• About
  • Gi Help
  • Jiu-Jitsu Events
    • Past Events
  • Female Black Belts
    • North America
    • Europe
    • South America
    • Australia/New Zealand
    • Middle East/Asia
    • Unknow Location
  • Resources
  • Media
  • Photos

BJJ For Women

~ Women's BJJ Blog: Interviews, Jiu- Jitsu Events and All Things Fenom

BJJ For Women

Tag Archives: australian girls in gi

Women’s BJJ Tournaments

06 Wednesday May 2015

Posted by fenomkimonos in News and Events, Women's BJJ

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

australian girls in gi, competition, girls' jiu-jitsu, sophia drysdale, wbjjf, women's bjj, women's brazilian jiu jitsu

Women only tournaments are popping up everywhere. Garra Jiu-Jitsu Darra is hosting a girls’ and women’s white belt and blue belt tournament on May 9th in Brisbane, Australia. Cash prizes for blue belts are $200 for the first place, and $100 for the second place. Two weeks later, on May 24th, Australian Girls in Gi is hosting their 4th annual tournament on the West Coast of Australia, in Perth. It is a round robin style tournament for girls, and women of all belt levels.

On May 23rd, 16 female blue belts have a chance to win cash prizes at BJJ Top Tournament in Burbank, California. First place gets $300, second place $150, and two third places receive $80 each. A few weeks later, on June 13th, Texas-based Women’s Jiu-Jitsu Federation is holding its 2nd Annual Southern Regional Championship, in Justin, Texas. The tournament benefits three charities: Hope For The Silent Voices, Rescue Her, and Restore Her, and offers both gi and no-gi divisions to girls, and women of all belt levels.

If competition is not your cup of tea, please check out Sophia Drysdale BJJ Camp in Edmond, Oklahoma on June 6-7. She is offering two days of training for a hard to beat price of $70. Enjoy!

OklahomWC
bluebelts
agigtourney
wbjjf2015

Black Belt Corner with Sophia Drysdale

10 Wednesday Sep 2014

Posted by fenomkimonos in Fenomenal Women, Women's BJJ

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

australian girls in gi, drysdale bjj, female black belt, sophia drysdale, women's bjj, women's brazilian jiu jitsu

Pan_Am_Champion_Sophia_McDermott_Drysdale_3_Sophia Drysdale started jiu-jitsu in 2002 in Melbourne, Australia. She had been in gymnastics for about 10 years when a long-term injury forced her to retire. She was looking for something that was physically and mentally challenging, and her search stopped the day she found BJJ.

Sophia trained in Australia for 5 years, and after doing very well at local tournaments she decided to compete overseas. She won her first Pan American Championships as a blue belt and then again as a purple belt two years in a row. That is when she decided to move overseas to focus more on training.

Sophia moved to the US in 2007. For the next few years, however, she was dealing with a series of major injuries that halted her competition career temporarily. In 2009 Sophia started training in Las Vegas with Robert Drysdale, and received her black belt in 2010. Two years later she won a gold at the No-Gi Worlds right before becoming pregnant with her first child. A year and a half later she had another baby. This year Sophia has been busy teaching women’s jiu-jitsu seminars in Australia, Mexico and the US, and she is back on the competition scene. She added Pan Ams gold, and the Worlds bronze to her impressive list of achievements.

sophia-and-baby

Although she still trains very hard and competes, her focus is a little different. She wants to teach more, and help inspire and empower women. She wants to show that you can be a mother, and an athlete at the same time. Even though she did not take home a gold this year at the Worlds, we are pretty sure she was the only mother on the black belt podium. Considering her youngest is only a year old, and she had stopped breastfeeding 6 months earlier, that is quite an achievement.

What was the most challenging belt level for you?

My brown belt was the most challenging belt because at the time I was overseas on my own searching for an academy that I could call home. I had suffered from some really bad injuries, such as torn cartilage in my ribs, complete shoulder separation, and herniated disc in my neck. Competing was also tough because brown and black belt were in the same division. Mentally it was tough to deal with being an up-and-comer, and knowing that I was competing against some of the most seasoned black belts who I had idolized throughout my journey.

What advice would you give to women who are struggling?

Sophia_McDermott_Drysdale

BJJ is always tougher for women since we are the minority on the mat. I would say that most women have dealt with sexual discrimination, being ostracized or bullying of some sort. But this is changing. Today the journey for women is much easier than it was back when I started.

There are so many more women who train now, and they have formed solid training groups which is a huge help. Additionally, there are more female black belts, so there are more role models who teach women’s classes and seminars.

This is important on so many levels because women see that it can be done. You can achieve your black belt, be a world champion, a teacher, and a mother! Seminars are an opportunity to pass on techniques that are better suited for women. I teach techniques that have taken me years to refine, and I know they work! Seminar, camps and open mats provide an opportunity for women to cross train, learn, share, and grow together and build lifelong friendships.

BJJ is a way of life. If things get rough, there is nothing wrong with taking a break, and getting back on the mats when the fire is strong again. Also, changing your attitude at certain times can help. If you are feeling bad, tired or weak, it is better to focus on having a great workout, and spending time with friends rather than focusing on winning all your matches. Having a strong support network helps tremendously. It is much easier to overcome obstacles if you have an empathetic coach, a friend or a partner who understands the sport and what you are going through.

Australian Girls in Gi Camp 2014

07 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by fenomkimonos in News and Events

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

australian girls in gi, girl's bjj, jess fraser, sophia drysdale, women's bjj, women's brazilian jiu jitsu

Australian Girls in Gi annual two-day camp is one week away! This is shaping to be one of the largest women’s BJJ camps in the history of Australian Girls in Gi with over 75 spots sold out. The instructor for the weekend is Sophia Drysdale, the first Australian female black belt, who is successfully juggling training, competing, teaching, and being a mom.

AGIG has been bringing women together for events, competition, networking, and training since 2010, and the group is led by outstanding efforts of Jess Fraser, a Melbourne based purple belt. For more information or to register, please click here. Happy training!

australian_girls_in_gi_camp2014

Fenomenal Woman: F as in Fiona

13 Friday Jan 2012

Posted by fenomkimonos in Fenomenal Women

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

australian girls in gi, bjj, brazilian jiu jitsu, women's bjj

We are pleased to kick off the Fenomenal Woman series this month with Fiona Muxlow, a BJJ and MMA pioneer from Australia. Fiona is an active competitor at state, national and international level in submission wrestling, knockdown karate, sambo, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and has an impressive (5-1) MMA record with 3 submission wins.

Fiona started her martial arts training in 1996, earned her blue belt in BJJ in 2002 and currently holds the rank of a purple belt. In the recent years she has been doing mostly MMA and submission wrestling. She participated at ADCC in 2007 and 2011. This year she is returning to the BJJ competition scene and focusing on earning her brown belt. She is also a highly qualified CrossFit, Kettlebell and Weightlifting instructor.

1. You’ve been in martial arts for more than 15 years. Can you tell us a  little bit about it?

Oh my goodness, has it been that long? I started when I was in university as a way of getting away from my crazy room-mate, there was a notice for a club that had just started on campus, I went along and I think it was a full year before I missed a class. I still train with my original coach, I did relocate to Melbourne for 3 years to train exclusively BJJ but I was not happy living there and ended up moving back to Townsville and the tropics.

2. In 2006 you switched focus to MMA? Can you tell us more about why and what are your plans for future in MMA? Active competing? Coaching?

MMA was a natural progression for me when I first started we used to do a mix of striking, aikido and BJJ. Eventually my club switch to mostly BJJ, once I moved back from Melbourne they had gone full circle and  where focusing more on the standup side. I competed in a few knockdown karate competitions and enjoyed it, but I still liked grappling. In 2006 to went to do my CrossFit coaches training in America and stopped over in Japan, while I was there I was lucky enough to train/spar with Roxanne Modafferi and a few other female japanese MMA fighters. In 2007 I got an offer to fight on Princesses of Pain Australasian knockout tournament in New Zealand and I jumped at the chance to do ” hugging and hitting”. I’m planning on having a few more fights this year, I had one planned for March but my opponent had to pull out so I’m not sure when the next one will be at the moment. I reffed my first MMA fight in 2011 as well so maybe once I stop fighting this maybe something for me to get into. I just started to teach a girls only grapple group once a week as well.

3. You are the Head Trainer and owner at CrossFit North Queensland. Do you still have time to train and what is your training schedule?

Depends on the time of year I teach season Aqua Fitness classes so over winter I have more training time, but I have to make time to train if I want to do well. I’m lucky I had two great CrossFit coaches working with me which left me to do my own training. This year however I’m back down to one coach as the other is just about to have her second baby and is on leave. I have to get used to training at odd times, which can be hard and some times there seems not to be enough hours in the day.

4. Why has CrossFit and Olympic lifting suddenly become so popular?

I don’t think it’s a sudden thing, it’s just gaining momentum really quickly now. I was introduced to CrossFit via one of the guys at BJJ who one night came up to me and handed me a piece of paper saying “ here” you like weird stuff… It was a print out from that day’s crossfit.com. He had found it via a link on BJ Penn’s site. That was back in 2004. I’ve been a CrossFit affiliate since 2006 and  my Affiliate CrossFit North Queensland is actually the first CrossFit Affiliate in Australia. I think people like CrossFit because it gives them an outlet to test themselves, it gives them a place to play, it empowers you,  it’s a community and it works.

5. Do you follow a special diet all year around or try to lose weight right before competing?

I was an obese kid and teenager at 90 kg. It wasn’t till I left home and started training and actually getting off my butt and moving in general that I lost weight.  I found during my time at University that wheat didn’t really agree with me. Nowadays I follow the Paleo/ primal diet . No grains, legumes or dairy. Meat and veggies, nuts and seeds, some fruit and avoiding sugar. Although, my old friends chocolate and ice cream can be hard to resist. If I’m not preparing for a competition or fight  I will allow myself to have them as a treat. But I find that if I eat clean I feel and train better and can also recover quicker.  In 2011 I competed at under 65 for an MMA fight, Open weight 60+ for ADCC and under 68 in Sambo, with my walking weight being up around 72-73. This year i plan to keep it under 70. Ideally 69 or below to make it easier to cut down to the lower weight class when I have to or at shorter notice and also to give me more opportunities to compete.

6. What was the highlight for 2011 for you and what are you competition plans for 2012 now that you are focusing on BJJ again?

2011 is hard to pick… it was a big year. I racked up a lot of frequent flyer points.   I had 3 overseas trips in order to compete

  • Winning ADCC South Pacific Qualifiers for the second time (and after only being back at training for 2 months after a 12 month layoff).
  • Fighting MMA in the cage for the first time (all previous fights had been in a ring and let me say the cage is so much safer than the ring because there is no risk of falling out of it, like there is with the ring.
  • Being invited to coach the stand up and no gi section of the first Australian Girls in Gi day camp.
  • Competing at ADCC World Submission Grappling Championship in England for the second time and coming up against Hannette Staack.
  • Representing Australia at the World Sambo championships in, Vilnius, Lithuania.
  • And finally having my old training partner Sophia McDermott Drysdale and her husband Robert come to my club The Arena Townsville and school me for almost a week and help renew my desire to progress in BJJ.

In terms of competition I’m trying to do as many as I can the ones at the top of my list include

  • 2012 FILA Oceania Grappling Championships in January
  • WPJJC Australian Qualifiers in February
  • BJJ State, Australian and Pan Pacific titles

I ‘m  also saving up to head over to the USA to train and compete at the World BJJ Championships.

7. Talking about Australian Girls in Gi day camp. You were the submission wrestling and take down coach. What were your expectations before the camp and were you pleased with the turnout? Are there any other AGIG events planned for 2012?

It almost didn’t happen my plane got delayed. I was meant to do the second session after the yoga  and had to ring Jess from Brisbane and tell her the bad news. They swapped the program around and put me on last. I actually arrived just in time for the gi session and it all went fine. It was an awesome turn out of 30+ ladies. I didn’t really know what to expect before I went down there, Jess Fraser, the brains behind it sent me a list of people ranks and experience so I could plan my session around this. I was actually quite nervous, I’m used to coaching CrossFit not Grappling.

In December I went back down to Melbourne for the AGIG Christmas party which was awesome, it was an open mat/free rolling with at least 20 people. At the moment I know that there is a seminar with Ester Tavares Tutida in the works and I’m sure there will be another day camp but I’m not exactly sure when.

9. Is there anything else interesting you want our readers to know about you?

I used to work with dolphins when I was in high school and have a degree in Zoology. I have a little Koala named Walter who is my travel companion. He goes with me everywhere and has become quite famous.

Enter your email address to follow this women's jiu- jitsu blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Facebook

Facebook

Instagram

Simplicity. This is how we start 2021. #newbeginnings #backtobasics

Popular Posts

  • North America
    North America
  • Let's Talk About Gi Pants Part I
    Let's Talk About Gi Pants Part I
  • Past Events
    Past Events
  • A0 Tall Size Gis
    A0 Tall Size Gis
  • Unicorn and Donuts Gi in White Pearl Weave Plus
    Unicorn and Donuts Gi in White Pearl Weave Plus
  • Female BJJ Black Belts
    Female BJJ Black Belts
  • Gi Help
    Gi Help
  • Gi Weaves 102: Single Weave Gi and Double Weave Gi Mystery
    Gi Weaves 102: Single Weave Gi and Double Weave Gi Mystery
  • Gi Weaves 101
    Gi Weaves 101
  • South America
    South America

Tags

affordable australian girls in gi beatriz mesquita bjj bjj bffs black friday brazil 021 brazilian jiu jitsu competition cotton drill crystal weave curvy pants emily kwok female black belt fenom gi raffle fenom kimonos gi giveaway girl's bjj girl's brazilian jiu jitsu girls' jiu-jitsu girls in gis gis for girls gis for women gracie humaita hannette staack jill baker jiu-jitsu jocelyn chang leka vieira leticia ribeiro like a girl Love luciana "luka" dias messy hair we don't care michelle nicolini Mother's Day pearl weave pearl weave plus purple belt socal wbjj sophia drysdale strong woman support women's bjj sweaty betties training should be fun white to black belt women's bjj women's brazilian jiu jitsu women's gis women's grappling camp

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Follow Following
    • BJJ For Women
    • Join 217 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • BJJ For Women
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar