The last article tracked the parallel growth of Jujitsu in Japan and Catch Wrestling in Europe as inventions of necessity when faced with armored opponents. This article will focus on the emergence of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and it's entry into the fighting sport of Vale Tudo in Brazil.
The Japanese art of Jujitsu was outlawed in the late 1800s by Japan's own Emperor in effort to become more modern. The art was saved was Jigoro Kano, a true martial arts legend, who streamlined the overly complicated and disjointed art into Judo and also created the concept of awarding students black belts. He founded his own school and began teaching. One of Kano's star pupils was a man named Mitsuyo Maeda, who would go on to be pivotal in the founding of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu.
This video provides a nice summary of Maeda's background; personal views on martial arts and his role in the founding of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu:
MITSUYO MAEDA: The Origin of BJJ (via AvantGuardBrand)
Maeda's fights in Europe took place in Catch Wrestling matches, and Maeda trained in the art. He was drawn to catch by its focus on combat instead of forms. Maeda mixed what he learned with his own Judo and he passed on those combined techniques to his students including the young Carlos Gracie.
We'll follow Maeda's story to Brazil and meet the Gracies after the jump.

When Carlos was 22-years-old he decided that jiu jitsu had given his life direction and purpose and that he wanted to make a living out of teaching jiu jitsu. Carlos, now a black belt, opened the first Gracie owned jiu jitsu academy in 1925 in Rio.
Carlos' first students were his younger brothers Oswaldo, Gastao, George and Helio Gracie. Helio was 11 years younger than Carlos and was sickly as a child, given to fainting spells and was relegated to watching Carlos giving lessons most of the time.

(Carlos and Helio Gracie sparring via ftwbrazilianjiujitsu.com)
Carlos would give Helio lessons, but Helio's frail body had trouble executing some of the movements. Helio had to rely more on the leverage and timing of the technique than the speed or strength. Together the five brothers, through trial and error, developed the foundation of what they would call Gracie Jiu Jitsu, but would become known to the world as Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. With their own style developing, the Gracies looked to raise awareness of their martial art and they knew perfect venue to display the effectiveness of their style.
In the early 20th Century a side show event at Brazilian carnivals and festivals was gaining popularity. Known as "Vale Tudo" or "No Rules", these were combat contests that pitted two men against each other in a ring or open space for the entertainment of on-lookers.
These Vale Tudo matches are direct ancestors to modern Mixed Martial Arts matches and many in Brazil still refer MMA as Vale Tudo. These matches were not a sport as MMA is today; there were no promotions, weight classes or championships, and fighters represented their styles and their schools more so than just themselves.
One thing that is important to understand about these fights is that Vale Tudo did not develop in a nice clean progression that can be traced back to one original match. The growth was much more organic out of existing catch or professional wrestling matches until it developed into something that strongly resembled modern MMA.
Carlos Gracie issued what is now known as "The Gracie Challenge" in a newspaper, an open invitation to a Vale Tudo style match with a Gracie with a cash prize for the winner. Carlos and his brothers accepted many, many challenges over the next forty years. Boxers, professional wrestlers, Capoeira fighters, and generic tough men were common opponents. As the years wore on Carlos slowly receded form the leadership of the family and Helio stepped forward to bear the Gracie standard.
Helio sought out the biggest fights on the biggest stage he could find. While Helio had become much healthier through his training, he was still a very small man with very little physical strength and he sought to demonstrate the superiority of his skills by challenging much larger opponents. Helio's matches were most often under catch wrestling rules, meaning grappling only, though there are times we know that wasn't the case.
In 1934, Helio fought the much larger professional wrestler Wladek Zbyszko to a draw. In that same year Helio faced Japanese professional wrestler Taro Miyake, who had defeated a great Japanese Jujitsu champion, and submitted him. In 1951, Helio choked out Yukio Kato, widely considered the second best Judoka in the world in just under six minutes.
But it was Helio's 1951 match with Mashaiko Kimura that earned him everlasting fame. Kimura was a living legend and is considered one of the best Judokas of all time. He had boasted that if the smaller and older Helio last three minutes with him, that Kumira would declare the Brazilian the winner. In the 13th minute of the match, Kimura secured a reverse ude garami shoulder lock and when Helio refused to tap, Kimura broke his arm. Carlos Gracie stepped in and forfeited the match on behalf of Helio, but Kimura left extremely impressed with Helio. The Brazilians claimed the moral victory and firmly established the Gracie name in Brazilian combat sports legends.
(Helio Gracie vs Kimura via joseeugeniodias)
Kimura invited Gracie to come teach at his Academy in Japan. Helio politely refused the invitation, but the Gracies renamed the reverse ude garami lock "the Kimura" in honor of the Judoka's victory.
While matches with Judokas and Gracie Jiu Jitsu fighters did become a common occurrence there was mutual respect between the two related arts. But in the 1940s a true challenger to Jiu Jitsu would rise in Brazil and spark a heated rivalry of schools and style that still continues in modern MMA.
In 1940, a man named Euclydes "Tatu" Hatem defeated George Gracie in a Vale Tudo match. Not only did Tatu defeat George Gracie, he submitted him with the Kimura lock. Tatu was a catch wrestler, the grappling tradition from Europe, and he paired that wrestling with Judo techniques in the mirror image of what Mitsuyo Maeda did in adding catch wrestling to his Judo base.
Tatu called his style of grappling Luta Livre, meaning free fighting and began teaching this style. He and his students scoffed at the use of the gi and focused exclusively on no-gi grappling. They also made extensive use of leglocks, which Judo and Gracie Jiu Jitsu both shunned.
Gausto and Carlos Brunocilla, two of Tatu's students, would go own to produce several Luta Livre experts of their own that would spread the martial art not only across Brazil but also to Germany. Luta Livre took another step forward when a University Professor of Engineering named Roberto Leiato began practicing the art.
Leiato was experienced in both wrestling and Judo and brought a technician's eye to Luta Livre. Leitao believed that gaining leverage was important but that it was a mistake to see strength as a sin instead of an asset in grappling. Luta Livre fighters are more than willing to use leverage but are not shy about using overwhelming strength.
Leitao once captured the differences between Luta Livre and BJJ quite nicely in an interview with Fight! Magazine:
"Gracie was stubborn," Leitao said, referring to Helio Gracie. "He believed that leverage was enough, but he was wrong."
Luta Livre fighters brought more urgent aggression to matches. Helio Gracie often employed a slow, grinding style using his closed guard to wear down opponents in wars of attrition. Luta fighters attacked relentlessly, looking for submissions from all positions and keeping a high work rate.
(Luta Livre -- No Gi Brazilian Submission Wrestling and Vale Tudo via andycondaxxl)
These fundamental difference would spawn an intense rivalry that would span from that 1940 defeat of George Gracie to the modern day. Brazilian Jiu Jitsu vs. Luta Livre would be played out at Vale Tudo matches both in the ring and in the stands and on the streets and beaches of Rio.
For More on Mitsuyo Maeda, the Origins of BJJ, Catch Wrestling and Vale Tudo:
History of Jiu Jitsu: Judo Travels the World and Maeda Meets Gracie
History of Jiu Jitsu: Baptism By Fire and Luta Livre
History of Jiu Jitsu: Non-Gracie Jiu Jitsu
Book Review: Catch Wrestling Round Two by Mark Hewitt
Happy Belated Birthday Helio Gracie
MMA History: The Ur-Brazilian MMA Feud: BJJ vs Luta Livre and the Style They Never Saw Coming
MMA History: The Losses of Luta Livre
MMA Origins:
12 recs | 25 comments
amazing as usual, rec'd, blah blah blah
gspmademegay - January 1, 2012
haha thanks for the read
and the rec, blah blah blah
T.P. Grant - January 1, 2012
great stuff
Kid Nate - January 1, 2012
thanks Nate
T.P. Grant - January 1, 2012
wow
i dont login often, but this was great, thank you.
ruckus - January 1, 2012
thank you
T.P. Grant - January 1, 2012
articles like that are the reason why I come to this site
feiwongfu - January 1, 2012
that’s exactly what i was gonna say
tanakz - January 1, 2012
Great, great write-up
Personally, one of the more interesting/fun reads for me since coming to the site.
Job well done
cubsin2010 - January 1, 2012
one thing T.P. and I have discussed at length
and don’t have a good answer to is when did the early catch wrestling rules bouts (many of the Gracie brothers early bouts we def under catch or other grappling only rule sets) first begin to be true Vale Tudo bouts with striking?
Kid Nate - January 1, 2012
Might be around the time the TV contract ended and the younger guys were starting to come to the forefront.
Ben Thapa - January 1, 2012
Awesome work T.P.
Really interesting stuff.
Patrick Wyman - January 1, 2012
thank you
T.P. Grant - January 1, 2012
It's worth pointing out Zbyszko was 43 to Helio's 21 years of age
And Zbyszko hadn’t been competitively active for over a decade when they fought to a draw.
Also BJJ’s traditional shunning of leglocks was down to Helio Gracie’s arrogance. The Gracies weren’t the only Brazilians to be taught by Maeda, and Luis Fracca was one of them. Fracca taught Maeda’s Jiu Jitsu in suburbs where people were poorer.
Gracie supposedly got snobby over this, and challenged Fracca’s students with his. The result? Fracca’s students leg and footlocked the Gracie students because they were right there and vulnerable in the guard, because Helio’s game was guard centric as were his students.
With a hurt ego, Helio Gracie tells the lie that leglocks are ‘suburban techniques’; in other words ‘low class’ and probably helped develop the culture of an audience booing leglocks at a BJJ tournament and throwing shoes at the culprit in disgust.
Its only in the last 15 years BJJ guys have been really incorporating them into their games from learning what they can from Catch and Sambo.
KJ Gould - January 1, 2012
Based on the newspaper reports it seems as if Wladek controlled the match
with Hélio on the defensive the whole time. It’s worth noting as well that that Wladek had been recently dominated by Fred Grubmier so he was no longer one of the premier pro wrestlers (but I’m sure he was still pretty good). Also think the mat may have had extra cushioning so Wladek couldn’t slam him, will have to check on that.
John Nash - January 1, 2012
Wladek was deffinitely war torn by that point.
It would have been interesting to see if Stanislaus Zbyszko would have beat Gracie, being a bit older than his brother.
I think a guy like John Pesek would have destroyed Helio, but he would have been in Australia at the time I think.
KJ Gould - January 1, 2012
Stan would have been over 50
and Wladek was always supposed to be the better catch wrestler so I think the outcome would be the same.
Pesek vs Hélio is always one of the great dream fights (how about Maeda vs Olson as the other). I too think Pesek beats him up, especially if it’s truly no holds barred. Clarence Eklund also would have had a good shot at Hélio. Other than those two I don’t give many wrestlers a chance. The era of the true shooters was fading, they no longer kept their skills razor sharp.
John Nash - January 1, 2012
There was a newspaper piece
Or something like that, suggesting one of the Luta Livre fighters in the 1960’s was terrified of a potential match with Karl Gotch and so turned it down. I have no idea where this article is, but I’m pretty sure it’s origin is Brazil and it was in Portuguese.
KJ Gould - January 1, 2012
thank you for bringing this up! first I’m linking to my History piece where I talk about Luis and Fadda in the further reading.
And yes Helio had big problems with dealing with defeat, giving credit to others and really just ego in general. The other Gracies reacted to the defeats by Fadda’s students with more grace than Helio.
T.P. Grant - January 1, 2012
Yeah, I may have got the stories of Franca and Fadda mixed up
As well as not being able to spell Franca, obviously :\
KJ Gould - January 1, 2012
In one of nottheface’s pieces, he talks about a boxer who was a Maeda student as well. Can’t remember the name off the hop of my head, but there were more than just Franca and Gracie as Maeda students.
Ben Thapa - January 1, 2012
yes there were
but Gracie and Franca were the only two to really grow their own lineage trees
T.P. Grant - January 1, 2012
Thank you, the whole series is fantastic.
uwcb - January 1, 2012
thank you
T.P. Grant - January 1, 2012
Great article T.P.
Keep em’ coming!
jack knight starman - January 1, 2012 via mobile
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