcasts with MMA guests. Rhymes with Brogan.
Travis and Lex, thank you for a meteoric rise of a conversation. Attention all humans on Earth: Travis conveys some of the most beautiful concepts and insight into training, losing, grinding, and persevering. I will never EVER complain about hurt body parts, losing, and putting work in. Thank You Travis for your titanium armored mindset 🙏🏻 🚀 🦅 🇺🇸 🔨 @arclightironworks
Please upvote this if you want lex to interview nassim taleb
Really enjoyable podcast!
So much inspiration here ✨
Love you both and this amazing conversations that you both had.
Just in time for me to go to work, cheers Lex!
Hey Lex I appreciated this one as a former Judo player and fan of Travis Stevens. Kind of interesting hearing him say the IJF rulechange about grabbing/attacking the leg was the best thing for the sport. For me, I hated that rule. I despise that rule. It may open up the game of Judo and make for some bigger more plentiful throws but for self defense/MMA purposes I feel like kids will lose that valuable part of the game going forward.
I felt the same way at the time, but over the years I agree with Travis more now. It really did make judo more exciting on the whole and got rid of a lot of stalling people were doing to win matches by doing crappy leg grabs to run out the time.
As for self defense and MMA people can still train those tehcniques, we do at my academy and there are comps for freestyle judo as well. I made sure we didn't lose those techniques.
It sucks losing some of the more beautiful big throws like kata guruma and the guruma but I'd rather lose them in the big circuit instead of seeing people so crappy judo to win by getting a small score and then stalling out the clock.
There is probably other ways they could have addressed this but none as effectively, it's pretty much impossible for a ref to tell the difference between a tired athelete trying a real attack and one just stalling with a crappy one. And they spent a lot of time with statisticians crunching the numbers and looking at matches to figure out how to solve the problem.
3:04:54 "everyone has an opportunity too" referring to overcoming and persevering in whatever walk we are doing in our life...
What a crazy perspective on weight cutting and nutrition. Wild stuff.
Wow 2:42:25 really hit home for me. Great interview!
Have you read most of those books lex?
Travis needs to be on Joe Rogans show.
The common factor in the greatest people is that they solve the problem in hand and move forward- What a matra !
This is by far one of the best conversations about Judo and martial arts in existence.
Awesome interview! 🦍👊
Cauliflower ears, cauliflower face, this guy looks like the embodiment of the grappler.
Really like this guy
Ive done very little boxing and muay thai. I've mostly done TKD and BJJ and I couldnt disagree more. If your walking the streets and facing real danger, diffusing a situation or just trying to survive, every situation is like a puzzle that can call for a mirad of different solutions. Martial arts is about defending yourself not competition.
If im 140 pounds im not going to try to grapple a group of three 250 pounds bigger than me. It's impossible. You have a much better chance of knocking them out. My go to move was a side kick the knee which is tkd. It's not kick boxing it's just a really useful move my tkd instructor showed me. It's where my mind goes in a street ulterication. As a kid i would pull people's hoodie over their face and go to town.
In general in a closed room with just two people sports combats is going to beat traditional martial arts but that's not how life goes. The most impressive feats recorded in deadly encounters are alot of the times styles that people say dont even work. Aikijijutsu has more than a couple real life gun disarmements and they arent striking, grappling or wrestling.
Imo this is all ego because some styles have higher win percentages in mma.
So much respect for this man