
Man on a mission: A Matt Thornton profile
Matt Thornton has spent the last decade bringing the message
of Alive training to the martial arts world. Recently his travels
took him to Reykjavik, Iceland.
MMA.IS caught up with him, attended his seminar and (barely)lived
to tell the tale.
Riding the bus on my way to the seminar it started to hit home.
This was it. My first class under a legitimate Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu
black belt. Wow. I was about to meet a guy that had actually rolled
with the legendary Rickson Gracie! Then I started to get a little
nervous. Due to my chronic inability to remember that the bus
schedule is diffrent on the weekends I was an hour late. Visions
of push-ups and squats as punishment for my tardiness flashed
through my head. Surely someone that had boxed since childhood,
served in an elite U.S military unit, trained with UFC champion
Randy Couture and routinely taught police officers how to defend
themselves must be the ultimate disciplinarian badass?
Well,no to the first one, and a yes to the second.
Upon entering the Aikido dojo where the seminar took place the
smell of sweat hit me. I´ve been in there dozens of time
and the only thing you usually smell are crisply washed uniforms.
It´was obvious that a diffrent class was in session today.
Twenty odd people were paired up rolling around on the ground.
Sitting by the window surveying the scene was Matt, looking at
this latest batch of students, roughly half of whom were wearing
the uniforms of the World Jiu-Jitsu Federation, a "traditional"
organization that belongs to a section of the martial arts world
that he has been quite critical of. After quickly securing an
interview after the seminar I rushed to the locker room to change
into my Gi.
The first thing that hit me after I joined the class was how
soft-spoken Matt Thornton is. His voice has an extremely relaxed
quality that, although distinctly american lacks the annoying
accent that sometimes makes yanks hard to listen to for long periods
of time.
Whether explaing the finer points of groundfighting, his views
on realism in martial arts or telling stories from his own gym
in Oregon he grabs your attention and doesn´t let go. You
quickly realize that he is that most precious commodity: a natural
teacher. It probably wouldn´t matter whether he had gotten
into astrology, woodworking or 12th century history, he´d
be able to explain his craft to newcomers effortlessly.
The second thing you notice is how freaking tall he is. Standing
6 feet 9 inches, he towers over most everybody, and he moves in
the slowly graceful, deliberate way common to those people forced
to spend their youth bumping into things in a world that just
isn´t designed with them in mind.
Matt Thornton´s martial arts base is boxing, which he has
trained pretty much from childhood. After he left the U.S Army
he became interested in martial arts, and began his teaching career
within the Jeet Kune Do Concepts organization, who claims to follow
the legacy of innovator and martial arts legen Bruce Lee. The
mission statement of JKD Concepts was(and still is) to incorporate
techniques from all martial arts into a cohesive whole, and although
the system is rooted in the tradition of Chinese Kung-Fu has grown
to include a multitude of diffrent methodologies and approaches.
Matt became a certified instructor and taught at a JKD school
for several years. Then he met Rickson Gracie.
"At the time Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu was virtually unknown in
the US, and only a few people were talking about this new brand
of groundfighting" Matt explains. Keep in mind that this
was before Rickson´s brother Royce cleaned house in the
Ultimate Fighting Championships, winning eleven no-rules fights
against much bigger opponents and grabbing three championship
titles, a feat only recently surpassed by Matt´s old training
partner and Oregon native, Greco-Roman wrestler Randy Couture.
"I went to a seminar held by Rickson and watched him line
up a roomfull of black belts in various styles and submit them
on the ground using only his legs". That experience caused
Matt to look at JKD in a diffrent light. What made Rickson so
dominant, so fluid and able to apply his techniques without hesitation
on a resisting opponent while they struggled ineffectually, unable
to pull of any of their moves? After attending some BJJ classes
the question was easily answered.
"Sparring is the key to success. If you don´t spar
you will never be able to apply your techniques against a resisting
opponent".
Seems self-evident? Not to most traditional-minded martial arts
schools. Most operate on the theory that the best way to be able
to apply a self-defense technique against an attacker is to drill
the sequence of event either alone or with a training partner
that may resist a little, but not much for fear of injury. This
is known as Kata or Forms.
If done over and over and over again this is supposed to make
the response automatic when faced with a life-threatening situation.
In Matt´s opinion this is the core fallacy of most martial
arts.
"Human beings don´t learn that way, it runs contrary
to how our minds and bodies operate. If we play tennis for example,
and we want to improve our backhand we don´t go into our
garage and do 500 backhands, just swinging the racket at thin
air. If we did our backhand would suck just as much, and would
probably be worse than before, because the body cannot stand repetitive
motions. If we go out and put in the hours on the court, or at
least use a machine to fire balls at us we improve, and improve
quickly".
In Matt´s book, hands-on experience counts for anything.
"If we tried to learn everything in our life the way most
martial arts schools teach, we wouldn´t be able to walk,
let alone drive. But believe it or not this is the rule rather
than the exception in martial arts. It´s ridiculous."
A bold statement indeed, and looking around at my fellow students
I could see that some of them were not pleased. But no-one said
anything. I don´t know whether it was the ingrained respect
for the instructor, or the permanent "no-bullshit zone"
that seems to follow Matt around wherever he goes, but not one
of the people who had spent their entire life as martial artists
doing pretty much nothing but kata voiced one objection.
Matt´s training is based on what he calls the I-method.
Every move, whether it´s a sweep, a guardpass a submission
or something else is taught using three stages; Introduction,
Isolation and Integration. During the introduction stage, Matt
shows the class the move step by step, and haves them pair up
and do the move on their partner without any resistance. Once
everyone has it nailed down he moves to the isolation stage where
the opponent resist the move, lightly at first but gradually piling
on the pressure. Then comes the integration stage where, although
starting from a position that makes the move possible, the opponent
may resist fully and launch his own sweeps and submission attacks.
Much emphasis is on using your partner as a training tool. The
partners need to gauge their resistance to a level where they
are neither too compliant or too tough to crack. I found my game
improving almost by the hour on the first day of the seminar.
There is no doubt that this method works.
All the while Matt walks around the room, observing, and when
he sees someone make a mistake and end up submitted or in a precarious
position, he doesn´t rush over and correct the mistakes
but asks the unfortunate one "Why did this happen? Why was
he able to do that?" This forces the student to think for
himself, a concept that seems to be dear to Matt Thornton.
Matt began training with Rickson and earned his blue belt in BJJ
under his tutelage. But when he wanted to incorporate it into
the curruculum at the JKD academy he ran into a brick wall of
resistance.
"Everyone told me that it didn´t work in real life,
just on the mat, that nobody wanted to train that way, that nobody
wanted to sweat, that it was just a sport and not a real martial
art". Not satisfied, and becoming more and more disillusioned
with the JKD curriculum Matt decided to open his own place, despite
the naysayers.
"Everyone thought it wouldn´t work, that I´d
never get enough students that wanted to train this way to make
a living. But I couldn´t teach something that I knew didn´t
work".
Fully expecting to have to work a full-time job for the rest
of his life to make ends meet, Matt took the plunge. Ten years
later his Straight Blast Gym has expanded from it´s headquarters
in Oregon to include branches in all areas of the United States,
England, Ireland, Denmark and South Africa, along with a multitude
of affiliated training groups in four diffrent continents. Matt´s
training methods have found fertile ground in the modern era of
mixed martial arts, but he is quick to stress that Straight Blast
isn´t just a breeding ground for cage fighters.
"We were doing mixed martial arts before mixed martial arts
existed, so that it was a natural evolution for the guys that
wanted to compete to go and do that, but the Alive concept of
training which is unversally adopted by all sports, by all athletic
disciplines I emphasize because that´s the only thing that
works and the only way to train that´s healthy. Once somebody
is exposed to training this way they can´t go back provided
their intent is performance. They may not neccesarily stay with
Straight Blast but they will always train in an Alive fashion".
But what is Aliveness? For sure sparring is a key element, but
there is more to it than that. Several golden rules govern the
actions of all SBG locations, including an "open mat"
policiy that forces all coaches to spar with whoever walks through
the door in front of their students, and a "freedom of learning"
that encourages students to go to other schools, train diffrent
disciplines and figure out their own techniques. Another aspect
of Aliveness is that no one is more critical of the curriculum
than the instructors themselves, and techniques that are superseded
by other more effective ones are ruthlessly weeded out. In ten
years the SBG curriculum has undergone several transformations,
ensuring maximum effectiveness.
SBG is also a very democratic organization, and every student
from the most experienced instructor to the humble beginner is
encouraged to add their own opinions, techniques and experience
to the organization. "No hierarchy" is one maxim that
is enforced to ensure this. There are no bowing rituals, no uniforms,
and no titles at Straight Blast. If you want to wear a diffrent-color
Gi no-one has a problem with it. Students address their instructors
by their first name or or nickname. In short, respect is not given
to an authority figure, but earned on the mat, the hard way.
"I think it´s a very elitist attitude that unless
you are 22 and competing that you shouldn´t be doing this,
that you shouldn´t be training this way. At our gym everyone
is welcome. Why shouldn´t a 53 year old woman that wants
to do Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu do it, if she enjoys it as much, if
not more as the young guys that are out there competing".
"What we do at SBG is in my opinion is fairly unique. Most
MMA gyms are for young jocks that are looking to compete. I don´t
know of any organization where this type of training is available
for everyone. People may claim that but then when you walk into
their gyms it´s all 20-something athletes. Add to that that
many BJJ instructors teach in a very traditional manner. You learn
a few techniques and then you roll, there´s really no athletic
drilling in-between."
"Also there´s an underlying theme that all the coaches
have that I have not seen anywhere else."
What is that theme? One thing all the SBG senior instructors
have in common is an exploring mind, always seeking to improve
and add new material to their arsenal, and a dedication to giving
the best possible curriculum to their students. Most of them have
background in other combat sports, such as boxing, Muay Thai and
wrestling, in addition to a strong base in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
Talk to Matt for a while and his love for BJJ shines through.
He definently knows his boxing, but there´s just this diffrent
kind of look in his eyes when he talks grappling, a slightly fan-boy
like enthusiasm that speaks the unspoken message “isn´t
this the coolest thing ever!?” At the seminar he related
a story from his days as a bouncer, where he was forced to defend
himself against a crazed drug abuser in a nightclub parking lot.
“I was doing a lot of Muay Thai at the time and I hit him
hard several times with knees and punches right in the face but
he just wouldn´t go down. In the end he ran away and when
I opened my fist I realized that I had ripped his ear off. He
hadn´t even noticed it. I found out later that he had been
on heavy drugs non-stop for days at that point,”
“If I had been training Jiu-Jitsu and at any point in the
fight I could have taken his back I would have been able to end
it with a chokehold. Because when you block the arteries that
provide the brain with blood I don´t care what your bench
press is, how crazy you are or how much crack you smoked that
day you will be unconcious in a matter of seconds. It´s
the quickest, cleanest way to end a confrontation there is.”
Although, or perhaps because of,Matt Thornton has been in “violent”
professions all his life he is an amazingly gentle person, so
laid-back that he´s practically horizontal.. When I caught
up with him Monday night after the seminar to record this interview
he was dog-tired from a combination of jet-lag, teaching and the
obligatory tour of Iceland´s finest tourist attractions
and bars courtesy of seminar holder Bjadni. Most everyone would
have blown off the interview in favour of sleep, but not Matt.
When the tape recorder clicks off we keep chatting about a multitude
of things. I´m more than a little surprised when he claims
not to be all that crazy about MMA.
“It´s the 21st century now and still we find enjoyment
in watching two men hit each other in the head. Of course it´s
barbaric in a sense. Boxing DOES cause brain damage, and so does
MMA, if not as much. That we still live in a world where grown
men beating each other up is considered entertainment is something
that we should really think about.” Of course, I like watching
it too, - which makes me a total hypocrite.” A wry little
smile follows that last comment.
Somewhat rattled I ask him if he thinks that this will ever change?
After a long pause he replies:
“Yes. I think that in the next hundred years human soceiety
will undergo a transformation to the point that it will no longer
be socially acceptable to strike another human being. It´s
a world I´d like to live in but wont. Hopefully my children
will live to see it”.
“In the end competition doesn´t matter to anyone
but the competitors. Who was wrestling champion in the fourth
Greek Olympics? Who was middleweight boxing champion in 1934?
It all fades from the public memory in the end. It only matters
to the two guys in the ring, They are the ones that feel the urge
to get in there. When an ex-champion comes out of retirement to
fight one more time and loses badly everyone gives him grief and
tells him he shouldn´t have done it, but he did exactly
what he needed to do. For himself.
And that´s really the core of the SBG philosophy. You are
not training for your teacher, for the gym, the audience or the
honor of your “style”. You do what you do for yourself,
to know yourself better.
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