Marcelo Behring
Biography
Marcelo Benring was born in
1965 in
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He was the son of Jiu
Jitsu Red
Belt, Flavio Behring and brother to
BJJ instructor
Sylvio Behring. Being from a family with such a strong fighting background, it didn’t come as a surprise that Marcelo would start his martial arts training as a child practicing Jiu Jitsu with his father and Judo with master Hélcio
Gama (and with
George Medhi at a later stage).
When Marcelo reached the age of 14, his father gave him a choice, to go and train wherever he wanted. Marcelo chose
Rickson Gracie’s gym. Though Marcelo Behring trained under the Rickson banner for the most part, he also liked to vary his preparation, often training with
Roberto Lage. By the age of 16 he was already an assistant coach.
The close relationship the Behring’s had with the
Gracie’s made way for Marcelo to grow fond of Kirla Gracie, the daughter of
Carlos Gracie Senior. From this relationship Marcelo and Kirla had two sons,
Kyron and Kywan Gracie Behring. Another one of Marcelo’s great passions was his love for surfing, he was a big name in the surfing circuit at the time in
Rio de Janeiro and in the coast
of Sao Paulo and he was often interviewed by surfing magazines. Marcelo Behring’s love for his family and surfing walked hand in hand, a testament of this is his surfing board on which he had written:
“
God bless and protect my sons and best friends.
I love you guys so fu**
ing deep. All my energy, my waves, my fights. My best feelings and energy.
Jesus Christ, please take care of them.”
In
1987 after one of Marcelo’s trips to
Australia to
Surf, he was invited by his father to move to
Sao Paulo and open an academy there. Flavio (the father) worked in banking and he was offered a position there. Sao Paulo already had some Jiu Jitsu instructors, people like
Gastão Gracie,
Pedro Hemetério, Otavio Almeida (father) and a few students
George Gracie had left running schools there, but championships were scarce and there wasn’t enough buzz to drive students. Flavio and Marcelo had a different approach, Marcelo was already a champion and a big name in the Jiu Jitsu scene, he brought a new style of Jiu Jitsu, years apart from what was being taught in the region. Behring started giving seminars all around the state, regardless of the academies lineage. He would even give seminars at Judo schools such as the one run by
Shigueto Yamasaki. Another thing that pushed BJJ in the area was Marcelo’s popularity among surfers, they would come to jiu jitsu academies as a result of the interviews given by Marcelo to magazines such as “Fluir” and “
Trip”.
Paulo Lima, the editor of the “Revista Trip” also had a radio show that had Marcelo speaking about the benefits of grappling.
In
1988 Marcelo had one of the toughest challenges in his fighting career, the epic fight against
Cassio Cardoso from
Carlson Gracie‘s team. Marcelo and
Cássio were evenly matched having fought twice with a victory to each side. Cassio was also a
Rio de Janeiro state champion and had won the
Brazilian Nationals that year. The bout was arranged with the rules being a match of
30 minutes after which (if there was a draw) another 30 minutes extra time would be made available. The competition was held at the “Jardim
Babilônia” events house, and after a 30 minutes with no points, the challengers went back to the mat for the extra time. Cassio Cardoso won the fight by
6×2 (3 guard passes to 1) though
point system was very different from today’s common
IBJJF rules.
Marcelo continued competing in BJJ and
NHB (
Vale Tudo rules) while also teaching and helping promote competitions in Sao Paulo.
Around 1992/3 Marcelo Behring went to Australia
- published: 16 Mar 2016
- views: 9