Bryan Vetell — IFL's Number One Locksmith


© Marc Wickert
www.knucklepit.com
31 Aug 2006

Bryan Vetell's neighbors might have wondered what he was up to, lurking in the shadows outside his house. But there really was a plausible explanation for his behavior: "I've just come home from training, and I'm standing outside my house, because I get better reception on my cell phone out here," says the 265-pound IFL star, during his interview with knucklepit.

Not that anybody would consider interrupting this jovial giant of a man, who at a young age was tying people up with arm bars and locks, when most other kids were still learning to tie their shoelaces.

"I've been wrestling since I was five years old. My mum signed me up for classes at the YMCA when I was a kid – I don't know why, but she did. And I took to it. My dad had died when I was really young, and I guess Mum wanted me to have some sort of male thing going on. I had a family of women around me, and my mum maybe wanted to toughen me up a little bit."

Bryan was later attracted by the reality of MMA and decided to broaden his fighting skills. "At the time, I used to watch what I thought was real – the old UWF shoot wrestling thing from Japan. And I thought their submissions were awesome. I tried to do what I could from the TV, and then I saw the UFC and thought, 'Hey, this is how a real fight goes.' That was in '93.

" In '95, I played around on the wrestling mats, and when I was nineteen, I hooked up with the Russians down at Brighton Beach. They started teaching me a style of Sambo which was modified for MMA. I didn't really do anything competitive from that, and I went back to college and put my training on the wayside – just going through the motions.

"Then about three years ago, I got the competitive bug again. I can't even say why. I tried to avoid it and not do it for a while. You know, I really did try to say, 'No. I don't watch UFC or PRIDE anymore.' But before I knew it, I was sucked back in. And before I knew it I was training out of Queens with a good group of guys who really helped me get my stand-up and basic Jiu Jitsu down."

Let loose on the amateur circuit, Bryan started cleaning up the competition in record time: Norm Shack at 1:18, Tommy Falco 1:55, and Simon Manning in 34 seconds. It was soon time for Vetell to focus on the bigger fish.

"A year ago, my guys in Queens said I was surpassing them, and it was time for me to move on. My coach was a great coach, but as a training partner, the gap was getting too wide. Of course it didn't help any that he was 200 pounds and I weighed 300."

Today, Bryan is rated #1 by the American Sambo Association for the 96+ kg division. And he regards his sambo skills to be better than his jiu jitsu abilities, because of his natural explosive power, and his desire to get the job done quickly is more suited to sambo.

"I would probably do better at sambo matches than at jiu jitsu competition – just because of the takedown aspect of it. You can score so quickly with the takedowns in sambo, and you only have so much time on the ground. After a year of training with Renzo, maybe it would be a little different, but that was always my strong suit – the throws, takedowns, and gaining position rather than the slow, methodical work that a lot of these jiu jitsu guys will do on the ground."

Bryan, what is Thaisport?

"That's the brand of the merchandise I wear which is owned by my stand-up coach, Dave Martucci, whom I do my Muay Thai with. I do some of my stand-up at Renzo's as well, but my boxing, my kickboxing, and definitely my stuff that's mixed with MMA – kicks to takedowns, all the set-ups and stuff – he's pretty much exclusively my MMA coach. But he also has a gear line, so whenever I fight as an individual, I wear his clothing range, because he's been pretty good to me."

Do you have a strong stand-up game as well as ground fighting?

"I'd like to think so. My stand-up game is primarily centered on my takedown game. But, if things go wrong, I have a stand-up game – my Thai techniques, etc."

At The Last Man Standing Tournament in May, 2005, you defeated Norm Shack and then Tommy Falco by key locks. You also defeated Simon Manning by key lock at Rumble in Rahway. Would it be fair to say that's one of your favorite submissions?

"It's definitely where I wind up, and it's definitely something that, when I'm in position, I can get. It is my bread and butter as a submission. I don't know if I'd actually call it my favorite: There are much more beautiful ones, there are much more technical ones. But it just happens to be where I want to go."

Your bout with Tommy Falco lasted less than two minutes before you submitted him with that hold. Then Tommy withdrew from his bout with Norm Shack. You must have latched on a pretty damaging key lock to put him out of the tournament.

"Actually, I think it was his ribs from one of my takedowns. I don't know for sure, but I heard it was from one of the takedowns that he sustained an injury."

Read the full article on Knucklepit.com.

Article written by Marc Wickert

Marc Wickert is one of the world's most respected martial arts journalists.

For years his articles have been published in America, Europe, Australasia, and on the acclaimed knucklepit.com website.

Having interviewed some of the most elite combatants of the No-Holds-Barred inner sanctum, and a hybrid fight system's instructor in his own right, Marc Wickert is also author of the now-famous self-defense manual Knucklepit.com - The Book.