Professor Scott Burr on Radical Accountability and Training with Rickson Gracie
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Host Pete Deeley interviews Professor Scott Burr on how jiu-jitsu shaped his life by enforcing radical accountability, honesty, and responsibility for results. Burr describes coming from a traditional Korean striking art through MMA into Jiu-Jitsu, valuing its endless depth and continuous intellectual challenge, similar to writing. He explains his learning style as principle-driven, needing clear parameters and an overview before rapid improvement, and notes turning points like suddenly applying armbar concepts. Professor Burr discusses adding judo later to improve getting fights to the ground, and reflects on a painful but instructive amateur MMA loss that included a quick guillotine and revealed training blind spots. He says he learned most from strong, inexperienced opponents and details transformative training with Rickson Gracie, shifting from logic-based technique to sensitivity and a new "operating system."
00:00 Welcome and Guest Intro
00:51 Life Without Jiu Jitsu
02:26 Radical Accountability
05:03 How He Found Jiu Jitsu
06:10 Endless Rabbit Holes
08:33 Work Ethic Over Talent
10:38 Principles First Learning
12:40 Judo and Takedown Gaps
16:50 Overwhelm and True North
17:41 Traumatic Fight Lessons
20:19 Training Room Blind Spots
21:29 Memorable Rolls Question
22:31 Learning From Tough Rounds
22:54 MMA Reality Check
24:17 Strong Guy Lessons
25:45 Why Control Matters
27:16 Training With Hixson
29:06 New Operating System
32:52 Prereqs And Timing
34:34 Beyond Logic To Sensitivity
38:03 Invisible Jiu Jitsu
39:07 Stories And Signoff