Cesar Gracie's official statement in regard to Nick Diaz's absence from World Jiu-Jitsu Expo

Posted on May 15, 2012, 10:25 AM by Anton Gurevich
> Cool 26
|
> Poor 10
Hereby is Cesar Gracie's official statement in regard to Nick Diaz's no show for the no-gi grappling match with Braulio Estima, without any additiona analysis or comments. As it is:

My decision to write an account of what happened this weekend is not to answer to the detractors of myself or my team, as no explanation is owed them.  It is instead based on my acknowledgement and respect to our fans and supporters. I never thought I would be answering for something that happened at a grappling tournament, however with the worldwide popularity of the sport and my team increasing, I understand that our supporters need answers.

Below is a compilation of events in chronological order.  I included the behind the scenes problems we had to let you, our supporters, know how things deteriorated.

Facts

In the month of February I was contacted by a Brazilian named Junior asking me if I wanted to participate in an Expo\Jiu-jitsu tournament. The goal was to put one of our team’s stars in the event to attract sponsors and ensure it was successful. The event was not that far away and they desperately needed exposure. Junior stated that he was working with my uncle Rilion and my cousin Renzo on this project and they were in fact partners. Rilion and Renzo are 2 people that I greatly admire and respect and I was more than happy to partner up with them.
 
I discussed the idea with Nick Diaz and he readily agreed to enter in the black belt gi division. He did not seek any reimbursement. Junior thought it better for Nick to do a super fight as he thought this would be more of a spectacle and bring in more attention. Nick was not as enthusiastic but agreed on the condition that whoever was picked to go against him was not an mma fighter. He knew even a mediocre mma fighter would try to use a match and/or victory over him to further their career in mma.  Nick believes a reputation as a fighter should only be earned in a ring or cage.I relayed this to Junior and he agreed to arrange for a strict jiu-jitsu competitor.

In March I received the disturbing news from Rilion that Junior had broken his agreement with him. Rilion stated to me that Junior was registering all World Jiu-jitsu Expo names under his name alone and was no longer taking his phone calls. When contacted by me, Junior stated that he would no longer honor his financial obligations to Rilion because “Rilion was doing nothing and treats me like one of his clerks”.
He then went on a tirade about Rilion which I interrupted and reminded him that Rilion was my family member and I would not listen to someone speaking negatively about him.

This rift left me in a dilemma. My instinct was to sever ties immediately. Rilion was my original jiu-jitsu instructor and his reputation as an honest person was impeccable. On the other hand we had already committed Diaz and Caio Terra.  Our removal would destroy an event Renzo provided all of the funding for.

I consulted with Rilion who advised me to move forward with the event. He was the one that had brought Renzo into this project and convinced Renzo to fund it. He also still believed in the idea of an American tournament that paid the best BJJ guys on the planet to showcase their skills. We agreed to move forward without him since at this stage Junior had entrenched himself and his removal was impossible. Lastly Rilion warned me that Junior was not to be trusted and would undoubtedly try to cheat me and Renzo.

In early April I got the call from Junior asking what I thought of a Braulio Estima vs Nick Diaz matchup. I had heard of Braulio and knew he was a formidable jiu-jitsu practitioner. I was under the impression that Braulio competed in the close to 200lbs weight category.
When I asked Junior he assured me that Braulio could weigh in as little as 175 lbs right before the match.

I presented his information to Nick who accepted the matchup and seemed happy to go against the top BJJ player in the world at that weight. Nick started training for the match and I brought up several BJJ black belts to compliment his training.

Looking through some of Estima’s youtube videos, it was soon discovered that he had in fact been planning on entering upon a career in mma. We wondered if the match with Diaz was a way to create a buzz around him and get him signed with a prominent organization.

I called Junior who assured me Estima would not be fighting in mma and that he had spoken with him and been assured he had given up on the idea of ever fighting. Junior reiterated, “Cesar I spoke with Braulio, the guy is in his 30′s, he has a family and doesn’t want to live that type of life at this stage in his life…etc”

I repeated this info to Nick. A week or so later it was all over the Internet that Braulio had joined the “Blackzillians” and was training for an mma fight. We had been lied to. Furthermore it was evident that Nick’s sole condition that he not go against a wanna be mma guy was violated and this was in fact an attempt by Braulio to ignite an mma career.Nick was to have been accurately portrayed as a fighter returning to his BJJ roots. He had even agreed to give his entire purse to charity; St Jude’s Children’s Hospital for kids with cancer. If you know the story of Ralph Gracie’s son you would understand why this charity was chosen.  Nick’s name having been added to this event had saved it but now it was clear he was to be the patsy, not respected but used.
 

Despite all of this Nick was still going to compete. He brought up Kron Gracie and prepared himself. Around this time I was informed by Junior that Braulio wanted to weigh in the day before and not right before the match as is the custom in IBJJ competitions and Abu Dhabi. At the time Nick was about 186lbs so I consented to both guys weighing in at 180lbs the night before.

Nick boarded a plane on Friday for Long Beach having cut 6 pounds for the weigh in that night. On his way there I got a call from Junior telling me Braulio would not be making weight!  ”Cesar Braulio is complaining about the weight cut. Can we have him weigh in tomorrow? He can’t make the weight tonight how about 185 in the morning?”

Nick arrives in Long Beach to the news that there will be no weigh ins that night. As a professional with over 30 fights this was the final straw. The disrespect and total lack of professionalism given him convinced him he was at a circus not a professional event.

At 3:20 in the morning I received a text from Junior that Braulio would in fact make the 180lbs weight class at 10:00AM.  With no other option available I said fine I’ll check with Nick in the morning. At 10:00AM Braulio did weigh in at 180lbs but by that time Nick had already left.

Opinion
As a Brazilian I love Brazil but not all things Brazilian. In the last decade I have witnessed Brazilian cronies running the IBJJF and making it impossible for Americans to get a fair shake when competing against their Brazilian countrymen. These cronies have instituted rules to where if you miss weight by even half a pound you are disqualified and not refunded your entry fee. They gladly keep your money and treat you like crap in your country because they can.  One of these cronies (Junior) decided to bend all the rules for Braulio Estima and treat Nick Diaz like crap. Sorry that didn’t work out here.

As for Braulio I still respect him as a great BJJ artist. As far as calling Nick out for a mma fight, he knows that is impossible because Nick is signed with the UFC and in mma you have to make weight when they want you to. Not when you want to.  If Braulio ever finds success in mma then he can mention Nick’s name for a fight. Right now he should respect the man.

Nick is not without fault by any means. His lack of communication with his team and coach was inexcusable. This will be addressed privately.

Renzo and I have spoken and we are committed to continuing with this otherwise awesome event….without the services of Junior.

It should be noted that Nick paid to St Jude’s Children’s Hospitable the sum of what would have been his entire purse.

Thank you,
You have my apologies and my respect
Cesar Gracie


Comments

REGISTER OR LOG IN TO POST COMMENTS AND BECOME AN ACTIVE MEMBER OF THE COMMUNITY
  • ny2ut2id2nv
    Weak
    31
    Funny | 15
    Sharp | 0
    Cool | 0

    Him regarding everything as a circus offended him? Weird... He should have felt right at home.

    Reply 1 year ago
  • GoldenBibi
    Funny
    13
    Weak | 4
    Sharp | 2
    Cool | 0

    Yet fire coming out of a Monkey. Get back in your cage hater..



    War Diaz...

    Reply 1 year ago
  • dropkickmurphy
    Weak
    5
    Cool | 2
    Funny | 1
    Sharp | 1

    To Nick Diaz

    "Cool beans"

    fr. Dropkickmurphy

    Reply 1 year ago
  • sambo
    Sharp
    14
    Weak | 3
    Funny | 0
    Cool | 0

    Sounds like Nick did what he was supposed to do , even though they tried to dupe into helping launch Estima's mma career.



    I hope Estima calls Dana White to get in line for a beating from Diaz

    Reply 1 year ago
  • JoeFaceHood
    Sharp
    16
    Weak | 1
    Funny | 0
    Cool | 0

    Agreed. I'm not a big Diaz fan or Cesar Gracie fan, but good on Cesar for letting the public know the situation (or at least his side of it). This whole situation makes more sense now that he shed light on it, and whether you like Nick or not, you have to respect him for putting up with that BS for that long and donating to St. Jude's regardless of what happened.

    Reply 1 year ago
  • enjoylife321
    Cool
    1
    Weak | 1
    Funny | 0
    Sharp | 0

    Its great that Nick's charity recieved money.....



    It shows that Nick doesn't always do things for money sake....he trains and competes in triathlons and is willing to enter a jujitsu tournament. because he likes the sport



    I'm not surprised he walked away after finding out the guy was training with blackzillians.



    Chael Sonnen will love hearing about this situation involving brazilians and a dodgy jujitsu tournament

    Reply 1 year ago
  • nickp44
    Sharp
    20
    Weak | 1
    Cool | 1
    Funny | 0

    Ok, fair enough... I buy it.



    if nothing else, this fiasco should remind Nick that he's already an employee of the most respected MMA organization, where nonsense like this doesn't happen. Hopefully he solves his problems with the commission and comes back quickly.

    Reply 1 year ago
  • MAMBA24ILL
    Weak
    14
    Sharp | 12
    Funny | 0
    Cool | 0

    Why does Nick always need someone to talk for him?

    Reply 1 year ago
  • GoldenBibi
    Weak
    10
    Sharp | 3
    Funny | 0
    Cool | 0

    Next time he should hire Ed Soares then. Either your stup!d, or blind, but Anderson always has Ed Soares doing the talking for him.. Especially the English part. Anderson Michael Jackson wanna be talk is always in close doors, while Soares is doing the talking...

    Reply 1 year ago
  • JoeFaceHood
    Sharp
    9
    Weak | 4
    Funny | 0
    Cool | 0

    What the ever loving f*ck are you talking about? Anderson is a Brazilian that is not very fluent in English. Nick is from California. Quite a big difference there. I understand Nick's allowance of letting Cesar speak on his behalf, but don't try to compare it to Anderson's situation. If you were a Pro athlete answering English questions that could be misinterpreted across the world if you say the wrong word or use a word out of context, you'd want a fluent English speaker to speak for you too.

    Reply 1 year ago
  • GoldenBibi
    Weak
    5
    Sharp | 2
    Funny | 0
    Cool | 0

    Bullsh!t Anderson lives in the U.S.A, and talks English also... Nick Diaz talks 209 style... So it's better for Cesar to talk for him.. So the comparison stays...

    Reply 1 year ago
  • roybonesjr
    Funny
    6
    Sharp | 1
    Weak | 0
    Cool | 0

    Nick's translator is Brazilian

    Reply 1 year ago
  • tonedelove
    Sharp
    26
    Cool | 6
    Weak | 1
    Funny | 0

    "It should be noted that Nick paid to St Jude’s Children’s Hospitable the sum of what would have been his entire purse."



    Im back on board. That is all.

    Reply 1 year ago
  • GuardAli
    Sharp
    13
    Weak | 4
    Cool | 1
    Funny | 0

    I judged too quick. This explanation by cesar was convincing enough, but when I read about the donation towards the end...it blew me away.



    That's it, nick rocks.

    Reply 1 year ago
  • Brasil
    Weak
    5
    Cool | 4
    Sharp | 1
    Funny | 0

    Braulio is a gentleman and a legent in BJJ...When speaking about professionalism and respect you cannot have Braulio and Nick in the same sentence....Cesar should stop putting out those fires and start giving some previous guidance to his boys.

    Reply 1 year ago
  • ny2ut2id2nv
    Cool
    5
    Funny | 1
    Weak | 0
    Sharp | 0

    I hope Caesar is well compensated because he's probably the best publicist in MMA.

    Reply 1 year ago
  • roybonesjr
    Sharp
    6
    Funny | 0
    Weak | 0
    Cool | 0

    I do agree Brazil. Though the match may have been weighed in braulios favor, nick could have withdrawn instead of disappearing and leaving a Facebook message

    Reply 1 year ago
  • Michael Stephensen
    Sharp
    3
    Funny | 0
    Weak | 0
    Cool | 0

    From the start my problem with Nick in this affair is that as I sat there watching the event live nobody seemed to know what was going on. As Cesar said the problem was the communication. If Nick had simply told the organizers "you screwed up. I'm not showing" his many fans wouldn't have been sitting there waiting. Fans aren't idiots. We don't fault him if we understand but communicated more effectively.

    Reply 1 year ago
  • Mike Perryman
    Cool
    Weak
    Sharp
    Funny

    Now Nick can get back to the major problem at hand with the commission.

    Reply 1 year ago
  • Bilhal
    Weak
    1
    Funny | 0
    Sharp | 0
    Cool | 0

    TL;DR

    Reply 1 year ago
  • poweroftwomen
    Weak
    8
    Sharp | 2
    Funny | 1
    Cool | 0

    Nick and his team realised they had made a big mistake by dissing the charity. It has taken them four days to think of an excuse, and everyone has bought it...............pathetic,lol.

    Reply 1 year ago
  • mousasi
    Sharp
    6
    Weak | 1
    Cool | 1
    Funny | 0

    Actually, this story was summed up on the Diaz brothers facebook page shortly after the event.



    Diaz paid the Charity.



    The promoter did not.



    Diaz did not participate.



    Who really "dissed the charity?"

    Reply 1 year ago
  • kingboxing
    Cool
    Weak
    Sharp
    Funny

    Support Nick

    Reply 1 year ago
  • falcon4917
    Funny
    1
    Sharp | 0
    Weak | 0
    Cool | 0

    I believe the story. It makes perfect sense. Nick knows he doesn't need more trouble and this situation is just not likely to be something Nick would just throw on himself by being an idiot. I think he is like me in some ways in that after you get screwed a few times you start trying to screw up the other guys in retaliation. He paid his dues to the charity and he probably didn't care if the fans were screweed in his eyes the promoters can cough up the excuses for that one.

    Reply 1 year ago
  • movescamp
    Cool
    Weak
    Sharp
    Funny

    Let's not forget he is a kinda a genius. I bet no other MMA fighter has the level of press he does. Even if it's negative sometimes. Chances are when you google his name there are current news stories about him. Not something you can say about many other fighters except maybe chael.



    I assumed all this was going on anyway. Even regular jiujitsu tournaments are total fiascos compared to judo, sambo, or wrestling. It's becoming a real money maker and all the sharks circle around the money. Throw in all the wannabe ultimate fighters and you get a building with a huge number of douchebags who forgot this used to be a martial art with respect and decipline.

    Reply 1 year ago