The Chute Boxe Academy (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈʃutʃi ˈbɔksi], Kick-Boxing) is a Brazilian martial arts academy. It opened as a Muay Thai academy in 1978 in Curitiba, Paraná, Brazil. Head trainer Rudimar Fedrigo later expanded the program in 1991 to include other aspects of modern mixed martial arts, such as wrestling and submission grappling. By 1995, the Chute Boxe team was considered a prime training ground for Vale Tudo fighters.[1] In 2004, an American branch, Chute Boxe USA, was established in Los Angeles, California.

Chute Boxe Academy
Est.1978; 46 years ago (1978)
Founded byRudimar Fedrigo
Primary trainersRudimar Fedrigo
Mestre Zito
Gerson Schilipacke
Jose Landi
Current titleholdersCris Cyborg Bellator Featherweight Champion (2020–present)
Past titleholders
  • Anderson Silva Middleweight Champion (UFC 2006–2013) 185 lb (84 kg; 13.2 st)
  • Cris Cyborg Featherweight Champion (Strikeforce (2009–2011), Invicta FC (2013–2016), UFC (2016–2018) 145 lb (66 kg; 10.4 st)
  • Wanderlei Silva Middleweight Champion (Pride 2001–2007) 205 lb (93 kg; 14.6 st)
  • Mauricio Rua Light Heavyweight Champion (UFC 2010) 205 lb (93 kg; 14.6 st)
  • Murilo Rua Middleweight Champion (Elite XC 2007) 185 lb (84 kg; 13.2 st)
Charles Oliveira Lightweight Champion (UFC 2021-2022) 155 lb (70 kg; 11.1 st)|
Training facilitiesCuritiba, Paraná, Brazil
Long Beach, CA, United States

Chute Boxe fighters are characterized by being extremely aggressive and physical, well-rounded fighters.[2]

History edit

Beginnings edit

In the 1970s, in search of a more full contact martial art, Taekwondo black belt Nélio "Naja" Borges de Souza [pt] learned Muay Thai and brought it to Brazil. He moved to Curitiba and in 1978 his student Rudimar Fedrigo would found the Chute Boxing academy.[3][4]

The style developed by Nélio Naja and his students had more emphasis on various kicks (due many of the early Brazilian Thai boxers coming from Taekwondo and Kyokushin Karate) but soon, the "Chute Boxe" style of Muay Thai became characterized as extremely aggressive, with wild combinations, hard low kicks and usually lacking in defense, trying to defeat their opponents as fast as possible.[5]

The Chute Boxe team first made a name for themselves in the MMA world during the late 1990s in the Brazilian vale tudo promotion known as the International Vale Tudo Championship (IVC). With an aggressive and physical style focused around their muay thai skills, Chute Boxe fighters captured three of the four title belts in the promotion (Wanderlei Silva winning the light heavyweight belt, José Landi-Jons winning the middleweight belt, and Rafael Cordeiro winning the lightweight belt). The promotion ended up serving as a spring board for the Chute Boxe team (as well as many other Brazilian MMA stars) into the lucrative Japanese MMA market. For Chute Boxe specifically, it would help to launch their careers in Japan's PRIDE FC.

PRIDE FC dynasty edit

The major cog of the Chute Boxe machine in PRIDE was Wanderlei Silva. Known for an exciting, brawling style complete with lethal knees and leaping stomps, he would exemplify Chute Boxe style martial arts in PRIDE's middleweight division and eventually win the 2003 PRIDE FC Middleweight Grand Prix and the PRIDE FC middleweight title which he would hold for 5 1/2 years.

Coming off of a disappointing five-round decision loss to Tito Ortiz at UFC 25: Ultimate Japan, Silva would return to PRIDE to earn the biggest victory of his career to that point over the Lion's Den's Guy Mezger. It would be 20 fights and over four years before he would lose again in a controversial decision to superheavyweight Mark Hunt. During this span he defeated notable fighters Kazushi Sakuraba (three times), Quinton “Rampage” Jackson (twice), Yuki Kondo, Ikuhisa Minowa, Hidehiko Yoshida, Kiyoshi Tamura, Dan Henderson, Alexander Otsuka, Shungo Oyama, Hiromitsu Kanehara, and would draw with Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipović.

His aura of invincibility wouldn't truly be broken until a decision loss to Ricardo Arona in the 2005 PRIDE FC middle weight Grand Prix. His loss would be avenged later that night by teammate and rising star, Mauricio “Shogun” Rua. Silva is noted to have never lost under full PRIDE FC rules at his weight class; PRIDE's event in Las Vegas had altered rules.

Enter the Rua brothers edit

As the older of the Rua brothers, Murilo “Ninja” Rua had a mediocre run during his years with PRIDE FC. Wins over Mario Sperry, Akira Shoji and Alexander Otsuka established him as a contender in the organization. His younger brother Mauricio "Shogun" Rua would also enter the PRIDE fighting championships and would prove the most successful fighter produced by Chute Boxe under Wanderlei Silva's and Ninja's guidance.

Younger than Murilo by about a year and a half, “Shogun” has defeated a who's who list of fighters including Evangelista “Cyborg” Santos, Akira Shoji, Akihiro Gono, Quinton "Rampage" Jackson, Alistair Overeem (twice), Antônio Rogério “Minotouro” Nogueira, Ricardo Arona, Kevin Randleman, Mark Coleman, Chuck Liddell, and Lyoto Machida. Shogun was the UFC light heavyweight champion until losing his first title defense against Jon Jones at UFC 128. His exciting, fan-friendly style includes much of the standard Chute Boxe Muay Thai clinch work, knees, stomps, and soccer kicks, as well as polished Brazilian Jiu Jitsu.

Rivalry with Brazilian Top Team edit

The opposite number in terms of Brazilian dominance in PRIDE FC was the Brazilian Top Team (BTT) which was comprised, at the time, of such fighters as Antonio Rodrigo “Minotauro” Nogueira, Ricardo Arona, and Murilo Bustamante. Both BTT and Chute Boxe were the dominant Brazilian teams at the time, representing different contrasting combat philosophies: Chute Boxe was mostly based in a very aggressive Muay Thai style, while BTT was founded by Carlson Gracie's students and had a more well-rounded BJJ-based approach. While there were some tensions between the team, the rivalry was thought ended after a discussion-turned-brawl between Ricardo Arona and Wanderlei Silva at the Tokyo Hilton hotel in the eve of Pride 20 in 2002. The same event saw the first confrontation between both teams, matching Chute Boxe's representative Murílo "Ninja" Rua against BTT's Mário Sperry.[6][7] Competition between the two teams was hardly limited to the Pride scene however. Matches between fighters of the two organizations had taken place in Brazil, Portugal and other parts of the world before, but perhaps the most interesting chapter of the rivalry took place on August 28, 2005 at the 2005 PRIDE FC middle weight Grand Prix.

The 2005 PRIDE FC middleweight Grand Prix would be the first such competition for newcomers Mauricio Rua and BTT's Ricardo Arona. Both scored impressive victories over highly regarded veterans Alistair Overeem and middleweight champ Wanderlei Silva respectively. It was Arona's victory over the latter that would stoke the flames of the rivalry because until then Silva had been the torch-bearer for Chute Boxe. Later that night, however, “Shogun” would pick up the torch with a thoroughly dominating first-round KO of Arona, ultimately finishing him on the ground which was considered Arona's strength.

Another notable aspect of this period is that it shortly followed the departure of promising prospect Anderson Silva. Silva had noted several disputes with Chute Boxe's management as reasons for leaving the team and shortly began training with some of Brazilian Top Team's best in the Nogueira brothers. He was quoted in an ESPN article as stating that friendships formed with his former rivals helped to save his career upon his departure from Chute Boxe. [8]

Post-Pride era edit

With the demise of PRIDE FC in late 2007, coinciding with the departure of its first mass-appeal superstar Wanderlei Silva around the same time, Chute Boxe entered a new era. Moreover, the Rua brothers, Mauricio and Murilo, and Andre "Dida" Amade, also departed Chute Boxe to start their own gym. One of the top instructors, Rafael Cordeiro, also left around that time to found his own gym in the US, Kings MMA.[9] However, up and coming fighters, such as lightweight Jean Silva, have augmented their talent. In addition, fighter Evangelista Santos has recently competed in Strikeforce as well as his ex-wife, female fighter Cristiane "Cyborg" Santos, who is currently Chute Boxe's most marketable fighter.[10]

In 2018 UFC fighter Charles "do Bronx" Oliveira joined Chute Boxe Diego Lima in São Paulo[11] starting a 10-fight win streak.[12] According to him, his former gym Macaco Gold Team (headed by Jorge "Macaco" Patino, a Chute Boxe alumni) was mostly focused BJJ with complementary striking, and he felt he needed to improve his striking game. Patino is still his BJJ coach but now he is complemented with Chute Boxe's aggressive Muay Thai style.[13] In 2021 he became the UFC Lightweight Champion after defeating Michael Chandler with a T.K.O.[14]

Notable Chute Boxe fighters edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Grant, T. P. (2012-06-25). "MMA Origins: Muay Thai Emerges". Bloody Elbow. Retrieved 2022-07-07.
  2. ^ "Foreign invasion: Some familiar faces are ready for action at UFC". SI.com. 2007-07-02. Retrieved 2007-09-03.
  3. ^ "História no Brasil – CBMT". cbmt.com.br. Retrieved 2021-11-18.
  4. ^ Albuquerque, Por Adriano; Barone, Marcelo; Curitiba, Marcelo Russio e Raphael MarinhoDireto de. "Especial Chute Boxe, a equipe que fez Curitiba se tornar a Tailândia brasileira". sportv.globo.com/site/combate (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2021-11-18.
  5. ^ "The Evolution of Muay Thai | Thailand, Japan, Holland and Brazil". Diesel Gym. 2021-07-20. Retrieved 2022-07-07.
  6. ^ staff, MMAmicks (2015-08-12). "Chute Boxe vs BTT: Pride FC's The Ultimate Original Rivalry". mmamicks.com. Retrieved 2022-07-10.
  7. ^ "Relembre: em 2002, rivalidade BTT x Chute Boxe atingia seu ápice, com Minotauro chorando após duelo entre Murilo Ninja e Zé Mario Sperry - TATAME". tatame.com.br (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2021-01-12. Retrieved 2022-07-10.
  8. ^ "Silva not fazed by fighting in Franklin's home town". ESPN/Sherdog. 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-16.
  9. ^ "– 20 YEARS IN, RAFAEL CORDEIRO EXITS CHUTE BOXE | MMAWeekly.com". 2009-04-19. Retrieved 2022-07-07.
  10. ^ "The State of Chute Boxe, Gleidson Venga". Sherdog. 2009-02-02. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  11. ^ Cruz, Guilherme (2018-09-25). "Charles Oliveira says he's a 'legend' after breaking Royce Gracie's UFC record". MMA Fighting. Retrieved 2021-11-18.
  12. ^ "Charles Oliveira ("do Bronx") | MMA Fighter Page". Tapology. Retrieved 2021-12-22.
  13. ^ Future MMA 7 - Connected - Episódio 17 - Charles do Bronx, retrieved 2021-12-22
  14. ^ Anderson, Jay (2021-05-16). "UFC 262 Results: Charles Oliveira Stuns Michael Chandler to Claim Lightweight Title". Cageside Press. Retrieved 2021-11-18.
  15. ^ Feira, Segunda (September 20, 2008). "Wanderlei: No fight with Shogun no money". Tatame News. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved September 4, 2007.