Romero Cavalcanti


Romero Cavalcanti (born October 22, 1952), nicknamed Jacaré because he used to wear Lacoste polo shirts in his younger years, is a practitioner of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and the founder-head coach of the prestigious Alliance Jiu Jitsu Team. He is one of the six people to have been promoted to Black Belt by the famous Rolls Gracie prior to Gracie's death in a hang gliding accident.[1][2] Romero has coached many of today's top Black belt competitors and black belt coaches, and was a significant influence on the US Army Combatives Program through his student Matt Larsen.

Romero Cavalcanti
Born (1952-10-22) October 22, 1952
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Other namesJacaré
ResidenceAtlanta, Georgia, United States
StyleGracie Jiu-Jitsu
Teacher(s)Rolls Gracie, Rickson Gracie, Helio Gracie
Rank         8th Degree Coral Belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu[1]
Notable studentsFabio Gurgel, Rubens Charles Maciel, Matt Larsen, Leandro Vieira
Websitehttp://www.alliancebjj.com/

Biography

Romero's nickname refers to this species of caiman

Romero began training in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu at 11 years old. By the age of 16, Romero regularly attended jiu jitsu classes at the famous Gracie School in Copacabana where he grew up, alongside Carlos Gracie, Jr., Crolin Gracie, Mario Claudio Tallarico, Fábio Santos, Mauricio Motta Gomes, the Machados, and Rickson Gracie.[1][2] After extensive competition from 1972 to 1985 and working as an assistant instructor at the Gracie school, Romero opened his first school in Ipanema, Brazil. Romero had studied in New York in the 1970s, and in 1995 he moved back to the US with his family and opened a Brazilian Jiu Jitsu school in Miami. He later moved to Atlanta where he established a school in late 1996.[3]

Instructor Lineage

Mitsuyo "Count Koma" MaedaCarlos Gracie, Sr. → Helio Gracie → Rolls Gracie → Romero "Jacaré" Cavalcanti

gollark: On the extreme side of things, if you have only *one* artist, people will be less happy.
gollark: Though I'm not certain human inspiration is actually necessary.
gollark: If you have less of an incentive to do art, much human inspiration will be lost and not converted to art.
gollark: Yes
gollark: Without incentives for arts to be artinated we would have fewer arts.

See also

  • List of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu practitioners

References

  1. Flograppling >> Even Masters Get Promoted Too: 7th And 8th Degree Black Belts Honored. URL accessed on September 13,2017.
  2. On The Mat >> Rolls Gracie Biography. URL accessed on June 14, 2010.
  3. Allian Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. URL accessed on June 14, 2010.
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