A Brazilian jiu-jitsu power couple have brought their championship winning ways to Boynton Beach. The women are multiple time world champions in competitive jiu-jitsu. And as the first openly gay married athletes in the sport, the black belt instructors say their martial arts school serves as an athletic haven for women and the LGBTQ+ community.
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Ana 鈥淏aby鈥 Vieira, who competed in the medium-heavy division, won her fifth world title in June at the International Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Federation in California, one of the biggest tournaments in competitive jiu-jitsu. Her new medal fits well with the other gold medals adorning the walls of the school just a few feet from the live streaming TV, where jiu-jitsu practitioners 鈥 who live as far as Montana 鈥 stream the training sessions. The gold medals are a small, shiny 鈥渞eminder for hard work" and grit, the instructor says.
Vieira, who married jiu-jitsu Hall of Famer Luanna Alzuguir in 2018, said female athletes, however, haven't won over many people within the sport. And going public as part of the first openly gay married couple had exposed even more difficulty for the athletes.
A journalist who interviewed Vieira about her marriage to Alzuguir said he was surprised by the level of hate he had seen directed at the newlyweds.
鈥淎nd the guy, he came to me and he said 'I didn't know the community was so homophobic,鈥 Vieira said. 鈥淎nd I was like, 鈥楻eally?鈥 He said, 'I received so many messages that I deleted the comments and I didn't allow them to comment anymore.'
"And I said, 鈥榶eah, that's that's how they in the community is, you know, so being a woman and gay in this sport is not easy.' 鈥
hopes her efforts can inspire and elevate female involvement in the sport. She鈥檚 from Rio de Janeiro and Alzuguir is from Sao Paulo. The couple met in Brazil in 2012. Six years later, they got married and moved to Boynton Beach, and in 2019 opened , a Brazilian jiu-jitsu school. Aviv means 鈥渟pring season鈥 in Hebrew. The champions say training at the jiu-jitsu school is about constant personal and professional growth.
When you stroll into the school, you'll hear sounds of bodies, contorted in different angles, being smashed on the dark gray mat. That鈥檚 teaching students advanced ground grappling moves for self-defense. Alzuguir and Vieira say their school is intended for the LGBTQ+ community and women who often feel uncomfortable grappling on the ground with men in traditional schools.
鈥淚 believe the only way for you to develop yourself, it's being comfortable,鈥 Alzuguir said. 鈥淏ecause I can be myself. That's important.鈥
Alzuguir said female jiu-jitsu athletes can鈥檛 improve their game if they aren鈥檛 comfortable in the gyms.
Vieira says a comfortable training process allows each athlete to feel 鈥渆mpowered鈥 to 鈥渞each their full potential.鈥
Brazilian jiu-jitsu is a form of a self-defense martial arts that places more emphasis on ground fighting than striking your opponents. The tactics are typically choking or joint locks like head locks, elbow locks, and leg locks.
Kat Janis is an artist from Delray Beach and a student at Aviv. Janis says other jiu-jitsu schools she's attended had plenty of men and not enough women.
鈥淭here were just few women on the mat and I started to want to compete. And I could tell going to the competitions that I just wasn't getting the experience of rolling with women my size or being able to work techniques,鈥 Janis said. 鈥淏ecause just rolling with guys, I was getting smashed all the time.鈥
Janis said as a gay woman, Aviv Jiu Jitsu school in Boynton Beach gives her "a sense of freedom" she hadn鈥檛 felt in other schools before.
鈥淚 remember thinking it鈥檚 like my old gym, but flipped.It's kind of like this cool women's club. I feel like I can come here, like, shoot the sh*t with my friends and train jiu jitsu," Janis said. 鈥淎nd I'm not thinking about being a woman, which is kind of cool. It just feels like home.鈥
That鈥檚 what the world champion owners of Aviv want 鈥 a space for growth.
Alzuguir helped train her wife Vieira at Aviv before her championship win in June. Vieira said raising the profile of women and gay people in the sport is a battle they鈥檙e fighting together on and off the mat.
鈥淚 receive a lot of support messages from guys and girls around the world, from the LGBT community,鈥 Vieira said. 鈥淚 receive a lot of messages from men saying, 'Oh, thank you. You know, I don't feel safe to be myself at my gym, you know, you know how our sport is.'
In 2019, more than 6,000 people and organizations signed the couple鈥檚 in under three weeks. It called for equal pay, better media coverage, and more diverse weight class divisions for women in the big international jiu-jitsu federations. That resulted in an all women鈥檚 , a version of the all-male, high paying King of the Mat tournament. But the champions say more needs to be done.
Alzuguir is a black belt and five-time world champion. She said for years, female Brazilian jiu-jitsu athletes have struggled to reach the same notoriety as their male counterparts.
鈥淎 lot of guys, they say the female jiu jitsu don't sell. The point is, if people don't see, of course they don't want to buy. So we need space,鈥 Alzuguir said. 鈥淭hat's all we need. Because if you have space to show our jiu-jitsu, of course we're going to sell it because it's beautiful the way women fight. We don't hold 鈥 we go! It's different.鈥
Alzuguir said women's matches are often at a faster pace and are just as exciting. And she argues adding more diverse weight class divisions would give women more opportunities to excel. She said female athletes spend a great deal of time trying to prove themselves.
鈥淲e want to prove that we have beautiful jiu-jitsu,鈥 Alzuguir said. 鈥淲e want to prove that we know how to fight, but we don't have space to fight.鈥
And now they continue to fight perceptions in multiple ways. Vieira said the opening of Aviv Jiu-Jitsu is a huge step toward creating more female athletes in the sport because seeing champions in action is a blueprint, a template of sorts, for aspiring female and gay athletes.
Even before the couple met at a trials competition in Brazil, Alzuguir was a huge inspiration for her now-wife, Vieira.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 what I felt for Luanna. So when I started training, she used to be already black belt world champion,鈥 Vieira said.
鈥淎nd I knew she was gay and I was like 鈥橶ow, it can be me.' 鈥