# Rigan Machado

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## Overview

**Name:** Rigan Machado


## Bio

Rigan Machado was born on the 2 nd  of July, 1966 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He had Carlos Gracie as an uncle (Carlos was married to the sister of Rigan’s mother) and so Rigan grew up being very close to the Jiu-Jitsu environment, rolling with his cousins from an early age.

When Rigan reached his mid-teens (around 14 or 15 years old), he started taking Jiu-Jitsu more seriously, becoming a fierce competitor. He started training with one of his older cousins, who was already a legend of the sport,  Rolls Gracie , and stayed with Rolls until his tragic death in 1982. At the time, Carlos Gracie Junior was seen as Rolls Gracie’s second in command and Rigan as the 3 rd , with the Master’s passing, Rigan took the spot as an assistant instructor while Carlinhos took control of the class, shortly after Rigan Machado became the first-ever Carlos Gracie Junior black belt.

In the late 1980s, Rigan Machado came to San Francisco where he spent some time with his cousin  Cesar Gracie . He stayed in the Bay Area for a while, but there was very little Jiu-Jitsu there and so he moved to Los Angeles. In L.A. he started coaching at Rorion Gracie’s academy,  Royce Gracie  was incredibly busy teaching private lessons and with the enthusiastic growth of the place, Rorion needed someone to coach the group classes. Rigan Machado spent a year at the Gracie academy but he left because of diverging ideas on how classes should be structured. As Rigan left, he had plans to call his own academy  Gracie Jiu Jitsu , this was not possible as Rorion Gracie had the legal rights to the Gracie Jiu-Jitsu name in the United States of America.

As Rigan did not have the legal rights to give his master’s name to his school, he chose to call it Machado Jiu-Jitsu with the approval of Carlinhos Gracie. In the early days, Rigan was fortunate to have the help of Hollywood actor Chuck Norris, who helped him get established and brought a lot of attention to the gym. With the rapid growth of the academy, Rigan felt the need to bring his own brothers to the US to help him with the business.

As there weren’t any BJJ competitions in the US worthy of a fighter of Rigan’s caliber at the time, Machado decided to start competing in different tournaments where he could keep sharp and have fun. He entered many Sambo (Sombo) and Judo competitions winning several of those, including 3 Pan American championships and 4 national US championships in Sambo, but as both Sambo and Judo had very restricting rules on the ground, Rigan ended leaving his competitive career on the side to dedicate himself fully to coaching Jiu-Jitsu.

Rigan Machado at Judo Tournament

Rigan at Sambo Tournament

Rigan Machado vs Rickson Gracie

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**Last Updated:** March 21, 2026

**Data Source:** BJJ.Space (https://bjj.space/people/rigan-machado-01b294d5d21f)
