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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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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[Gabrielle Ludwig says the biggest advantage she has this season isn't her height or her strength, but her conditioning. Courtesy Gabrielle Ludwig]

:lit:What a farce
 
Just lose some weight, you fat fuck.

Crying about a weight difference when competing in a openweight tournament is pathetic.
Men have more physical advantages than just weight. I can see why they wouldn't want to fight males when they weren't expecting to. Weight differences are one thing but they thought it was still other women. You really sound like a feminist who believes a male and female of the same weight as functionally identical.
 
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.
that's not very gender euphoria of you
 
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 had looked into BJJ for self-defense, and what I've found out is that it's not a great option; if your opponent in a self-defense scenario has you on the ground, you've already lost.
 
From what I have read, it's not good for self-defense; if you're on the ground, you've already lost.
yeah especially if you are facing multiple attackers. going on the ground to try and put one guy in a choke hold is really dumb when he has his buddy right there who will stomp on your head.

but even if it's just one guy, a lot of jiujitsu stuff works on the assumption that the other guy is also doing jiujitsu and playing by jiujitsu rules. but in a real fight that's not the case, and there are a lot of things you can do that are illegal in jiujitsu rules but devastating in a fight. bite, try and break a finger, push your finger in his eye socket, use fist or elbow strikes, or of course pull out some weapon.
having jiujitsu training is definitely a lot better than having no fighting experience at all, but it's not going to auto win a street fight for you
 
yeah especially if you are facing multiple attackers. going on the ground to try and put one guy in a choke hold is really dumb when he has his buddy right there who will stomp on your head.

but even if it's just one guy, a lot of jiujitsu stuff works on the assumption that the other guy is also doing jiujitsu and playing by jiujitsu rules. but in a real fight that's not the case, and there are a lot of things you can do that are illegal in jiujitsu rules but devastating in a fight. bite, try and break a finger, push your finger in his eye socket, use fist or elbow strikes, or of course pull out some weapon.
having jiujitsu training is definitely a lot better than having no fighting experience at all, but it's not going to auto win a street fight for you
Yup. There is only one true self-defense method
May my ancestors forgive me for passing on this forbidden, invaluable knowledge
 
I had looked into BJJ for self-defense, and what I've found out is that it's not a great option; if your opponent in a self-defense scenario has you on the ground, you've already lost.
It depends on who has the friends with him. When you're on the ground together, the person with more friends willing to stomp on the other's head is the one that wins.

BJJ is one of the styles that gives the best techniques and experience for escaping from being held down by someone. And it's one of the styles that gives the best tools for restraining someone with minimal harm. But it's not good against groups, dynamic dangerous situations, weapons. The only styles that gives you a chance against groups are striking styles. And against weapons you're mostly fucked anyways, though it's better to have some training than no training.
 
"I had no idea that leopards would eat MY face!" says woman with a "Leopard Lives Matter!" T-shirt and the "Leopard Rights are Human Rights!" sign in her front yard.

She then went on to vote Yes of Prop-12782, which allows Leopards to enter your house and eat your face if they want.

It's kind of funny, because a lot of guys who served in co-ed units all knew "That Chick" who was convinced she could beat any dude in the ring or in the circle or thought because a dude wasn't willing to give her a full force punch to the face that she so richly deserved she was a tough bitch.

Every time they finally had to put their money where their mouths were, they lost and lost bad, or, if it was a punch up, hid behind "You're hitting a woman!" once they got smacked back.

I can't see how any BJJ Tournament would be any different than the time the 5' 4" guy got sick of this big dyke bitch picking on him, picked her up, carried her over to the dumpster, and threw her in before slamming the lid.
 
but even if it's just one guy, a lot of jiujitsu stuff works on the assumption that the other guy is also doing jiujitsu and playing by jiujitsu rules. but in a real fight that's not the case, and there are a lot of things you can do that are illegal in jiujitsu rules but devastating in a fight. bite, try and break a finger, push your finger in his eye socket, use fist or elbow strikes, or of course pull out some weapon.
having jiujitsu training is definitely a lot better than having no fighting experience at all, but it's not going to auto win a street fight for you
It really does depend on the situation, and honestly for most people Judo is very useful overall but BJJ also has upsides and downsides. It also depends on the school, my teacher for example has a lot of fights and bouncing under his belt, and he is very good at explaining the differences between BJJ for BJJ vs BJJ for a violent altercation. Many of the people there also train in striking, so it ties in well overall. He also has serious wrestling chops, so it's a very well rounded and "rough and tumble" style that consistently wins local and state competitions. But, competition is different from violence.
If you do want some unarmed defense skills, in my opinion Judo would be my personal Plan A if only because a heavy throw from standing can end a fight right there and it's really good to know what to do if someone is grabbing at you. And as a bigger guy, I can throw hard. But BJJ excels at one area Judo has underdeveloped due to the focus of each art. Judo is all about the takedowns, sometimes horribly powerful ones, the ground game is secondary but still useful. BJJ is all about grappling for the purpose of breaking joints and strangling, and the level of ground game is far above a lot of people's base skill level. You learn how to escape from bad positions or even attack, and that's just great to know how to do in general.
And as for the common "never let a streetfight go to the ground", I agree but trust me you are not always the person making that decision. Me and a guy in my Muay Thai class were sparring, and just for fun we were doing more of a MMA type thing where we would just keep going if it went to the ground. This dude is a freaky kickboxer, but once I got him down it was over quick because he doesn't grapple much. Would that work on the street? Depends on the situation, but at least that's an option available to me if I need it.
In short, learn what it's like to fight if only so you understand what the dangers are before you're caught in them.
 
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It’s not patronizing to “save” women from troons beating their asses

It actually is. Women are supposed to be able to do anything on their own, without men's help. And not just physically, but also socially and economically. So if they don't like men invading their sport let them do the organizing, campaigning, funding, suing, whatever, to make it all stop. I mean, they did a pretty good job abolishing men's spaces. So if they want their own space back, it's on them to get it back. Why should men lift a finger to save them?
 
Why should men lift a finger to save them?
Why would you want to when its expected of you while they keep up their strong/independent act? Really, it's amazing how so many terfs don't see how they dug their own grave on this. They denied the sexes being different when it suited them but are saying they are when it comes to this. You don't get to pick and choose equality. It's the entire line of thinking that got us here in the first place. And it's not going to change until that goes away.
 
It actually is. Women are supposed to be able to do anything on their own, without men's help. And not just physically, but also socially and economically. So if they don't like men invading their sport let them do the organizing, campaigning, funding, suing, whatever, to make it all stop. I mean, they did a pretty good job abolishing men's spaces. So if they want their own space back, it's on them to get it back. Why should men lift a finger to save them?
To me, the young ones. Many men have daughters or sisters, and want the best for them. This generation is starting to now be autonomous in the world they were born into, and that was a world they had no say in creating. And as time goes on, the number of those women will only grow. It's my personal belief that you shouldn't hold people who had no say in the matter at fault for it. And for Christians, of whom there are still many devout ones, Ezekiel 18 is very clear on the matter. Verse 10-20 is specifically about the whole "sins of the father" type deal. Bible thumping aside, many men have great reasons for wanting to help women.
I can't think of many fathers who would be happy seeing their daughter, who trained hard for a sport they're passionate about getting mauled by a grown man. Add to that that troons are creepy perverts who get aroused by being creepy perverts, that's going to generate a response. And in a purely sports context, we have weight classes and ban gear for similar reasons. An athlete on juice has an often massive advantage over the natural ones, where the assumption is the baseline of all athletes is an unaltered human. Men have an often even greater advantage than dopers, because we've been drenched in those steroids since the womb.
And also don't forget, the young generation of men who had no say in this current world are also not to blame. These men are also standing up for the women they love for the aforementioned reasons. All these people want a better world, and that does require effort but many deem it worth doing. And as people grow up into this world, it's in their best long term interest to make it nicer to live in if only for themselves.
 
Men have more physical advantages than just weight. I can see why they wouldn't want to fight males when they weren't expecting to. Weight differences are one thing but they thought it was still other women. You really sound like a feminist who believes a male and female of the same weight as functionally identical.
Trannies always compete in freak divisions when it comes to weight class.
They compete at absolute, welterweight,lightweight or featherweight.
Weightclasses that basically do not exist with very few competitors. A normal fit woman should compete between 115 and 135.

Beside the size , those trannies are garbage. If the podium was only trannies it would be one thing. But those troons are just incredibly mediocre.
Yet they whinne like they are dominating.
 
Trannies always compete in freak divisions when it comes to weight class.
They compete at absolute, welterweight,lightweight or featherweight.
Weightclasses that basically do not exist with very few competitors. A normal fit woman should compete between 115 and 135.

Beside the size , those trannies are garbage. If the podium was only trannies it would be one thing. But those troons are just incredibly mediocre.
Yet they whinne like they are dominating.
Good points, I don't know that much about women's weight divisions. Wouldn't it depend on her height though? There's a definitely a point where it's just fat. Apparently a 5'11 woman can still be healthy at 135:
For this height, a weight range of 132.6–178.5 lb is a normal BMI.
 


The uber ultra strong tranny that won gold 4 times won gold by winning a single or 2 match in a row.


The tranny even win silver by losing once.

That should give you an idea of how shallow and mediocre welterweight and absolute are in general.
 
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