You Do Not Need Permission To Belong In Combat Sports
Impossible d'ajouter des articles
Échec de l’élimination de la liste d'envies.
Impossible de suivre le podcast
Impossible de ne plus suivre le podcast
-
Lu par :
-
De :
À propos de ce contenu audio
The fastest way to understand where women’s jiu-jitsu is headed is to listen to someone living it. We sit down with Adriana Gutovska, a rising competitor and coach, to talk about the real world of Brazilian jiu-jitsu for women: how you get started, what makes a gym feel safe, and what it takes to keep showing up when the sport is still heavily male dominated.
We get practical fast. Adriana shares why the quality of a first academy can make or break a woman’s experience, how to spot unhealthy gym culture, and why athletes speaking up protects the next generation. From there we dig into how women’s grappling can look different on the mat, with technique and flexibility often taking priority when most training rounds are against stronger partners. She also explains gi vs no-gi jiu-jitsu in clear terms and why she prefers no-gi’s faster pace.
Then we go where combat sports get uncomfortable but necessary: fairness. Adriana breaks down ADCC qualification and prize money differences, why extra trials mean extra injury risk, and how equal weight classes, equal pay, and equal competitive opportunities would help the entire sport grow. We also talk training volume, small injuries that stack up, smart rest, weight cuts, and the mindset shift that turns “failure” into fuel.
If you care about women in combat sports, BJJ training, athlete safety, or the future of jiu-jitsu competition, this conversation is for you. Subscribe for more, share this with a training partner, and leave a review, what’s one change you want to see in women’s jiu-jitsu next?
This Podcast is your Podcast, text us if you're an Athlete with a story to share...
The only podcast that is all about Athletes Supporting Athletes!
Support the show
To see more pictures, footage and out takes, bloopers and more follow us @PlanB.By Coach B on Instagram and or contact Coach B directly at www.coachbperformance.com to be part of the show.
*Athletes must be 18 years or older or in the company of their legal guardian to participate in the show. Participants can remain anonymous with no visual footage for marketing and names can be changed to protect identity.