Andrew Green said:
Royce went on a pretty intense bulking up program prior to the UFC as well.
My intro to GJJ was through a close buddy of mine named Eric (nick-named "Mick" in many of these circles) who went to take the Gracie Challenge, and lost. He was a UFAF black belt under Norris; NCAA collegiate wrestler, AA kickboxer at the Jet Center, well-versed in Judo and Japanese jujutsu, as well as a 2-time powerlifting champion in his weight category for the state of California. He signed up at the Torrance Academy, and he and Royce became rapid friends; it was Eric who was Royce's weight trainer prior to the UFC's. Mick and I both worked as bouncers together with Kimo in Huntington Beach (Eric more than I), and it was Eric who chided Kimo into taking the Gracie challenge/entering the UFC.
As for who is better...between the UFC's and Rickson taking them (vale tudo) to Japan, Rickson would come to the academy to roll with Royce & Royler...at the same time. To work on legs, he would roll with them with his hands tucked in his belt. They wouldn't catch him. Yells of frustration and portugese swearing could be heard coming from the smaller privates room.
Ricksons grasp on jiujutsu is different than most peoples, even the very advanced. Although he is a consumate athlete, Rickson has an intuitive feel for technical subtleties that pass most people by. Recent Rickson story involves him visiting a Brazilian championship black belt team in training, with a team champion who could boast having never been dismounted. Rickson watches from the side, announces the guys are doing the techniques wrong, and they say, "show me". So Rickson does...dismounts the guy, no problem, 3 times in a row using the same technique. He then switches position with the guy, who then fails to dismount Rickson.
Stories like this abound around Rickson. People who talk smack about him haven't rolled with him. When they do, the story usually changes. (Consider Marco Ruas...went from a Rickson basher, to admirer of his skills as being "on a totally different plane").
Towards the tail end of my short BJJ career, I switched to a Rickson school, and had the pleasure of rolling with him. It is a different world than rolling with other guys; a real bar-raiser.
Royce is possibly one of the nicest guys you're likely to meet; honesty before ego. I heard him with my own ears, in the Torrance academy, respond to the question about who, out there, could/would beat Rickson. (insert thick Portugese accent about here) "Nobody beat Rickson."
Regards,
Dave
And I still think the Hulk would kick Spider-Mans butt.