Leo Frincu Discusses His Pupil Ronda Rousey and High-Performance Mentality

Behind every amazingly talented and successful person is usually a team of support. Ronda Rousey is no exception, and one of the many people behind the UFC Bantamweight Women’s champion is Leo Frincu.The 36-year-old is a wrestler-turned-trainer and lif…

Behind every amazingly talented and successful person is usually a team of support. Ronda Rousey is no exception, and one of the many people behind the UFC Bantamweight Women’s champion is Leo Frincu.

The 36-year-old is a wrestler-turned-trainer and life coach from Romania. Much of his early life was marked by the struggles of living under a communist government. 

He overcame that and poverty to achieve success as a wrestler. He won six Romanian Wrestling Championships and several international gold medals. Frincu also went on to win the World Championship in 1994 at the age of 18.

Now he is a renowned trainer, with Rousey being the most commercially successful of his athletes.

I had an opportunity to talk to him about his clients, his philosophy on the right mental approach and his book.

 

Brian Mazique: Many know you best for your work with Ronda Rousey, but you work with a lot of athletes, correct?

 

Leo Frincu: I work with predominantly MMA and Jiu-Jitsu guys. However, I don’t stop there. I work with swimmers, tennis players and other sports. But my favorites are combat sports. As a former wrestler, they just come more naturally for me.

 

BM: When you do work with other athletes, are you working with them on defense or combat techniques?

 

LF: Well, as we all know, our physical aspect and our body is controlled by our brain. The mental aspect is one of my primary focuses with my athletes. I help them understand themselves better. I help them attain their highest potential.

 

BM: Basically, you’re helping them get the most out of what they have.

 

LF: Exactly. The more you drive a car, the better you know what the car is capable of. I help them uncover their true potential.

 

BM: You have quite the impressive history of wrestling yourself, and an interesting backstory. I understand you’ve written a book that talks about your accomplishments as well as some of your early struggles.

What’s the title of the book and what is it about?

 

LF: It’s called Choosing Freedom: A Journey of Determination, Setting Goals and Achieving Success (read more about the book here). If I can put this book into a paragraph, I’d say it is a book that turns into a life-changing experience.

It’s not a normal read. It’s a multi-dimensional paragon of one’s quest for their ultimate goal.

It is for those that enjoy a great story, for example, or those that want to rise above status quo and believe they deserve better. The book will provide people with tools for self-reflection.

 

BM: It sounds great. It sounds as though it doubles as a self-help utensil and a way to tell your story. It is designed to draw correlation between any one person’s struggles and the ones you overcame.

 

LF: Yes, people grow up thinking they are free. But most of us are trapped in a spiral of wrong decisions based on others’ expectations or the burdens of our past.

If we don’t know who we really are, the more decisions we make distance us from our life purpose and the person we’re meant to be.

Choosing Freedom will take you on my emotional journey, and hopefully it will ignite something in the reader to chase their personal emotional freedom.

 

BM: You’re still a very young man who has accomplished a lot in athletics, as a writer, coach, etc. Of all the things you’ve done, what are you most proud of?

 

LF: I’m most proud of finding a purpose. Everyone struggles to find a life purpose; I’m very proud I’ve found a direction and a life meaning. It’s bigger than myself. My goal is to reach out to others and help them find their purpose.

 

BM: Are there other current athletes you’re working with currently, aside from Ronda Rousey?

 

LF: Yes, I’m currently working with Romulo Barral, a Jiu-Jitsu world champion several times. There’s also someone who I believe is going to be one of the up-and-coming stars in MMA: Ronda’s best friend Marina [Shafir].

She’s at the start of her career and doing very well.

The philosophy that I’m preaching is called high-performance mentality. Everything I’m telling you is about finding your goal that will pull you higher; something that you generate that will become your mantra or your religion.

I train these people. For example, Ronda, I took her to the top of her game to become the best in her field. And then I get Barral, who hasn’t lost a fight since last June when I started with him.

This thing is so powerful. It brings the best out of you.

 

BM: When a fighter comes to you, how does the relationship happen? Is it by reference?

 

LF: It’s mostly by reference.

Someone will say, “Hey Leo, can you take a look at this person?” For example, someone said, “Can you take a look at Ronda?” I trained her a couple times and could easily see she has what it takes. Not a lot of people have what it takes to do this.

 

BM: I know you mentioned Marina, and you’ve been training her for a while. Do you see her moving into the UFC anytime in the near future?

 

LF: Yes, yesterday I had like an “ah-ha” moment.

She has a really clear view of her life and her goals and how she’s going to reach them. She has a good chance to become the greatest. She has the resources to reach her highest potential and she’s smart enough to realize she can grow.

 

BM: I hear you’re high on her. You said she has potential to be the greatest. Do you think she has more potential than Ronda?

 

LF: Well, when Ronda came, she had a clue. She had been to the Olympics. She had a clue of what it takes. Marina has a hunger for knowledge and that is rare.

She’s like a sponge. Ronda didn’t really have that, but Marina is just solid and thirsty, and that’s a great quality in an athlete.

 

BM: [Laughing] How does she defend the armbar?

 

LF: Well, it’s funny. Ronda’s got the armbar, but they are in a different weight class, so that’s not really an issue. But she has the strength. She’s so strong, and that will be her skill that no one else has.

 

BM: It’s funny, someone asked me after the Rousey-Carmouche bout, “What’s it going to take for someone to beat Ronda?”

I understand anyone is beatable, but at Ronda’s weight class, I just don’t know if there is another woman that strikes well enough to get past her grappling.

At 135 pounds, I don’t think there is a good enough striker to stop her. Do you agree?

 

LF: With me, I’m an athlete like Ronda. She learned the armbar since she was six years old. That has become her skill and part of her identity.

With Ronda against Miesha Tate, she (Tate) looked like a school girl. Although, she was really bragging about her takedown skills, but what happened when she was under so much pressure? She withdrew to a place that was empty.

For Ronda in this place she goes to her judo. A striker may be talented in striking or whatever, but that doesn’t withstand the pressure from fans and whatever. The sport is so new and it’s like a marathon, and Ronda is already at the 20th mile and the other competitors have just started running.

It’s too much of a deficit.

 

BM: In a lot of ways she’s writing the script for what it takes to be a dominant female MMA fighter. You’re correct it is the training, but there is also a mental edge. It shined through in some of the tough moments against Liz Carmouche.

 

LF: Yes, when you go into the cage, it’s one thing to be afraid of losing, but when you’re afraid of getting hurt, that’s the biggest fear.

That fear is so much deeper and it will alter the performance. So when you go there, you’re not going there to win, you’re going there to prevent yourself from getting hurt. And guess what? The corner is reinforcing that fear.

They’re telling her, “Be scared, stay away from the armbar, stay standing.” The corner is telling her to run away. In an athlete’s head, that messes everything up.

 

BM: Yes, Ronda’s armbar has garnered so much mystique. It seems people are battling not just Ronda, but they are also battling the legend of the armbar.

 

LF: I mean when you’re afraid to extend your arm because you’re afraid it’s going to get broken, how are you going to perform or throw a punch? You’re not going to perform to the best of your abilities.

When someone has nothing in their history, the opponent can go out there without all the layers.

 

BM: Now, I’m looking at the book you’ve written and the athletic accomplishments. What else do you want the readers to know?

 

LF: One thing. The message I want to send out is that most people are not aware of their comfort zone. I think that’s a big mistake that people make when they try to improve themselves.

Once you experience it, to acknowledge it and believe in it, you can then use it as a platform to reach your highest potential.

 

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Georges St. Pierre vs. Nick Diaz: GSP’s Easy Win Should Kill Rivalry

Nick Diaz talked the talk, but he failed miserably in attempting to walk the walk. Welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre scored an easy win over Diaz in the main event at UFC 158, and the so-called rivalry is dead.Rivalries exist when there are two …

Nick Diaz talked the talk, but he failed miserably in attempting to walk the walk. Welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre scored an easy win over Diaz in the main event at UFC 158, and the so-called rivalry is dead.

Rivalries exist when there are two competitors of equal or similar talent, and that clearly isn’t the case with GSP and Diaz. The champion dominated the challenger for five rounds to the delight of the crowd at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

In the Octagon, Diaz tried to taunt, he threw a punch after the bell, and he talked more trash, but in the end, he lost.

GSP didn’t just out-class Diaz in the Octagon; even his post-fight interview was handled better. He gave Diaz tons of credit for being a great fighter, and he even unsuccessfully asked the pro-GSP crowd to give Diaz a hand.

When Diaz took the mic, he claimed he didn’t want to make excuses, but predictably delivered a few. He mentioned being rusty after being out of action for a year.

He referred to GSP‘s attacks rather dismissively and continued with the persona that makes him one of the more disliked fighters in the sport.

Diaz even said he would probably retire. We’ll miss you…not really.

The UFC can now move on to the fight that should have taken place on Saturday. Johny Hendricks defeated Carlos Condit in a spectacular fight in the co-main event, and now Hendricks is in line for his long-awaited shot at the title.

Diaz talked his way into this title shot despite coming off a loss and a drug suspension (Yahoo! Sports), and that never sat well with me.

I’m happy to see GSP and the UFC hopefully move on to a bout that makes sense from a fighting standpoint. This main event was based on trash talk that Diaz obviously couldn’t back up.

 

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UFC 158 Weigh In: High Tension Before Bout Will Create Electric Fight Atmosphere

The weigh in for the UFC 158 main event featuring Georges St. Pierre and Nick Diaz didn’t escalate into a brawl, but you didn’t need to be in the room to feel the tension.The combination of competitiveness between top-level fighters, Diaz’s insults and…

The weigh in for the UFC 158 main event featuring Georges St. Pierre and Nick Diaz didn’t escalate into a brawl, but you didn’t need to be in the room to feel the tension.

The combination of competitiveness between top-level fighters, Diaz‘s insults and accusations (ESPN) and a raucous crowd is creating an explosive fight atmosphere.

Though many of Diaz‘s comments and claims seem juvenile and inappropriate, they have ignited the hype for the fight.

The weigh-in on Friday only stoked the flames.

UFC President Dana White was firmly between the two welterweights as they posed for the customary fight picture, and he probably needed to be. Check out the video below:

Both men are in tremendous shape physically, and that only adds to the intrigue for the fight.

As the champion, GSP got on the scale last, but you can see after he put on his pants and shoes, he aggressively walked towards Diaz, and White was there to prevent any premature fisticuffs.

The bad blood is real between these two men, and even though they’re professionals (well at least one of them is) when emotions are running this high, it is hard to say what can and can’t happen.

Though GSP is destined to be the crowd favorite at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on Saturday night, you could certainly hear some cheers mixed in with the boos for Diaz.

The overall response was so loud that you couldn’t hear much of what he was saying during his interview with Joe Rogan. Perhaps that could be a good thing, as he has already said enough to draw the ire of the champion.

GSP never genuinely seems to lack motivation, but he figures to be riding higher than ever for this one. Diaz has taken shots at him from almost every angle, and it appears he doesn’t just want to defeat Diaz, he wants to beat him up.

Any one that has followed Diaz‘s career knows, he is truly one of the 10 best fighters in the world, so beating him up is no easy task. GSP will need to be at his best to punish Diaz, and from the looks of him at the weigh in, the physical aspect is in order.

It’s almost time to put the talk and personas to rest and let Octagon skills dictate the result.

 

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UFC 158: Latest Odds and Predictions for Tonight’s Huge Card

The Georges St. Pierre-Nick Diaz main event at UFC 158 is one of the biggest fights of the year, and no matter what is signed for the remainder of 2013, it will likely hold onto that status.When major UFC events like these come along, the betting and p…

The Georges St. Pierre-Nick Diaz main event at UFC 158 is one of the biggest fights of the year, and no matter what is signed for the remainder of 2013, it will likely hold onto that status.

When major UFC events like these come along, the betting and predictions increase, and UFC 158 is no exception. Of course, I have my own predictions. I believe GSP will win a decision over Diaz, and Stockton, Calif.’s pseudo bad boy will whine about how the world is against him, blah, blah, blah.

Here are the odds and predictions for the main event and other fights on the main card from others around the sport.

Odds in parentheses and per VegasInsider.com

 

Odds: Mike “The Martian” Ricci (-285) vs. Colin “Freakshow” Fletcher (+225)

John Heinis of Bleacher Report says:

Ricci is tough as nails and training at Tristar Gym with studs like Rory MacDonald and Georges St-Pierre will develop his skills quickly.

He is also much better at lightweight than at welterweight, but I still think Fletcher is just more well-rounded at this point in his career. 

Fletcher, Unanimous Decision

I Say:

Ricci‘s height neutralizes the normal height advantage Fletcher genuinely enjoys, and I think he wears him down for a late submission or decision victory.

 

Nick “The Promise” Ring (-130) vs. Chris Camozzi (EVEN)

Jeff Wagenheim of Sports Illustrated says:

Ring hasn’t fought since last summer, and wasn’t exactly a world beater in his last two bouts (one a slim victory). But his well-rounded game (muay Thai, jiu-jitsu and pro boxing on his resumé) will allow him to get the job done. 

Ring by decision.

I Say:

Ring has impressed me with his toughness every time I’ve seen him. It is true, he isn’t the most talented. But I expect this fight to go to the ground, and Ring has the superior Jiu-Jitsu game.

 

Jake “The Juggernaut” Ellenberger (-170) vs. Nate “The Great” Marquardt (+140)

David King of Yahoo! Sports says:

Nate was impressive in his welterweight debut against Tyron Woodley, and it wouldn’t be fair to judge him off his performance against Saffiedine — who was simply a bad matchup for him. Ellenberger doesn’t have the striking style to keep him at bay like Tarec did, so I expect Marquardt to redeem himself on Saturday.

Marquardt wins via TKO.

I Say:

Not sure which Ellenberger fights King has been watching, but The Juggernaut has plenty of pop in his punches. Perhaps he’s speaking of dexterity and quickness. 

Either way, I see this fight unraveling differently. I believe it will be an intense battle, but Ellenberger will come out on top.

 

Johny “Bigg Rigg” Hendricks (-145) vs. Carlos “Natural Born Killer” Condit (+115)

Damon Martin of Bleacher Report says:

Over the past few weeks, Hendricks has also gone on the record several times talking about his knockout power and how he doesn’t use his wrestling much any more.

That comes back to bite him this time if that truly is his approach. Condit is a nasty, rangy striker with phenomenal kicks. If Hendricks isn’t looking for the takedown, Condit can light him up with his feet.

Condit, TKO, Round 3

I Say:

I fully respect Condit‘s overall ability, but Hendricks is ready to become the sport’s next star. His amazing punching power has veiled his great wrestling ability.

Martin is just one of many that still doubt Hendricks. But on Saturday night, he’s going to make a believer out of everyone when he stops Condit in the second round.

 

Georges “Rush” St. Pierre (-500) vs. Nick Diaz (+350)

Robert Rousseau of About.com says:

Diaz, by rounds three or four, will begin to gain the advantage due to his cardio (assuming that St. Pierre will be unable to stop him). I think that this will likely put St. Pierre in danger on his feet, leaving him more tired than he has ever been before in a professional bout. So the next question- will he be able to survive the Diaz onslaught late in the fight? If so, St. Pierre will win by decision. If not…

Yep, I’m calling an upset that seems almost blasphemous. But he’s got to lose some time, right?

Nick Diaz defeats Georges St. Pierre by TKO in round five.

I Say:

I certainly applaud Rousseau for going against the grain, and I respect Diaz‘s skills and toughness. Rousseau makes some very good points as well, but I disagree with the theory.

Diaz is a better boxer, but I’m not totally convinced he’s a superior striker. It seems that much of Rousseau’s prediction is based on that notion.

GSP can be very unpredictable with kicks, superman punches and knees. It just so happens he likely has a predominant edge in grappling. I see GSP trading a bit on his feet to gain respect, but ultimately he takes Diaz to the mat.

GSP is not only a better wrestler, he’s physically much stronger than Diaz. The only thing that’s better than being technically superior than your opponent in a specific skill, is having them physically overpowered as well.

Diaz‘s only chance to win this fight is to catch GSP early on. Once he gets taken to the ground and sees how overmatched he is there, he will lose confidence and go through the motions.

I’ve got GSP by decision.

 

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UFC 158: Simulating Main Events With UFC Undisputed 3 Video Game

The featured bouts scheduled for UFC 158 at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada are packed with quality welterweights and big-time names in the sport of MMA.The main event features one of the all-time greats in welterweight champion Georges St….

The featured bouts scheduled for UFC 158 at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada are packed with quality welterweights and big-time names in the sport of MMA.

The main event features one of the all-time greats in welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre taking on Nick Diaz. The bad blood between these two men doesn’t appear to be fabricated or overblown for the sake of hyping a fight.

It seems the hatred is mutual and very real.

Combine the fact that both GSP and Diaz are amazingly talented and you have an especially intriguing bout setup for the main event.

The co-main event shouldn’t be overlooked either.

Johny Hendricks has been flattening top-level welterweights for the last two years, and if you ask me, he should be the one facing GSP on Saturday night, but that’s another story.

At any rate, watching Hendricks battle Carlos Condit is still an acceptable co-feature and should be a huge test for both men. It’s quite possible that we could see the winners of both these fights face each other very soon.

Many of us have our opinions on who will emerge victorious from these two exciting battles at 170 pounds. I see GSP and Hendricks coming out on top, and I’m sure there are MMA fans that favor Diaz and Condit.

But I thought it would be interesting (as usual) to see what the most current, and respected MMA simulation video game would predict with both matchups. I used THQ‘s UFC Undisputed 3 to simulate the fights.

This will be the final UFC game produced by THQ, the company filed bankruptcy, per the Los Angeles Times and the UFC license was one of the first to go. 

EA Sports will be producing UFC games moving forward, per USA TODAY.

Unfortunately, I had to use a created version of Johny Hendricks because he wasn’t included in the real game. That said, a gamer named Super Bat Begins created a pretty spot-on version of “Big Rigg for the community to download.

He didn’t have any ratings, so I had to add those in. 

I made sure he was extremely heavy-handed and a very solid wrestler. Here is how the simulation went:

As you can see, the game didn’t produce the results I predict will happen, but then again, it is possible a more authentically created Hendricks may have fared better.

As for the main event, take a look at the simulation of the bitter battle between GSP and Diaz:

According to UFC Undisputed 3, I will be wrong about the main event as well. Diaz out-fought GSP to take his belt. I can only imagine what the atmosphere would be like in the Bell Centre if that happens.

There is a ton at stake for GSP fighting for the title against a bitter rival and in front of his hometown crowd to boot.

Check out the real event on Saturday to see who’s right, man or machine?

 

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UFC 158: St-Pierre vs. Diaz Fight Card, TV Info, Predictions and More

It may be sad to say, but it’s true, UFC main events are better when the two combatants have a disdain for one another. This is certainly the case for UFC 158 as welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre and challenger Nick Diaz will have no problem fin…

It may be sad to say, but it’s true, UFC main events are better when the two combatants have a disdain for one another. This is certainly the case for UFC 158 as welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre and challenger Nick Diaz will have no problem finding their game faces on Saturday night.

In a conference call conducted to hype the main event, the two fighters had quite the exchange. Though the entire conference call was quite edgy, this particular segment began when a reporter asked GSP if he was pampered.

Here is the excerpt per Sherdog

Diaz interrupted with this profane bark:

I hope so, motherf—–. If I had that much money, I’d be pampering myself up and having mother—–s pampering my s— left and right. Every hour, there’d be [someone] showing up to pamper me. That would be that.

 

GSP responded with:

 Let me tell you something, uneducated fool. Listen to me. I have not always been rich. I started from the bottom. I made myself and worked very hard to be where I am right now.

I know you don’t believe this, because you didn’t succeed yet, and maybe you will never succeed in your life because I don’t think you’re smart enough to understand how you should [act] to reach that point.

You don’t know anything about me, man. You have no idea where I come from. You’re not the only jealous guy.

Both men are extremely well-rounded, skilled and respected fighters, but the intrigue for the fight is only augmented by the bad blood. Add this clash to your list of must-see bouts, because it’s going to be electric.

In case you want to watch, here’s how you can catch UFC 158.

 

When: Saturday, March 16

Where: Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada

TV: PPV, Facebook and FX

 

UFC 158 Start Times

Preliminary Bouts on Facebook: 6:40 p.m. ET / 3:40 p.m. PT
Preliminary Bouts on FX: 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT
Main Card on Pay-Per-View: 10 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. PT

 

Complete Fight Card

Pay-Per-View

  • Georges St-Pierre (23-2) vs. Nick Diaz (26-8)
  • Carlos Condit (28-6) vs. Johny Hendricks (14-1)
  • Jake Ellenberger (28-6) vs. Nate Marquardt (32-11)
  • Nick Ring (13-1) vs. Chris Camozzi (18-5)
  • Mike Ricci (7-3) vs. Colin Fletcher (8-2)

Preliminary Bouts (on FX)

  • Patrick Cote (18-8) vs. Bobby Voelker (24-8)
  • Antonio Carvalho (15-5) vs. Darren Elkins (15-2)
  • Dan Miller (14-6) vs. Jordan Mein (26-8)
  • John Makdessi (10-2) vs. Daron Cruickshank (12-2)

Preliminary Bouts (on Facebook)

  • Rick Story (14-6) vs. Quinn Mulhern (18-2)
  • T.J. Dillashaw (7-1) vs. Issei Tamura (7-3)
  • George Roop (12-9-1) vs. Reuben Duran (8-4-1)

 

Predictions for Fight Night Bonuses

Submission of the Night – Mike Ricci over Colin Fletcher

Both men are solid submission fighters, but in this matchup, I see Fletcher’s length working against him.

He is 6’2″, and at 155 pounds, he normally has a big height advantage, but that won’t be the case against Ricci who is six-feet tall. Fletcher will have a hard time keeping distance.

Once Ricci gets inside, he’ll take his lanky opponent down. Ultimately, I see Fletcher giving up his back from fatigue, and Ricci gets the submission victory via rear-naked choke, or having this position transition rolled into a triangle, or kimura.

In an event that doesn’t figure to have a ton of submission finishes, this rather pedestrian tap out may be the only choice.

 

KO of the Night – Johny Hendricks over Carlos Condit

Condit is an amazing all-around fighter, but Hendricks is on a mission. Saturday night is the night he makes it painfully obvious that Dana White can no longer overlook him.

Hendricks has scored impressive KOs over Martin Kampmann, Jon Fitch and Charlie Brenneman, but he’ll add an even bigger name to that list at UFC 158. When he lands the heavy artillery on opponents in stand up, they got to sleep.

Condit has a good chin and very good striking, which will make this KO all the more impressive. This will be Hendricks’ biggest victory and should undoubtedly set him up for the winner of GSP-Diaz.

 

Fight of the Night – Jake Ellenberger defeats Nate Marquadt

Both men are very good wrestlers with KO power, and I expect to see a mixture of both skills in this one. It is a fairly evenly matched fight of veterans, and we may see both men rocked or staggered at some point in this fight.

Marquadt is tough as nails, but his striking defense has always been a little weak.

Against a big puncher like Ellenberger, that will be an issue. Marquadt’s wrestling ability is on par with Ellenberger’s, but the power difference will lead to a late KO win for the Juggernaut.

Marquadt will have his moments, and that will make the fight the best of the event, but Ellenberger will prevail.

 

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