Women Abandon Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Tournament After Being Forced To Fight Males - Tranny Janny Sweeps Up BJJ Tourney

Female martial artists have come forward to reveal that male athletes claiming to be transgender have completely overtaken the women’s categories of a major grappling association, leaving them fearing for their safety in many instances. One of the men, Corissa Griffith, took home four gold medals in the women’s category during a tournament in Georgia on October 21.

The North American Grappling Association (NAGA) is the largest submission grappling association in the world, and facilitates standards and tournaments in various martial arts, including Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. But while NAGA has provided competition categories for males and females since its inception in 1995, it has recently become the subject of controversy after a number of female athletes were found to have been matched up against trans-identified males.

The issue first received widespread attention in September after it was learned that a female Brazilian jiu-jitsu athlete had not been informed she would be competing against a male. Taelor Moore posted a clip of her fight against James “Alice” McPike on her Instagram, noting that there was a 65lbs weight difference between them.

THE NORTH AMERICAN GRAPPLING ASSOCIATION HAS REVISED THEIR GENDER IDENTITY POLICY AFTER A 135LBS FEMALE JIU-JITSU ATHLETE WAS MATCHED TO COMPETE AGAINST A 200LBS TRANS-IDENTIFIED MALE.

JAMES "ALICE" MCPIKE TOOK HOME SILVER IN THE WOMEN'S CATEGORY.HTTPS://T.CO/NEHNZXR6IT
— REDUXX (@ReduxxMag) September 15, 2023

Following the clip going viral, NAGA was prompted to issue a statement clarifying its policies on the inclusion of trans-identified males in the women’s category.

“NAGA does not require biological women to compete against transgender women. Instead, we give the choice to the biological women and if they decline, they compete in a division only with other biological women.”

NAGA also provided a link to their official policy, which reads: “For those who chose not to compete with the transgender female, we will inquire if they have an interest in entering a separate division which includes the transgender female. This additional division will be offered at no cost to those competitors. However, if individuals decline this opportunity, the transgender female will be directed to compete with the males in their respective weight and skill level category.”

But despite claiming to have had a policy in place that required female athletes to be informed, many are coming forward to reveal that NAGA has continued to pair women against trans-identified males without their knowledge and depriving them of the opportunity to opt out in many instances.

Speaking to Reduxx, professional martial artists Jayden Alexander and Ansleigh Wilk said that they were made to fight against a male with no prior warning from NAGA until stepping onto the mat.

“I honestly never thought this would actually happen in a contact sport, especially not MY contact sport,” Alexander, who is a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu blue belt, said. “When I saw him, I was so shocked I didn’t know how to respond.”

Both Alexander and Wilk fought against Cordelia Gregory of Temporal Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Academy, who is one of many trans-identified males currently participating in NAGA women’s tournaments. Both women describe that they were not informed they would be competing against a male until the it was too late during their July tournaments.

“I hadn’t been notified. The only thing that brought it to my attention was my teammates. They kept asking me ‘are you fighting a man’ and I was honestly too focused on coaching the rest of the crew to really pay attention to my opponent,” Wilk said.

“I realized very quickly I couldn’t muscle them like most girls,” Wilk, who is a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu brown belt and coach, added. “Well obviously, because it wasn’t a girl! Then not long after, I had to do a second match of which Cordelia threw a tantrum saying [he] ‘didn’t tap [out].’ I was sincerely scared [he] was going to punch me when I stuck my hand out to shake [his].”

“The fact of the matter is that he had a man’s strength. I train with men and women and the difference is massive,” Alexander explains. “After my match with Cordelia, I sat mat-side and cried as my teammates massaged out my cramping forearms.”

But despite NAGA’s claims that its policy was to inform female athletes if their competitor was a biological man, watchdogs have noted that no enforcement of the policy appears to be taking place, even since their September announcement.

“A rule is only effective if a federation will follow it and, most importantly, enforce it,” says Marshi Smith, the co-founder of Independent Council on Women’s Sports (ICONS). She noted that on October 21, a female grappler was “blindsided” into fighting not one, but two trans-identified males during a tournament.

Danielle Lenane, one of the only females involved in the competition, was made to fight Cordelia Gregory and Corissa Griffith, the latter representing Odyssey Jiu-Jitsu. Following the fight, Lenane asked for her record to be wiped clean of any indication she had fought either one of the men.

Smith said that during the October 21 tournament, there were more males participating than women in some of the women’s divisions.

In the Women’s No-Gi fight for the 160-169lbs weight class, only Griffith and Gregory participated and took home medals. On his Instagram, Griffith joked about the match, posting a scene from a Japanese “softcore” pornography series and suggesting the two women depicted represented him and Gregory.

Jayden Alexander says that she and other females were set to compete in the October 21 tournament, but dropped out after seeing how many males were involved.

“There was not just one, but two trans-identified males who were signed up in a bracket that me and several other women should have been able to sign up for but couldn’t because we didn’t want to go against the men,” Alexander explains. “And for a man to be able to come in and sign up in the women’s bracket and discourage us from even being able to compete at all is absolutely heartbreaking and honestly scary.”

Ansleigh Wilk affirmed Alexander’s sentiment, and added that most female participants feel unable to vocally protest the gender self-identification policies.

“The majority of the women feel scared to even speak out about this matter. They don’t want to be labeled a bigot or transphobic,” Wilk said. “There’s so many girls just not signing up now because they are allowing this. Women’s sports will cease to exist if this keeps up. Medals, belts, records, and money are going to be stripped right away from women.”

Marshi Smith similarly notes that women have been self-excluding from the competitions, but that attempts to formally lodge complaints about being paired up against males have fallen on deaf ears.

“I have now spoken to four women who have all fought male fighters in the combat sport of Jiu Jitsu. They are extremely upset. They are self-excluding. They are emailing federation leadership and being dismissed. These organizations and teams that are encouraging this dangerous display of violence against women need to be publicly shamed into doing what is right for women or reap the outrage that comes with cowardice.”


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All the BJJ people I’ve encountered skew right. Unlikely that these specific women were handmaidens cheering on troons until now.
They would've banded together and handed the guy in drag his ass already if that were the case.
When my local tranny tried to violate gym rules and go into the women's shower rooms, he was promptly removed and got a severe beating by several members not keen on seeing their girlfriends/sisters get accosted by a faggot. He might've been permanently crippled if he didn't start begging for his life a bloody pulp, but was ultimately let go with a promise of more to come if he ever returned or gave the business owners any problems. He never came back.

It seems putting the fear of God into people works better than pandering to them and feeding into their delusions, hoping that placating them will make them less of a deviant. Who'd a thunk?
 

Women Abandon Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Tournament After Being Forced To Fight Males​

I'm not going to make many friends with my take here, but I believe these women deserve to go down a belt chip, if not a whole rank for this.

First and foremost: You do not choose whom attacks you on the street; why should you be able to choose whom attacks you at a tournament? Handle it as it comes.
Second: My judo teacher was one Christine P. -- she is a globally-tiered medalist. She called me up to demonstrate a move. I outweighed her by...I wanna say about 80 pounds at the time. I have light grappling experience. She tied me in a goddamned pretzel, put me facedown, and laid on my back and had me try to escape. Again, 80 pounds and natural muscle (former pro-ish DDR player) did not allow me to beat this hold.

Put on the gi, put on the belt, and do your best. That's all anyone ever expects out of you. "Forced to"? No, take it as an experience. And what if you beat them?
 
I'm not going to make many friends with my take here, but I believe these women deserve to go down a belt chip, if not a whole rank for this.

First and foremost: You do not choose whom attacks you on the street; why should you be able to choose whom attacks you at a tournament? Handle it as it comes.
Second: My judo teacher was one Christine P. -- she is a globally-tiered medalist. She called me up to demonstrate a move. I outweighed her by...I wanna say about 80 pounds at the time. I have light grappling experience. She tied me in a goddamned pretzel, put me facedown, and laid on my back and had me try to escape. Again, 80 pounds and natural muscle (former pro-ish DDR player) did not allow me to beat this hold.

Put on the gi, put on the belt, and do your best. That's all anyone ever expects out of you. "Forced to"? No, take it as an experience. And what if you beat them?
Imagine if Marcelo garcias cried about the weight difference when he faced Rico Rodriguez and won.

You're competing in the absolute weight class, just deal with it.
 
There is zero chance the dude with bolt ons was not holding back. The take down (or whatever it is called) at the end especially was 100% utter WWE fakery. He could have easily stood up and carried her off cave man style. 135 lb. man is not beating a 200 lb. man 99% of the time, any more than a 60 year old is beating a 22 year old. A 200 lb. man fighting a 135 lb. woman? Bullshit. I don't care if it even is this homoerotic Brazilian hug-fu.
 
I'm not going to make many friends with my take here, but I believe these women deserve to go down a belt chip, if not a whole rank for this.

First and foremost: You do not choose whom attacks you on the street; why should you be able to choose whom attacks you at a tournament? Handle it as it comes.
Second: My judo teacher was one Christine P. -- she is a globally-tiered medalist. She called me up to demonstrate a move. I outweighed her by...I wanna say about 80 pounds at the time. I have light grappling experience. She tied me in a goddamned pretzel, put me facedown, and laid on my back and had me try to escape. Again, 80 pounds and natural muscle (former pro-ish DDR player) did not allow me to beat this hold.

Put on the gi, put on the belt, and do your best. That's all anyone ever expects out of you. "Forced to"? No, take it as an experience. And what if you beat them?
Imagine if Marcelo garcias cried about the weight difference when he faced Rico Rodriguez and won.

You're competing in the absolute weight class, just deal with it.

The tranny is fem brained lol. Going for a scarf hold and head and arm throw like a female mma fighter would do.

edit: also the tranny rolled like I would roll with a woman if it was my first day of bjj.
Not trying to be a brute and going easy on her. The tranny is obviously way worse and inexperienced
 
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There is zero chance the dude with bolt ons was not holding back. The take down (or whatever it is called) at the end especially was 100% utter WWE fakery. He could have easily stood up and carried her off cave man style. 135 lb. man is not beating a 200 lb. man 99% of the time, any more than a 60 year old is beating a 22 year old. A 200 lb. man fighting a 135 lb. woman? Bullshit. I don't care if it even is this homoerotic Brazilian hug-fu.
I agree that it looks like he's holding back, but it also looks like that when people just aren't very well trained.

There was a brief moment where he was on his knees where he could stand up, but not after that. Because being able to lift x weight isn't the same as trying to lift x weight when all the balance is on your head, because that's what the opponent is holding on to. That's fine if you're standing up straight, but if you're horizontally flattened out it doesn't work for standing up.

He's not holding back, he's quite bad. She's reasonably skilled and going at it like a competitor.
 
Look, I’m a complete white belt and the gym I go to has multiple people who are monstrous competitors. I get completely destroyed all the time, but even then I have to use as little strength and weight as possible when I roll with the women, even the purple belts, because no matter how you slice it a two hundred pound man can just musclefuck his way through a lot of things. And in fairness, I also train Judo so I have some decent tools above untrained people. The women are high level, their technique is magnificent, they’re quick as fuck, and they are strong women, but I have over fifty pounds on them.
The reason people like to compete in BJJ is because it’s so heavy on technique, you pit your game against someone else’s and show that your technique and grasp of the art exceeds your opponent’s. If some massive guy rolls up and just dominates off power alone, that’s not the point of the sport. Strength is very important, duh, but that’s why we have categories in the first place.
It’s not patronizing to “save” women from troons beating their asses, it’s understanding that we have rules for a reason and being a proper sportsman. If you’re a big guy and just throw more muscle at the wall until you get something, that’s not the point of the sport and you’ll get destroyed by someone who’s better than you real quick. You can’t just circumvent the harsh reality of grappling by being a troon, and I’m glad to see more protest against this nonsense.
 
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I'm not going to make many friends with my take here, but I believe these women deserve to go down a belt chip, if not a whole rank for this.

First and foremost: You do not choose whom attacks you on the street; why should you be able to choose whom attacks you at a tournament? Handle it as it comes.
Second: My judo teacher was one Christine P. -- she is a globally-tiered medalist. She called me up to demonstrate a move. I outweighed her by...I wanna say about 80 pounds at the time. I have light grappling experience. She tied me in a goddamned pretzel, put me facedown, and laid on my back and had me try to escape. Again, 80 pounds and natural muscle (former pro-ish DDR player) did not allow me to beat this hold.

Put on the gi, put on the belt, and do your best. That's all anyone ever expects out of you. "Forced to"? No, take it as an experience. And what if you beat them?
I'd make a bet that the majority, if not all, of the women that quit did out of disgust of having to fight (and grapple) a perverted penis-haver, and not out of fear of having to fight a stronger opponent.
 
I've just been waiting for the real life recreation for 2002's comedy film Juwanna Man.
That already happened. In 2013, Robert John Ludwig, a 6 feet 8, 220 pounds, 50 year old man, joined a women's basketball team at some community college, after trooning out in his 40s. Of course, there were tons of glowing articles about him including in USA Today and on ESPN.com and he was on Real Sports

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