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The Gi Spot Podcast
The Gi Spot Podcast
Author: Kaz Page, Rachael Bradshaw
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© Kaz Page, Rachael Bradshaw
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Welcome to The Gi Spot Podcast, where hosts Rach and Kaz talk all things Jiu Jitsu from deep diving into serious universal topics to sharing hilarious stories and personal anecdotes.
Together, they break down Jiu Jitsu for everyone—from the most experienced grapplers to those just starting out. With world-class guests, brutally honest conversations, and a laugh-a-minute dynamic, this duo serves up the sport in a way you’ve never heard before.
TGSP is depth, honesty, chaos, comedy, and Kaz swearing like a sailor on a sugar high.
Together, they break down Jiu Jitsu for everyone—from the most experienced grapplers to those just starting out. With world-class guests, brutally honest conversations, and a laugh-a-minute dynamic, this duo serves up the sport in a way you’ve never heard before.
TGSP is depth, honesty, chaos, comedy, and Kaz swearing like a sailor on a sugar high.
88 Episodes
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You’re injured. Work is chaos. Kids arrived. Life is throwing heel hooks and you tapped early.So what happens to your jiu-jitsu when you’re not actually doing jiu-jitsu?In this episode of The Gi Spot, we dive into the uncomfortable but universal grappler experience: being forced off the mats. Whether it’s a blown knee, a newborn baby, burnout, or just life doing life things, most practitioners hit a stretch where training consistently just isn’t possible.We talk about:The mental side of being sidelinedWhy people disappear from the sport completelyWays to stay connected to the game even when you can’t trainStudying matches, coaching, drilling light, or just staying in the gym ecosystemAvoiding the “I’ll come back when I’m fit again” trapBecause in jiu-jitsu, the biggest danger isn’t the injury —it’s drifting away long enough that returning feels impossible.Even when you can’t roll, you can still keep a toe in the game.
In this episode of The Gi Spot, Rach and Kaz tackle a truth every grappler eventually meets — whether you’re white belt enthusiastic or black belt battle-worn.Injury isn’t a possibility in jiu-jitsu. It’s a certainty.This isn’t fear-mongering — it’s reality. If you train long enough, hard enough, or even just consistently enough, something will tweak, tear, strain or snap. The question isn’t if. It’s when — and how you respond.Rach brings the perspective of a full-time instructor watching bodies cycle through setbacks and comebacks. Kaz brings the athlete lens — ego bruises, actual bruises, and the mental spiral that follows time off the mat.Together they unpack the psychology of injury, the culture around “toughing it out,” the difference between resilience and recklessness, and how to train for longevity in a sport that rewards intensity.Because surviving jiu-jitsu isn’t about avoiding injury forever.It’s about building a game — and a mindset — that survives it.
In this world-first roundtable episode of The Gi Spot, Rach and Kaz bring together three academy leaders — not to debate territory, but to redefine it.In studio:Grant & Rachel Bradshaw from Iconic Jiu Jitsu Academy,Brian Lewis & John MacAleer from House of Water Jiu Jitsu and Other Musings,and Peter Jackson from Nura Brazilian Jiu Jitsu Academy.This isn’t an episode about who has the biggest competition team or the loudest Instagram presence. It’s a deep dive into what leadership in jiu-jitsu looks like in 2026.The team explores a growing shift in academy ownership — one built on confidence without ego, curiosity without insecurity, and collaboration without territorial nonsense.Cross-training is encouraged. Doors are open. The mindset is simple: we can’t help everyone — but we’ll help you find someone who can.No peacocking. No mat politics. No bar-storming bravado.Just grappling — and building awesome people into even more awesome people.This isn’t just a conversation about running academies.It’s a marker of a new era in jiu-jitsu.
In this episode of The Gi Spot, Rach and Kaz sit down with Cerys Finch, creator of the Artemis Grappling Challenge, for a conversation that goes beyond brackets and medals.While unpacking the origin and vision behind Artemis, the team also address some of the harder conversations shaping the sport right now — including the recent increase in members of the grappling community coming forward with allegations of sexual assault and misconduct.Rather than sensationalising headlines, this episode explores what accountability, leadership, and athlete safety should look like in 2026. How do we build competitions — and communities — that prioritise integrity as much as performance? What responsibility do event organisers, coaches, and teammates carry? And how can grassroots initiatives like Artemis contribute to safer, more transparent environments?Cerys speaks candidly about creating intentional spaces in jiu-jitsu, the cultural shifts required for real change, and why representation in leadership matters now more than ever.This is a conversation about sport — but it’s also about culture, courage, and the kind of future we’re willing to fight for.
In this special episode of The Gi Spot, Rach and Kaz hand the mics back to their long-suffering and much-loved partners: Grant (Rach’s husband) and Producer Matt (Kaz’s husband and behind-the-scenes wrangler of audio chaos).Together, the crew reflects on the year that was — from highs and chokes to those “why am I still doing this?” moments — and set their sights on what 2026 might hold.Whether it’s dealing with comp prep nerves, evolving gym culture, or training while juggling life/kids/work/bodies that don’t always cooperate, this is a conversation full of insight, a few spicy takes, and many laughs.Think of it as the end-of-year roundtable you didn’t know you needed: four people, one shared obsession with the mat, and wildly different coping strategies.
Listen in for the second instalment of Chantelle's powerful story.
In this two part episode the team sit down and chat with Female Black Belt, Shantelle Thompson, a proud Barkindji and Ngyampaa woman, celebrated as a world‑class athlete, community advocate, mother of five and recipient of the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for her service to Victoria’s Indigenous community.She began training in Brazilian Jiu‑Jitsu in 2011 initially as a way to manage post‑natal depression and quickly rose through the ranks to become a three‑time Brazilian Jiu‑Jitsu world champion — known as the “Barkindji Warrior.”Shantelle has also achieved success in wrestling competition and was recognised as the 2019 National NAIDOC Sportsperson of the Year, highlighting her impact beyond BJJ.Apart from athletic achievements, Shantelle has been a powerful voice for self‑determination, mental health and cultural empowerment, founding programs such as the Kiilalaana (Growth) initiative to support young Indigenous women through leadership, life skills and empowerment programs.Her work spans storytelling, mentorship, cultural teaching and community activism — all deeply rooted in breaking cycles of trauma and creating pathways for First Nations people and women in sport.
It’s a new year, the mats are packed, and your gym just got a fresh crop of hopeful, stiff, terrified new grapplers. In this episode of The Gi Spot, co-hosts Rach and Kaz take aim at the all-too-familiar churn of New Year’s resolutioners — and what we, as teammates, coaches, and community members, can actually do to help them stick around.Instead of mocking January joiners or letting them sink in the deep end of positional sparring despair, Rach (as a full-time coach) and Kaz (as someone who survived her own clumsy start) break down the mindset, language, and actions that help beginners go from “just trying it out” to “I’m in.”From gym culture to partner behavior, expectation management to subtle signals that scream “you don’t belong here,” this episode is a guide for everyone who wants their team to grow — not just in numbers, but in real connection.Because keeping new people isn't about coddling them. It's about recognising what it takes to be brave enough to start, and not making that harder than it already is.
In this special year-end episode of The Gi Spot, co-hosts Rach and Kaz look back on the year that was 2025 — revisiting their favourite guests, best conversations, most unhinged moments, and all the unexpected gold that came out of interviews, mat chat, and shared chaos.From deep dives with legends and competitors to raw conversations with everyday grapplers and behind-the-scenes mat brains, 2025 was full of voices that challenged, inspired, and occasionally roasted us into being better.Rach and Kaz reflect on the lessons, the laughs, and the episodes that hit hardest — plus they each pick the guest that made them see the sport, the culture, or themselves a little differently.If you’ve been along for the ride, this one’s a chance to celebrate it all. If you’re new to the pod, consider this your highlight reel (and maybe your gateway drug to the full back catalogue).Cheers to the rolls, the rants, the real talk — and to whatever madness 2026 has planned.
In this episode of The Gi Spot, co-hosts Rach and Kaz dive headfirst into the unspoken rules of gym etiquette — and say the things your coach wishes they could without starting a mutiny.Whether it’s hogging rolls, ignoring hygiene, rolling like it’s ADCC finals with a white belt, or doing that thing where you explain a move mid-round — this episode breaks down the 10 fastest ways to be labelled a dick in training (and how to stop doing them).Rach brings the coach’s eye for repeated offences, while Kaz channels the every-student experience of navigating egos, chaos, and cluelessness. It’s blunt, it’s funny, and it’s probably going to make a few people sweat — and not from the warm-up.If you train BJJ and you want to be someone people actually want to roll with, this episode is your much-needed mirror.
In this episode of The Gi Spot, Rach and Kaz rip the tape off one of the biggest misconceptions in BJJ: that just showing up is enough to get better.It’s not.Whether you're hitting four classes a week or barely squeezing in one, how you train matters more than how often. Rach — a full-time instructor — and Kaz — full-time student of chaos — break down 10 sharp, practical, and occasionally uncomfortable truths about how to make your training actually stick.From mindset shifts and partner dynamics to feedback culture and post-class reflection, this is the ultimate guide to making your hours on the mat actually mean something.Whether you're a fresh white belt or a purple belt in a plateau, this episode is your roadmap to training with intent and progressing on purpose.
In this episode of The Gi Spot, co-hosts Rach and Kaz dig into a topic most people think they’re nailing — but probably aren’t: how to actually get the most out of your coach.From Rach’s side of the mat, this is about more than drilling hard and asking questions — it’s about being coachable, building real trust, and showing your coach that you’re serious about improving. From Kaz’s corner, it’s about what it feels like to be on the receiving end of great coaching — and what you can do to make it happen more often.Together, they lay out 10 clear, sometimes blunt, always practical ways to deepen that coach–student relationship. Expect tips on communication, mindset, mat etiquette, and the kind of self-awareness that gets you noticed for the rightreasons.Whether you train twice a week or you’re chasing comp medals, this episode will help you become the kind of athlete a coach wants to build with — not just correct mid-roll.
In this episode of The Gi Spot, Kaz puts a microscope (and maybe a rear naked choke) on something most grapplers take for granted: their training partner.Whether you’re stuck with a spazzing white belt or blessed with a seasoned black belt, who you train with — and howyou engage them — shapes your progress. But are you actually making the most of those precious rolls and drills?This episode lays out 10 strategic, and sometimes uncomfortable, ways to turn every partner into an opportunity — without being manipulative, annoying, or dead weight. We cover everything from setting micro-goals during rolls to communicating boundaries, asking the right questions, and yes, how to stop just going through the motions.Whether you’re a seasoned shark or a fresh-out-the-packet blue belt, this one’s packed with real advice, gym wisdom, and the occasional jab at That Guy who only shows up for open mat and breaks your rib.
In this episode of The Gi Spot, Kaz strips back the fluff and lays out 10 high‑impact ways to extract more from every training session — whether you’re showing up twice a week or chasing gold. From mindset shifts to behind‑the‑scenes tweaks, we cover how to turn time on the mat into genuine progress. Expect blunt truth, real‑life stories from the gym, a few laughs, and one or two uncomfortable insights (because growth doesn’t come from comfort zones).We dive into things like: how to show up (not just physically), how to roll with purpose instead of going through the motions, how sleep + recovery matter more than you think, how to set micro‑goals between classes, how your non‑training life affects that 90 minutes on the mat — and a whole lot more.Whether you’re a white belt still learning what the hell “kimura” means or a seasoned belt wondering why you’ve hit a plateau, this episode gives you actionable tools to get more out of your gi time. Lace up, warm up, roll on.
Kaz and Rach catch up with Kari Summers and Mendi Carlson, the unstoppable forces behind the Unbreakable Jiu-Jitsu Women’s Grappling Camp, landing in DFW on February 6, 2026.This episode is a pulse-check on where women’s jiu-jitsu is right now — and where it’s going when women build the space themselves.The crew dives into:The story behind Unbreakable: why they started it, who it’s for, and what it’s already changed.What to expect at the 2026 camp: the vibe, the training, the bonds, and the brutal honesty.Creating safety without softness: empowering women without watering down the grind.The shifting role of women in BJJ culture — from token roles to titleholders.How the camp fights burnout, gatekeeping, and toxic bro‑culture one roll at a time.It’s inspiring, hilarious, a bit spicy, and full of the kind of insight you only get when women run the room. If you care about the future of jiu-jitsu, you’ll want to be part of this conversation.To learn more about these two "Unbreakable" powerhouses, or to organise a camp in your area, reach out to the ladies here: https://unbreakable-bjj.com/ @kari_genesisbjj@mendicarlsonbjj@unbreakable
In this episode, Kaz and Rach take a scalpel to one of jiu-jitsu’s most sacred — and absurdly inconsistent — rituals: the awarding of stripes. Are they meaningful milestones or psychological pacifiers? The debate is on.They break down:The history of stripes: who started this, and why?Global inconsistency: why getting your 4th stripe in one gym is equal to a blue belt elsewhere.The emotional weight: how stripes boost ego, crush hope, or keep students from quitting.The dark side: favoritism, performative promotions, and the culty reward system.Kids vs. adults vs. competitors — are stripes just one-size-fits-all dopamine?When not getting a stripe becomes more powerful than getting one.This one’s part roast, part real talk — and maybe, just maybe, part therapy session.
Kaz and Rach get gritty with the archetype of the Mat Enforcer — that gym legend who doles out order, humbles the arrogant, and keeps the culture “in check”… or maybe just enjoys being the hammer. In this episode, they break down:The origins of the Mat Enforcer in old-school BJJ gyms and MMA fight camps.Are they guardians of gym respect or relics of a toxic past?Stories of legendary enforcers (and wannabes who got checked themselves).The ethical line: teaching lessons vs. taking liberties.How modern gyms handle spazzes, ego, and inter-gym beefs without going full warlord.The psychology of enforcers: protector, predator, or just another blue belt with issues?Should we mourn the death of the enforcer—or be glad it's dying?Expect real stories, conflicting views, and enough shade to choke out an ego.
Kaz and Rach sit down with Grant Bradshaw and Matt Page, both of whom have experience in the area from two absolutely opposites entry points — from testosterone therapy to the darker corners of performance-enhancing drug use in BJJ and beyond. This episode gets real about:TRT: myths, realities, and what the average guy needs to know.PEDs in jiu-jitsu: who's doing what, how it's done, and the unspoken codes of silence.Natural vs. enhanced: the physical, psychological, and competitive consequences.Social stigma: how juicing gets judged, who’s quietly doing it, and how transparency could shift the sport.Hormonal optimization: what “healthy male” even means anymore in an era of low-T memes and supplement scammers.Testing protocols (or lack thereof) in BJJ and what that means for gym culture.Honest, unfiltered, and maybe a bit uncomfortable — this is the hormone episode you didn’t know you needed.
In this episode of Gi Spot, Kaz and Rach welcome James Driskill — a direct student in the Rickson Gracie lineage, a practitioner whose career bridges old‑school philosophy and modern BJJ realities. They dig into:James’s journey: from early training, earning ranks, crossing paths with old legends, and developing his own voice on the mats.The Ricksonian philosophy: control, breathing, “invisible” movement, mind‑body connection, lineage secrets.How to bridge traditional BJJ values and today’s competitive environment.Stories unseen: sparring with legends, dark moments, injuries, setbacks, perseverance.Tactical insight: how James sees the next frontier in gi jiu‑jitsu — subtle grips, posture, energy use.Advice for listeners: how to internalize lineage, respect both art & sport, and evolve without losing soul.This one is part history, part roadmap, part personal confession. If you’re serious about the depth of jiu‑jitsu (not just the highlights), this is your episode.Wanna check out some of James Work with Rickson?https://www.skool.com/defendyourself/about?ref=184bf67698164e508b96342709c5b7df
In this episode of The Gi Spot, Kaz and Rach reconnect with longtime friends and show superfans Grant Barlow and Jenniffer Skylas — founders of the Wollongong holistic Jiu-Jitsu studio, Synergy Method.They chart the path from big-box gym frustrations to creating a space where movement, recovery, nutrition, and mindset come together. Grant, a BJJ black belt and head coach, and Jenniffer, a wellness & mind-body coach as well as BJJ Black belt, open up about building a coaching identity, balancing business, family and students, and how they bring the “science behind every move” into their teaching.Tune in for a candid conversation about building culture, resisting toxic fitness norms, keeping fire in your training, and what it really takes to fuse martial art with holistic health.https://synergymethod.com.au/https://www.facebook.com/synergymethodhttps://www.instagram.com/synergymethod/























