Gordon Ryan
Gordon Ryan (born July 8, 1995) is an American submission grappler and Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt renowned for his dominance in no-gi competitions.[1][2]
Trained initially under Miguel Benitez and later Garry Tonon and John Danaher, Ryan was promoted to black belt in February 2016 by Tonon following his victory at the IBJJF World No-Gi Championship as a brown belt.[1]
He has won the ADCC World Championship in 2017, 2019, and 2022, along with ADCC Open Weight Superfight titles in 2022 and 2024, contributing to his status as a seven-time ADCC champion overall.[1][2]
Additional accolades include the IBJJF World No-Gi Championship in 2018 and the WNO Heavyweight Championship in 2022, underscoring his undefeated record in major competitions since 2018.[1][3]
Ryan co-founded New Wave Jiu-Jitsu following the dissolution of the Danaher Death Squad in 2021, amid personal health challenges including a diagnosis of gastroparesis in 2018 that led to a temporary retirement.[1]
Early life
Family background and upbringing
Gordon Ryan was born on July 8, 1995, in Monroe Township, New Jersey.[1][3] He grew up in the area with his parents, Trish Ryan and Gordon Ryan Sr., nicknamed "Big Gord," in a household that lacked a martial arts tradition but provided strong support for his developing interests.[4][5] Ryan's father, a vocal advocate for his sons' athletic endeavors, frequently expressed unwavering belief in their potential, including during conversations with others in the grappling community.[6] His mother, Trish Ryan, has been described in interviews as deeply involved and enthusiastic about her sons' pursuits, earning informal recognition within jiu-jitsu circles as a dedicated parental figure.[7] The family resided in New Jersey during Ryan's formative years, fostering an environment where extracurricular activities like grappling were prioritized over traditional academic or professional paths.[4] Ryan has one sibling, a younger brother named Nicky Ryan, who similarly pursued elite-level submission grappling from a young age.[4] Gordon Ryan Sr. passed away in December 2020, an event mourned widely in the Brazilian jiu-jitsu community for his role as a steadfast supporter of his children's careers.[8][9]Introduction to Brazilian jiu-jitsu
Gordon Ryan, born on July 8, 1995, in Monroe, New Jersey, began training in Brazilian jiu-jitsu at the age of 15 in 2010.[1][10] His initial exposure to the discipline occurred under the instruction of Miguel Benitez, a local coach who provided foundational grappling techniques.[1][3] This early entry into jiu-jitsu marked a pivotal shift, as Ryan immersed himself in rigorous daily sessions, training up to six days a week despite his youth and lack of prior extensive martial arts background specific to ground fighting.[11] Shortly after starting with Benitez, Ryan transitioned to the academy of Tom DeBlass, a seasoned black belt and former UFC fighter known for his no-gi expertise and systematic coaching approach.[1][12] DeBlass's guidance emphasized pressure passing, back attacks, and leg locks, elements that would later define Ryan's competitive style.[13] Under DeBlass, Ryan progressed rapidly through the belt ranks, competing as a blue belt by 2011 and demonstrating exceptional adaptability in both gi and no-gi formats.[10] This phase of training, conducted in Ocean County, New Jersey, laid the groundwork for his technical proficiency, with Ryan crediting the intensive environment for accelerating his development beyond typical adolescent practitioners.[13] Prior to formal Brazilian jiu-jitsu instruction, Ryan had limited exposure to grappling through judo and wrestling starting around age five, influenced by family members including his grandfather and father.[14] However, these activities did not constitute structured submission grappling, and his commitment to BJJ at 15 represented a dedicated pivot toward competitive no-holds-barred ground fighting. Ryan's brother, Nicholas "Nicky" Ryan, followed suit shortly after, training alongside him and fostering a familial emphasis on the sport within their household.[15] This early, family-supported immersion contrasted with many elite grapplers' paths, which often begin in childhood via Brazilian immigrant communities, highlighting Ryan's self-driven entry into the discipline.[5]Grappling career
Early competitions and black belt promotion (2014–2016)
In 2014, competing as a purple belt, Ryan achieved third place in the absolute division at the IBJJF Pan No-Gi Championship.[1] This performance highlighted his early potential in no-gi grappling, though gi competitions remained limited due to his focus on submission-oriented formats.[1] Ryan received his brown belt promotion in mid-2015, entering a dominant six-month phase that included victories in key tournaments such as the Newaza Challenge.[16] His most notable achievement came at the 2015 IBJJF World No-Gi Championships, where he won gold in the lightweight brown belt division by defeating opponents through superior control and submissions, including a final against Jacob Couch.[17][11][18] These results established him as a top brown belt contender, emphasizing his systematic pressure-passing and back-attack strategies under coach John Danaher's influence.[16] Following this run, Ryan was promoted to black belt in February 2016 by Garry Tonon, with endorsements from Ricardo Almeida and Tom DeBlass, recognizing his rapid mastery and competitive dominance after approximately five years of dedicated training starting at age 15.[17][19][11] The promotion marked a transition to elite-level no-gi events, building on his brown belt successes without reliance on gi-specific techniques.[16]Rise to prominence and initial ADCC success (2017–2019)
Gordon Ryan's ascent in elite no-gi grappling began in 2017 with his victory at the ADCC World Championships, where he secured the gold medal in the under-88 kg division on September 23, defeating Keenan Cornelius via arm-in guillotine in the semifinals and Romulo Barral 4-0 on points in the final, marking the first time an American won that weight class.[20][2] This performance, achieved less than two years after his black belt promotion, established Ryan as a top contender through systematic control and finishing ability against seasoned international competitors.[1] Throughout 2017, Ryan further demonstrated consistency by winning the Eddie Bravo Invitational (EBI) 11 and EBI 14 tournaments, both via submission victories, and claiming double gold—all by submission—at Grappling Industries events.[1] These results highlighted his proficiency in submission-only formats, building momentum from prior brown belt successes into black belt dominance. In 2018, Ryan expanded his record with double gold medals at the IBJJF Pan No-Gi Championship on September 15, defeating Max Gimenis in the open-class semifinals and Kaynan Duarte in the final, all by submission.[21] He followed this with first-place finishes in both his weight class and the absolute division at the IBJJF World No-Gi Championship, again submitting all opponents.[1] Additionally, he won Quintet 3, reinforcing his adaptability in team-based continuous grappling. Ryan's initial ADCC success peaked in 2019 at the ADCC World Championships, where he captured gold in the under-99 kg division and the absolute bracket, submitting every opponent including Pedro Marinho, Ben Hodgkinson, and others en route to the titles.[22][23] This double championship, achieved through rear-naked chokes and other finishes, solidified his reputation as the premier no-gi grappler of the era, with a tournament run emphasizing relentless pressure and technical precision.[1] He also won Kinektic 1 that year, maintaining an undefeated streak in major invitational events.[1]
Undefeated streak and multiple ADCC titles (2020–2023)
In the period from 2020 to 2023, Gordon Ryan extended his undefeated streak in professional submission grappling, which had begun following his last recorded loss in 2018, by securing victories in high-profile no-gi events amid a landscape disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic.[3] Competing primarily in invitationals and superfights organized by promotions like Who's Number One (WNO), Ryan amassed wins by submission against elite opponents, including a 30-minute submission-only victory over ADCC medalist Matheus Diniz in October 2020 and a decision win against Roberto Jimenez in February 2021.[24] These matches contributed to his overall record, with Ryan finishing the year 2020 recognized for standout submissions in FloGrappling awards.[25] Health challenges, including neck issues, led to a brief retirement announcement in May 2021, but Ryan returned later that year without suffering defeats.[1] Ryan's streak reached new milestones in 2022, highlighted by his performance at the ADCC World Championships held in Las Vegas from September 16–18, where he captured the +99 kg division title by defeating opponents via points and advantages, including a semifinal win over Jacob Couch and a final against Victor Hugo.[26] In the event's superfight, Ryan submitted nine-time ADCC champion André Galvão via rear-naked choke after 8:22, earning the Open Weight Superfight World Title and marking the first instance of an athlete winning ADCC gold across three distinct weight categories (previously 88 kg in 2017 and -99 kg/Absolute in 2019).[1] This double gold solidified his status as a dominant force, with Ryan submitting six of eight opponents across the tournament.[27] Concurrently, he claimed the WNO Heavyweight Championship in 2022 through a series of submission victories.[1] Entering 2023, Ryan maintained his undefeated run despite limited appearances due to recovery and preparation, defending the WNO Heavyweight title on October 1 against Patrick Gaudio via armbar at 14:42 in a 15-minute match.[28] By this point, his streak encompassed over 50 consecutive wins in professional matches, characterized by a high submission rate—82% of career victories at the time—primarily via rear-naked chokes, heel hooks, and armbars.[29] These achievements underscored Ryan's systematic control-oriented style, prioritizing positional dominance and leg attacks while avoiding concessions in rulesets favoring aggression.[3]Recent competitions and challenges (2024–2025)
In 2024, Gordon Ryan returned to competition at Who's Number One (WNO) 24 on June 20, defeating Josh Saunders to claim the event championship.[30][31] Later that year, at the ADCC World Championships in Las Vegas from August 17–18, Ryan competed in superfights rather than the main brackets, securing victories in both: a 2–0 points decision over Felipe Pena on August 17 and a dominant 21–0 points win against Yuri Simoes on August 18.[32][33][34] These ADCC superfight triumphs extended Ryan's undefeated streak in major no-gi events, though he later described the preparation as exhausting due to ongoing health issues, including a battle with Helicobacter pylori infection that had plagued him for years.[35][36] In post-event reflections, Ryan rated his performance against Pena as subpar compared to his peak form, attributing it to physical tolls from training and recovery.[37] Through 2025, as of October, Ryan has not competed in any verified tournaments or superfights, marking nearly a year of inactivity since ADCC 2024.[38] He opted out of the Craig Jones Invitational 2 in April, with his New Wave team confirming his absence amid a roster of other champions.[39] Health challenges persisted, prompting coach John Danaher to state in April that Ryan might never return to competition, citing the cumulative strain on his body.[40] Ryan himself hinted at potential retirement in late 2024, expressing hope that fans enjoyed his era while acknowledging the mental and physical fatigue of elite preparation.[41] Rivals like Craig Jones echoed this in July 2025, doubting a comeback given the lack of scheduled matches and Ryan's recovery focus.[38]Training affiliations and team dynamics
Danaher Death Squad and early influences
Gordon Ryan's affiliation with the Danaher Death Squad (DDS) began as a purple belt when, influenced by Garry Tonon, he started regularly traveling from New Jersey to train under John Danaher at the Renzo Gracie Academy in New York.[1] [42] Tonon, an early mentor whom Ryan met during white belt training under Tom DeBlass, played a pivotal role in exposing him to Danaher's coaching and the no-gi submission grappling environment.[1] This integration into DDS provided Ryan with access to a rigorous, elite training group focused on systematic no-gi techniques, marking a shift from his initial regional training to a professional-level developmental hub.[43] The DDS, led by Danaher—a New Zealand-born coach with a philosophy rooted in analytical problem-solving and Japanese-inspired self-sufficiency—emerged as a specialized team within the Renzo Gracie Academy, emphasizing control-based positions, leg entanglements, and high-percentage submissions over traditional gi grappling.[44] [43] Danaher's system encouraged athletes to internalize and teach concepts independently, fostering depth in areas like guard passing and back attacks, which differentiated DDS from broader BJJ academies.[44] Ryan trained alongside top partners including Tonon, Eddie Cummings, and later Craig Jones, creating a competitive ecosystem that honed his skills through daily positional sparring and conceptual drilling.[43] Under Danaher's influence, Ryan transitioned from a primarily athletic, grit-driven competitor to one employing a logical, interconnected framework for no-gi dominance, crediting the coach with revolutionizing his understanding of grappling efficiency.[43] This early DDS period culminated in Ryan's black belt promotion by Tonon in February 2016, with Danaher's direct oversight, setting the foundation for his subsequent competition breakthroughs such as the 2015 No-Gi World Championship and Newaza Challenge victories.[1] [42] The squad's emphasis on empirical refinement over rote techniques provided Ryan's core influences, enabling precise execution in high-stakes matches.[44]Formation of New Wave and B-Team split
In July 2021, John Danaher announced the dissolution of the Danaher Death Squad (DDS), a prominent no-gi grappling training group he had led, citing the need for members to pursue independent paths amid evolving personal and professional circumstances.[45] The split was precipitated by factors including the group's relocation to Puerto Rico in 2020 due to COVID-19 restrictions in New York, the death of Gordon Ryan's father, and growing internal frictions over training intensity, egos, and lifestyle differences, with some members favoring a more relaxed approach compared to the rigorous discipline emphasized by Danaher and Gordon Ryan.[46] Following the announcement on July 25, 2021, Gordon Ryan, alongside Danaher and Garry Tonon, established New Wave Jiu Jitsu in Austin, Texas, as a continuation of their systematic, fundamentals-focused training methodology, relocating from Puerto Rico to prioritize a dedicated environment for high-level competition preparation.[3] This formation positioned New Wave as a core group of elite grapplers committed to Danaher's instructional framework, with Ryan serving as the flagship athlete and leader in practical application.[1] Concurrently, Craig Jones, Nicky Ryan, Nick Rodriguez, and other DDS members formed B-Team Jiu Jitsu, initially based in Puerto Rico, adopting a more irreverent, scrappy ethos that contrasted with New Wave's structured intensity, while retaining elements of Danaher's earlier teachings before his departure.[47] The divergence created an immediate rivalry between the two teams, as they emerged as the leading no-gi entities, competing in events like the UFC Fight Pass Invitational and later inter-team matchups, with underlying tensions from the split influencing public narratives and athlete alignments.[46]Technique and training philosophy
Core influences and systematic approach
Ryan's grappling development was profoundly shaped by his long-term coach, John Danaher, under whose guidance he adopted a rigorous, analytical framework emphasizing conceptual depth over rote repetition.[48] Danaher, a New Zealand-born philosopher and grappling instructor, instilled in Ryan a method of dissecting techniques through first-principles analysis, focusing on leverage, positioning, and sequential problem-solving rather than isolated moves.[49] This partnership began in Ryan's early teens at the Renzo Gracie Academy in New York, where Danaher's instruction transformed Ryan's intuitive style into a structured system, evidenced by Ryan's rapid progression from blue belt in 2012 to black belt in 2016.[49] Central to Ryan's systematic approach is a hierarchical game plan that prioritizes positional dominance and control to facilitate submissions, de-emphasizing explosive athleticism in favor of methodical pressure and off-balancing.[50] He breaks grappling into interconnected phases—entry, maintenance, and finish—training each with high-repetition positional sparring to build efficiency, applying principles like Pareto's 80/20 rule to focus on high-percentage techniques that yield disproportionate results.[51] This philosophy manifests in Ryan's preference for back-attacks and leg locks from dominant positions, where sustained control (e.g., via shoulder crunches or ashi garami entries) exhausts opponents before capitalizing on openings.[52] Ryan complements technical systematization with mental conditioning, viewing grappling as a cognitive endeavor requiring resilience and strategic foresight, often crediting Danaher's emphasis on defensive mastery—such as improving back escapes from near-zero to 80% efficacy in a single session—as foundational to his undefeated streaks.[53] This integrated method, honed through daily multi-hour sessions, has produced a style reliant on precision and adaptability, allowing Ryan to dominate larger or more athletic foes through superior mechanics rather than raw power.[54]Signature submissions and strategies
Ryan's signature submissions center on the rear-naked choke (RNC), which constitutes 32% of his recorded 82 submission victories across competitions, often executed from dominant back control with precise hip and shoulder pressure to prevent escapes.[1] He complements this with arm locks chained from the back, forming a systematic attack framework that prioritizes completion over partial threats.[55] Inside heel hooks rank as his second-most frequent finish at 12%, typically entered from ashi garami entanglements, where he leverages entries from top positions or transitions to isolate and torque the heel.[1] [43] His strategies emphasize methodical pressure passing to establish top dominance, utilizing body weight distribution and grip control to dismantle guards without relying on speed, as demonstrated in ADCC matches where he methodically advances to mount or the back.[43] Ryan integrates leg lock threats defensively, converting opponent entries into back takes via counters from positions like irimi ashi or 50/50, creating interconnected "trilemmas" that force reactive errors.[56] [57] This approach extends to wrestling-based takedowns, such as tight-waist rides, to bypass guard pulling and directly access finishing positions.[58] Overall, Ryan's philosophy prioritizes positional control and high-percentage chains over athletic explosiveness, viewing grappling as a problem-solving science where intentional angles suffocate opponents' options, a method refined under coach John Danaher's influence.[43] In competition, this manifests in finishes like reverse triangles (9% of submissions) or outside heel hooks (7%), but always within structured systems that link defense, passing, and attacks seamlessly.[1]Business ventures and media presence
New Wave Jiu-Jitsu academy
New Wave Jiu-Jitsu was established in 2021 by Gordon Ryan alongside John Danaher and Garry Tonon in Austin, Texas, as a dedicated training facility and team following the breakup of the Danaher Death Squad.[3] The academy focused on high-level no-gi submission grappling, attracting elite competitors through Danaher's instructional methodology, which emphasized positional control, systematic entries, and pressure-based offense.[59] Initially operating without a permanent public-facing location, it functioned primarily as a private hub for Ryan's training partners and select athletes, producing multiple podium finishes in major tournaments.[60] In January 2025, Ryan announced the opening of a dedicated New Wave Jiu-Jitsu headquarters later that year, featuring advanced facilities designed to support full-time grapplers with on-site coaching, recovery amenities, and expanded class offerings open to the public.[61] This development marked a shift toward institutionalizing the team as a commercial academy, with Ryan positioned to lead instruction alongside guest appearances from Danaher. The initiative aimed to scale New Wave's influence beyond private sessions, potentially hosting seminars and competitive camps to monetize its reputation for dominance in events like ADCC.[60] By April 2025, the academy rebranded to Kingsway Jiu-Jitsu upon securing its physical space, reflecting an evolution in structure while retaining core personnel and training ethos.[62] Ryan assumed primary leadership responsibilities around this period after Danaher reduced his hands-on teaching role, enabling Ryan to direct curriculum and business operations directly.[63] The rebranded entity continued to prioritize competitive success, with Ryan's involvement ensuring alignment between academy programming and his proven strategies in high-stakes matches.Online coaching and content creation
Gordon Ryan maintains a YouTube channel under the handle @Gordonlovesjiujitsu, launched in May 2024, featuring videos on his training regimen, technique breakdowns, and personal recovery from health issues.[64] The channel includes content such as shorts on specific grappling mechanics, like knee levers and inside camping passes, alongside full seminars and Q&A sessions exceeding one hour. These videos provide insights into his daily life and competitive preparation, with uploads continuing into 2025, including demonstrations of leg riding and guard escapes.[65][66] Ryan produces paid instructional video series through BJJ Fanatics, covering advanced no-gi techniques such as guard passing systems, leg attacks, and half-guard dominance, with titles released as early as 2022.[67] By July 2022, multiple volumes were available for purchase, including comprehensive sets on systematically attacking the legs and rolling to mount, often promoted via promotional clips on YouTube.[68][69] His instructionals emphasize systematic approaches derived from competition experience, with user discussions highlighting their depth in areas like loose passing and creating passing dilemmas.[70] In August 2025, Ryan announced daily private online coaching services, which elicited criticism within grappling communities regarding accessibility and promotional tactics.[71] On Instagram, under @gordonlovesjiujitsu, he shares technique analyses and promotes his content as the "world's best Jiu Jitsu instructionals," alongside affiliations with ventures like Kingsway HQ.[72] This platform complements his video output, focusing on entrepreneurial aspects of grappling education.[73]Controversies and public disputes
Performance-enhancing drug use and admissions
Gordon Ryan has admitted to initiating the use of anabolic steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) around 2016, shortly after early competitive successes in lighter weight classes such as his victory at the Eddie Bravo Invitational (EBI) 11 in 2017 at 170 pounds, to support bulking into heavier divisions, accelerate recovery from intense training, and amplify strength gains.[74][75] He justifies this decision primarily on the grounds that PEDs were effectively legal in Brazilian jiu-jitsu at the outset of his use, as major organizations like ADCC conducted no systematic drug testing, rendering them a permissible tool for competitive edge rather than cheating.[75] Ryan notes that the International Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Federation (IBJJF) only introduced testing protocols after his 2018 World Championship win, positioning his pre-testing achievements as untainted by formal prohibitions.[75] Ryan explicitly acknowledges the severe health risks of prolonged steroid use, including potential cardiovascular damage and shortened lifespan, yet maintains he would willingly forfeit "20 years off of my life" to secure an unparalleled legacy in the sport, valuing peak performance and dominance over extended natural longevity.[75][74] In broader defenses, Ryan contends that PEDs unequivocally elevate athletic output, asserting that "the best athletes are the ones on PEDs" due to benefits in recovery, injury resilience, and career extension, while decrying fragmented testing regimes as favoring affluent athletes capable of micro-dosing or evasion tactics over emerging talents.[76] He advocates for uniform policies across grappling bodies—either blanket legalization or rigorous, equitable enforcement—to eliminate hypocrisy and ensure fair play.[76] These admissions have fueled ongoing scrutiny within the jiu-jitsu community, particularly as stricter anti-doping standards emerge in events like potential UFC-sanctioned competitions, where Ryan's history renders him ineligible despite his dominance in untested formats.[77] No titles have been revoked, but discussions persist on retrospective application of World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) statutes, which allow investigations up to 10 years post-event for self-admitted violations.[78]Feud with Craig Jones and team breakup
In late 2022, following the dissolution of the Danaher Death Squad (DDS), Gordon Ryan aligned with coach John Danaher to establish New Wave Jiu-Jitsu, while Craig Jones co-founded the independent B-Team collective with athletes including Nicky Rodriguez and Nick Albini. This divergence marked the onset of competitive and personal tensions between Ryan and Jones, former training partners who had collaborated under Danaher's system. Their rivalry manifested in high-profile matches, such as Ryan's heel hook submission victory over Jones at the 2022 ADCC World Championships, but escalated into public acrimony over event organization, judging, and team dynamics.[79] The feud reached a peak during the Craig Jones Invitational (CJI) events, particularly CJI 2 held on August 30-31, 2025, where B-Team defeated New Wave in the team competition via a tiebreaker to claim a $1 million prize. Ryan publicly accused the event of corruption, alleging mid-tournament rule changes—such as adjustments to scoring criteria—were implemented to favor B-Team and guarantee their victory, citing specific instances like Giancarlo Bodoni's controversial "Brazilian tap" decision on Day 1 as evidence of bias against New Wave athletes. He further claimed contractual violations and demanded the payout be withheld, prompting organizers to rescind the $1 million award amid the dispute. Jones dismissed Ryan's criticisms as repetitive complaints, responding that team splits and rebuilds are commonplace in jiu-jitsu, and emphasized his focus on innovation over personal attacks.[80][81][82] Compounding the rift, Jones announced on August 25, 2025, his departure from B-Team, citing internal "bad blood" and a reluctance to serve as the group's figurehead without full commitment to its expansion, though he clarified his intent was never to prioritize B-Team over individual pursuits. Ryan reacted sharply to Jones's earlier July 2025 statements about retiring post-CJI 2 and dissolving B-Team, launching a social media tirade labeling Jones's efforts as failures and mocking the invitational's viability. Jones countered by questioning Ryan's coherence, stating, "I don’t even know what he means half the time," and highlighting his own achievements in event creation despite the personal barbs. These exchanges underscored deeper grievances over credit for DDS innovations, competitive legitimacy, and diverging visions for professional grappling, with no formal reconciliation reported as of October 2025.[83][84][85]Statements on social issues and racism accusations
In June 2020, amid Black Lives Matter protests following George Floyd's death, Gordon Ryan posted on Instagram criticizing the movement, denying the existence of systemic racism in the United States, promoting conspiracy theories about ANTIFA involvement in riots, and supporting then-President Donald Trump's deployment of military forces to quell unrest.[86] He also shared a parody video titled "Star Wars: Rogue WUHAN" mocking COVID-19 origins, which was later deleted after backlash.[86] Ryan responded to an online claim that "people of color shouldn’t have to work as hard as white people" by asserting that success stems from individual effort regardless of race, stating that he achieved his accomplishments through relentless hard work applied equally to all.[86][87] These statements prompted accusations of racism and xenophobia from MMA media outlets, including Bloody Elbow, which described Ryan's views as aligned with far-right ideologies and called for his professional isolation.[87] FloSports, a grappling content platform employing Ryan for podcasts, issued a statement on June 3, 2020, affirming support for BLM while distancing itself from his comments, though it did not terminate his involvement.[88] Efforts to ban Ryan from the International Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Federation (IBJJF) and other events failed, as did calls for BJJ Fanatics to drop him; the company rejected the demands, stating it was "not here to be the morality police."[86] Critics, including some in the BJJ community, highlighted Ryan's broader social media patterns, such as disparaging homeless individuals as lazy rather than victims of circumstance, as evidence of insensitivity, though these were not framed as explicitly racial by primary accusers.[89] On October 10, 2024, during a public feud with former teammate Craig Jones over the dissolution of their training group, Jones countersued with allegations of gym abuse by Ryan, including physical mistreatment of members, and implied Ryan's racism through sarcasm, joking that Ryan would attend a "White Party" under the mistaken belief it was a Ku Klux Klan gathering.[90][91] Jones tied this to broader insults but provided no specific evidence of racial incidents in the gym, framing it amid mutual recriminations that included Ryan accusing Jones of betrayal and opportunism.[90] Ryan addressed the 2020 accusations in detail on the Jake Shields podcast in October 2024, dismissing them as cancel culture attempts by "Democrats who have historically been the most racist people," and reiterating that his philosophy centers on universal hard work: "Racism? I just believe in hard work."[86] He emphasized treating training partners equally based on merit and effort, not identity, and vowed to speak freely regardless of backlash: "I’ll say whatever the f*** I want."[86] Ryan has not publicly responded to Jones' specific racial jab, though the feud has escalated into wider disputes over professional legitimacy and personal conduct.[90] His career in competitive grappling has remained unaffected, with no formal sanctions from major organizations.[86]Personal life
Health and lifestyle
Gordon Ryan maintains an intensely rigorous training regimen centered on submission grappling, typically consisting of two daily Brazilian jiu-jitsu sessions supplemented by strength and conditioning workouts.[92] His schedule often totals three grappling or conditioning sessions per day, emphasizing high-intensity drills, positional sparring, and weight training three times weekly to build functional strength without excessive bulking.[93] This approach prioritizes recovery through structured rest periods, though Ryan has described the cumulative physical toll as demanding near-constant dedication to training and preparation.[94] Ryan's nutrition strategy supports his athletic demands with a high-calorie intake focused on lean proteins, complex carbohydrates, and vegetables, calibrated for muscle maintenance and performance. Collaborating with nutritionist Stan Efferding, his diet incorporates items such as sourdough toast with strawberry jam for breakfast, Bibigo rice bowls, salmon, eggs, white rice, and potatoes, while limiting processed sugars and emphasizing portion control to avoid fat gain during heavy training phases.[95] On competition days, he abstains from solid food, consuming only water to optimize weight management and focus.[96] This regimen facilitated a notable physical transformation, increasing muscle mass while preserving grappling mobility.[97] Ryan has encountered persistent health challenges, including recurrent staph infections treated with prolonged antibiotic courses, which he has stated caused greater systemic damage than other factors in his career.[98] These issues manifested in symptoms like labored breathing, skin irritation, stomach pain, cystitis, brain fog, and memory lapses, prompting a reduced competition schedule in 2024 limited to the ADCC World Championships.[99] Additionally, he suffered a grade 3 LCL tear in his knee prior to ADCC 2019, necessitating surgery, though he viewed it as less debilitating than prior injuries.[100] Despite these setbacks, Ryan's lifestyle remains oriented toward athletic optimization, with periodic absences from competition for recovery.[101]Views on success, work ethic, and meritocracy
Gordon Ryan attributes success in submission grappling primarily to a mindset of extreme ownership and accountability, where individuals fully accept responsibility for both victories and defeats to drive continuous improvement. He contrasts this with a loser's mentality, marked by fear of failure and avoidance of experimentation, asserting that true winners embrace risks and learn from setbacks to outperform competitors.[102] Central to Ryan's philosophy on work ethic is the primacy of mental labor over physical training, which he describes as the most challenging aspect of elite preparation in Brazilian jiu-jitsu. This involves deliberate focus, strategic analysis, and psychological resilience, enabling practitioners to refine techniques systematically and adapt under pressure. He highlights how such dedication, exemplified by his coach John Danaher's lifelong commitment, separates top performers from others who falter due to inconsistent effort.[103][104] Ryan views meritocracy as inherent to jiu-jitsu, where outcomes depend exclusively on skill acquisition and sustained dedication, nullifying advantages from wealth, social status, or fame. Intelligent individuals gravitate to the discipline, he argues, precisely because it rewards objective competence without external crutches, fostering environments where only proven ability determines hierarchy. To achieve preeminence, he advises diverging from herd thinking, immersing in elite circles, and prioritizing skill mastery over short-term wins in training.[105][106][107]Championships and accomplishments
[Championships and accomplishments - no content]Competition records
Submission grappling results
Gordon Ryan holds a professional submission grappling record of 157 wins and 9 losses as of August 2024, with 130 victories by submission.[1][29] His dominance is evident in major no-gi events, where he has secured multiple world titles, often finishing opponents via heel hooks, rear-naked chokes, and other joint locks. In the ADCC World Championships, Ryan has achieved first-place finishes in the -88 kg division in 2017 and in the absolute division in 2019 and 2022.[1][108] During the 2019 event in Los Angeles, he submitted opponents including Lachlan Giles in the absolute final via guillotine choke. In 2022 in Las Vegas, he defeated Nick Rodriguez by decision in the semifinals and submitted André Galvão with a rear-naked choke in the absolute final. Additionally, Ryan won ADCC superfights against Galvão in 2022 and against Felipe Pena and Yuri Simões in 2024, contributing to his status as a seven-time ADCC champion across divisions and superfights.[109][110] Ryan captured the Eddie Bravo Invitational (EBI) championship four times between 2016 and 2017, defeating high-profile competitors like Yuri Simões in overtime submission rounds.[12] He also holds the Who's Number One (WNO) heavyweight title since 2022, remaining undefeated in WNO events with submission wins over athletes such as Patrick Downey.[1]| Event | Year | Placement | Notable Finishes |
|---|---|---|---|
| ADCC World Championships (-88 kg) | 2017 | 1st | Multiple submissions in bracket |
| ADCC World Championships (Absolute) | 2019 | 1st | Guillotine vs. Giles (final)[108] |
| ADCC World Championships (Absolute) | 2022 | 1st | RNC vs. Galvão (final); decision vs. Rodriguez (semifinal) |
| ADCC Superfight | 2022 | Win | Submission vs. Galvão |
| ADCC Superfight | 2024 | Win | vs. Pena; 21-0 points vs. Simões[110] |
| EBI Championship | 2016–2017 (x4) | 1st | Overtime submissions, incl. vs. Simões |
| WNO Heavyweight | 2022–present | Champion | Undefeated, multiple title defenses by submission[1] |