Ivan Gomes

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BornIvan Simão da Cunha
(1939-12-25)December 25, 1939
Campina Grande, Brazil
DiedMarch 2, 1990(1990-03-02) (aged 50)
Campina Grande, Brazil
Kidney failure
Other names"El Samurai" ("The Samurai")
Height5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Ivan Gomes
BornIvan Simão da Cunha
(1939-12-25)December 25, 1939
Campina Grande, Brazil
DiedMarch 2, 1990(1990-03-02) (aged 50)
Campina Grande, Brazil
Kidney failure
Other names"El Samurai" ("The Samurai")
Height5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Weight246 lb (112 kg; 17 st 8 lb)
StyleBoxing, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Judo
Years active1954–1977

Ivan Simão da Cunha Gomes (December 25, 1939 - March 2, 1990) was a Brazilian vale tudo fighter and professional wrestler.

Born in Fazenda das Lajes in Campina Grande, Gomes was expected to become a cowboy like his father, but he started a career in martial arts after meeting coach Tatá. Along with his brothers José and Jaildo, Ivan trained in boxing and a few notions of "jiu-jitsu" (a name for judo in Brazil at the time).[1] He trained formally in the latter art under Agatangelo Braga and his brother-in-law Osmar "Builson" Mouzinho de Oliveira, trainees of judoka Takeo Yano,[2] and also learned under grappler José María Freire, a Brazilian jiu-jitsu expert from the George Gracie lineage.[3] Gomes, who was a black belt under Braga at 21,[3] also polished further his orthodox judo skills with Hayashi Kawamura in Recife and Masayoshi "Massaioshi" Saito in Belém do Pará.[1] He started his vale tudo career shortly after.

Vale tudo career

Gomes gained popularity in the late 1950s, signing up with a televised show named Ringues Torres that covered the northeast of Brazil, and later moving to another show named Bolsa ao Vencedor.[3] Gomes dominated the competition through the years, eventually leading to a high-profile match against Carlson Gracie from the notorious Gracie family in 1963. They fought on December 28 in Recife, in a fight in which Gomes supposedly had an advantage of almost 50 pounds. Gomes dominated Gracie, throwing him and taking him down multiple times and hitting ground and pound, while Carlson waited for him to get tired to build an offense.[4] The match ended in a draw, although witnesses and specialized press were unanimous Gomes was the better man.[1]

After the fight, Carlson complained about the rules, driving Gomes to propose a rematch. The Gracie family promised to concede it if Gomes managed to defeat Juarez Ferreira in Rio de Janeiro, but although Gomes did so, knocking Ferreira out with kata guruma in less of a minute, the rematch was never granted. Instead, the Gracies offered Gomes to open an academy together with Carlson, with the condition Gomes would never challenge them again.[3] In November 1965, due to the presence of Anton Geesink and several famous judoka in Brazil, the Gracies challenged them, claiming the superiority of Brazilian jiu-jitsu over judo and offering Gomes and Carlson to fight to prove it, but they were ignored.[1]

However, the partnership with the Gracies dissolved shortly after. His brother José described the situation as:

"[Ivan] didn't learn anything there. Reality is, he taught them a whole lot. People often ask me if we learned from the Gracies. I always say, everything we know came from the Japanese. Geo Omori, Takeo Yano, the Ono brothers, etc. Carlos and Hélio didn't invent a thing. The best Gracie out there was George Gracie, by a landslide. He left the Gracies to train mainly under Yano, and the Ono brothers. He was the true family champion."[3]

In 1968, after handing the academy to his brother Jaildo, Gomes returned to Campina Grande and resumed his vale tudo career, meeting fighters like Waldemar Santana and Euclides Pereira. In 1974, he opened another school there to teach his style of BJJ.

Professional wrestling career

Legacy and death

References

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