Brazilian Nationals Jiu-Jitsu No-Gi Championship

Brazilian Nationals Jiu-Jitsu No-Gi Championship is a no-gi Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ) tournament hosted annually by the CBJJ since 2009 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.[1]

Brazilian Nationals No-Gi Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Championship
Competition details
LocationRio de Janeiro, Brazil
Nickname(s)Nogi Brasileiro
DisciplineBrazilian Jiu-Jitsu
TypeNogi
OrganiserCBJJ
History
First edition2009
Editions8
Most winsMale Raul Gomes (4) Female Beatriz Mesquita, Talita Nogueira (7)

Men's champions

YearHost51.5 kg Galo56.5 kg Pluma61.5 kg Pena66.5 kg Levio71.5 kg Medio76.5 kg M Pesado81.5 kg Pesado86.5 kg S Pesado+86.5 kg U PesadoAbsoluto
2009[2] Bruno Malfacine (1/1) Raoni Barcellos (1/1) Michael Langhi (1/1) Tiago Alves (1/2) Felipe Silva (1/2) Bernardo Faria (1/1) Fabricio Do Couto (1/1) Igor Silva (fighter) (1/1) Murilo Santana (1/2)
2010[3] Rufino Neto (1/1) Leonardo Silva (1/1) Davi Ramos (1/1) Tiago Alves (2/2) Kleber Buiú (1/3) Rafael Costa (1/1) Antonio Peinado (1/1) Luiz Theodoro (1/1) Victor Costa (1/1)
2011[4] Marcus Oliveira (1/1) Thiago Teixeira (1/1) Herbert Burns (1/2) Leandro Lo (1/3) Murilo Santana (2/2) Kleber Buiú(2/3) Mauro Celso (1/2) Frederico Zaganelli (1/1) Bruno Bastos (1/1) Kleber Buiú (3/3)
2012[5] Raul Gomes (1/4) Douglas Rufino (1/2) Herbert Burns (2/2) Leandro Lo (2/3) Vinícius Marinho (1/2) Alberto Oliveira(1/1) Leonardo Maciel (1/1) Mauro Celso (2/2) Bruno Soares (1/1) Leandro Lo (3/3)
2013[6] Raul Gomes (2/4) Douglas Rufino (2/2) José Barros (1/3) AJ Agazarm (1/1) Vinícius Marinho (2/2) Claudio Cardoso(1/2) Luiz Panza (1/2) Salomão Ribeiro (1/1) Gabriel Lyrio Lucas (1/1) Luiz Panza (2/2)
2014[7] Raul Gomes (3/4) Paulo Melo (1/1) Rafael do Nascimento (1/1) Marcio Barbosa Jr (1/1) Jacob Mackenzie (1/1) Charles Negromonte (1/1) Marcus dos Santos (1/1) Cristiano Lazzarini (1/2) Cássio da Silva (1/2) Cristiano Lazzarini (2/2)
2015[8] Leandro Escobar(1/1) Philipe de Oliveira (1/1) José Barros (2/3) Thiago Gaia (1/1) Felipe Silva (2/2) Patrick Gaudio (1/1) Diogo Araujo (1/1) Cássio da Silva (2/2) Otavio Serafim (1/1) Dimitrius Souza (1/3)
2016[9] Raul Gomes(4/4) Hiago Silva (1/2) Isaque Paiva (1/1) Kim Terra (1/1) Edson de Oliveira (1/1) Claudio Cardoso (2/2) Dimitrius Souza (2/3) Max Gimenis (1/1) Antonio de Padua (1/1) Dimitrius Souza (3/3)
2017[10] Juan da Silva (1/1) Hiago Silva (2/2) Jose Barros (3/3) Thiago Abreu (1/2) Matheus Barros (1/1) Gabriel de Lima (1/1) Henrique Russi (1/1) Fernando Andrade dos Reis (1/1) Ricardo Evangelista (1/1) Kitner Mendonça (1/1)
2018[11] Cleber Fernandes (1/1) Alexandre Vieira (1/1) Thiago Abreu (2/2) Hugo Marques (1/2) Pedro Souza (1/1) Thiago Fortes Silva (1/1) Vinicius Gazola (1/1) Antonio Neto (1/1) Hugo Marques (2/2)</small
2019[12] Cícero Livio (1/1) Pedro Crixel (1/1) Alexsandro Sodré (1/1) Ygor Rodrigues (1/1) Marco Aurelio (1/1) Pedro Rocha (1/1) Rômulo Azevedo (1/1) Marcelo Gomide (1/1) Hugo Cunha (1/1) Rafael Paganini (1/1)

Women's champions

YearHost-46.5 kg Galo-51.5 kg Pluma-56.5 kg Pena-61.5 kg Leve-66.5 kg Medio-71.5 kg M Pesado-76.5  kg Pesado+76.5 kg S PesadoAbsoluto
2009[2] Elizangela Meireles (1/2) Hellen Teixeira (1/1) Beatriz Mesquita (1/7) Rosalind Ferreira (1/3) Talita Nogueira (1/7) Luciana Pinto (1/1) Talita Nogueira (2/7)
2010[3] Bruna Nascimento (1/2) Marina Ribeiro (1/1) Rosalind Ferreira (2/3) Luiza Monteiro (1/2) Karla Hipolito (1/1) Michelle Tavares (1/2)
2011[4] Bruna Nascimento (2/2) Michelle Tavares (2/2) Beatriz Mesquita (2/7) Rosalind Ferreira (3/3) Luiza Monteiro (2/2) Luzia Carmem (1/1) Beatriz Mesquita (3/7)
2012[13] Elizangela Meireles (2/2) Maria Teixeira (1/1) Talita Nogueira (3/7) Talita Nogueira (4/7)
2013[6] Talita Nogueira (5/7) Talita Nogueira (6/7)
2014[14] Marília da Conceição (1/2) Beatriz Mesquita (4/7) Talita Nogueira (7/7) Beatriz Mesquita (5/7)
2015[8] Marília da Conceição (2/2) Glaucia Libano (1/1) Andresa Correa (1/2) Andresa Correa (2/2)
2016[9] Beatriz Mesquita (6/7) Beatriz Mesquita (7/7)
2017[10] Juliana Simoes (1/1) Ana Maria Soares (1/1) Carina Santi (1/4) Carina Santi (2/4)
2018[11] Maysa Bastos (1/1) Carina Santi (3/4) Carina Santi (4/4)

See also

References

  1. "BRAZILIAN NATIONALS JIU-JITSU NO-GI CHAMPIONSHIP 2009 – RESULTS". Official BJJEE results. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
  2. Samura. "Brazilian Nationals Jiu-Jitsu No-Gi Championship 2009 - Results - IBJJF - International Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Federation". IBJJF. Retrieved 2018-02-13.
  3. Samura. "Brazilian Nationals Jiu-Jitsu No-Gi Championship 2010 - Results - IBJJF - International Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Federation". IBJJF. Retrieved 2018-02-13.
  4. Samura. "Brazilian Nationals Jiu-Jitsu No-Gi Championship 2011 - Results - IBJJF - International Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Federation". IBJJF. Retrieved 2018-02-13.
  5. "Campeonato Brasileiro Sem Kimono 2012" (PDF). ibjjfdb. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
  6. "Brasileiro Sem Kimono 2013" (PDF). ibjjfdb.com. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
  7. "Campeonato Brasileiro de jiu-jitsu Sem Kimono 2014" (PDF). ibjjdb,com. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
  8. "Brasileiro de Jiu Jitsu Sem Kimono 2015" (PDF). ibjjfdb.com. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
  9. "Brasileiro Sem Kimono 2016" (PDF). ibjjfdb.com. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
  10. "Brazilian National Jiu-Jitsu No-Gi Championship". IBJJF. Archived from the original on February 13, 2018. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
  11. "Brazilian National Jiu-Jitsu No-Gi Championship". IBJJF. Retrieved October 2, 2019.
  12. "Brazilian National Jiu-Jitsu No-Gi Championship". IBJJF. Retrieved October 2, 2019.
  13. "Campeonato brasileiro Sem Kimono 2012" (PDF). ibjjfdb.com. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
  14. "Campeonato Brasileiro de jiu-jitsu Sem Kimono 2014" (PDF). ibjjfdb.com. Retrieved February 13, 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.