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BJJ Fanatics Instructionals

ADCC Teams Report By The Numbers

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Nicholas Meregali Instructionals

There were many battles at play in the ADCC World Championship this weekend, and one of those was the return of team rivalry in jiu-jitsu, a subject that has been somewhat dormant in our sport over the past few years.

Much of this attrition between grappling’s top teams has been down to social media interaction between a few of the top players in each camp, but it had also plenty to do with the different training approaches at play in no-gi’s most important tournament. Be that the submission oriented focus by the Renzo Gracie Academy and 10th Planet, the more passing/wrestling heavy approach seen in the Atos Jiu-Jitsu camp or the more traditional outlook of the Alliance Academy.

When assessing head-to-head clashes, we have to look into the numbers of athletes. It is worth noticing that all teams did not start off from a neutral line since some had bigger numbers of representatives. The caveat here is that whenever there was more than 1 team member on a weight class, the promotors forced a team-mate vs team-mate clash either in round 1 or round 2. With that said, below are the numbers of athletes.

MOST REPRESENTED TEAMS

10 Athletes: Alliance – 5 Invited
9 Athletes: Atos – 7 Invited
7 Athletes: Renzo Gracie Academy* – 3 Invited
7 Athletes: Gracie Barra – 6 Invited
7 Athletes: Checkmat – 4 Invited
5 Fight Sports** – 4 Invited
5/4 Athletes: Absolute MMA – 3 Invited
4 Athletes: 10th Planet – All Invited
4 Lloyd Irvin Team – 3 Invited

* We included Craig Jones on the Renzo Gracie Academy representatives given how much time the Australian spends with John Danaher’s crew. Jones is traditionally an Absolute MMA competitor.

** We included Patrick Gaudio to the Fight Sports team on account of his extended training camp with the Florida based team.

RATES OF SUCCESS

A quick assessment of each team’s win-loss account shows Atos and Renzo Gracie’s Academy leading the pack, closely followed by Alliance. These teams truly dominated the tournament, taking 14 medals out of the 24 that were available. More on that below, but first the total wins/losses record.

As aforementioned, these teams also dominated the podium with a few exceptions, one of those coming from the remarkable performance of Lachlan Giles, the leader of the Australian team, Absolute MMA who placed in the open-weight division, being the very first member of AMMA to earn his place on the ADCC podium. We could just as easily say Absolute MMA medalled two athletes, considering how much Craig Jones works with the team, either way, this was a wonderful year for the Australian workgroup.

Also making its debut on the podium stands was the 10th Planet Academy, who saw the spectacular performances of Elvira Karpponen rewarded with a bronze medal, the first of the well-known team.

Below are the team podium stands.

Atos
Gold Medal(s) – 3
Bronze Medal – 2

Alliance
Gold Medal(s) – 2
Silver Medal(s) – 2

RGA
Gold Medal(s) -2
Silver Medal(s) – 2 (1)
Bronze Medal -1

Checkmat
Silver Medal -1
Bronze Medal -1

Unity
Bronze Medal – 1

Soul Fighters
Gold Medal – 1

FightSports
Silver Medal -1

Absolute MMA
Silver Medal -(1)
Bronze Medal -1

10 Planet
Bronze Medal -1

ECBJJ
Silver Medal -1

G13
Silver Medal -1

HEAD-TO-HEAD CLASHES

When assessing head-to-head matches, we looked into the top three teams, Atos, Renzo Gracie Academy, and Alliance, which were well balanced, with a slight edge to Alliance.

It is important to note that none of these matches went to a decision, all clear wins for either, with one submission win for Team Renzo Gracie – Gordon Ryan vs Vinicius Trator and Alliance’s Kennedy Maciel who submitted Tye Ruotolo.

SUBMISSION RACE

When it came down to submission hunting, one team did come out with a substantial advantage, namely the Renzo Gracie Academy which more than doubled the submissions of the runner-up in this submission race. In fact, RGA had more submissions than the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th ranked teams combined.

During the event, there were also complaints regarding a possible judge’s bias towards one team, the most vocal of these critiques coming from Fight Sports team leader Roberto Abreu. This did not appear to be the case as all top-ranked teams showed a decent balance of wins by decision. If there was a case to be made, however, that would be for team Checkmat, who did have a few tough losses in very close matches, though none that appeared to display blatant signs of favoritism to either team, in our opinion.

So there you have it, the ADCC Teams report, a very balanced playing field where the world’s top camps went “neck and neck” to the finish line. It is interesting to unveil how so many different coaching styles and approaches to the game can clash with no clear-cut winner in the most wide-ranging ruleset in grappling, which is the ADCC.

5050 Guard Instructional by Lachlan Giles

3 Comments

  • Simon says:

    I understand Craig has trained a lot out of RGA over the past months but did Craig not list his gym as Absolute MMA?

    According to your list Absolute MMA didn’t get a submission win? Pretty sure Lachlan’s heel hooks looked like Submissions to me.

    • BJJ Heroes says:

      Hi Simon, we didn’t rate Absolute MMA on the Submission/Decision board dude to the low numbers of wins (3) on account of Craig being ranked under the RGA. This is not a stab on Absolute MMA, they did a fantastic job.

    • Michael says:

      Simon you’re absolutely right, there’s no doubt about it Craig Jones should have been listed as part of the Absolute MMA team. Good call.

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