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    <title>Among Fighters Blog</title>
    <link>http://amongfighters.com</link>
    <description>Raw observations from inside a legendary California fight gym. The people, the culture, and the moments that never make it on camera.</description>
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      <title>How I Found The Pit</title>
      <link>http://amongfighters.com/blog/g13z89x361-how-i-found-the-pit</link>
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      <pubDate>Sun, 28 Jun 2026 16:32:00 +0300</pubDate>
      <author>Among Fighters</author>
      <category>Behind the Scenes</category>
      <description>A parent shows up for his kid. He ends up somewhere he did not expect.</description>
      <turbo:content><![CDATA[<header><h1>How I Found The Pit</h1></header><div class="t-redactor__text"><strong>How I Found The Pit</strong><br /><br />I did not come here for myself.</div><div class="t-redactor__text">Eddie is my son. He is the reason we found this place, and honestly the reason any of this exists. Like a lot of kids, he bounced through sports early on — surfing, baseball, swim team from the time he was small. He was good at things. He just got bored. My daughter was doing the same thing on a parallel track, and my wife and I were spending most of our weekends running between schedules, trying to keep up. At some point we made a decision. Both kids needed to pick something and commit to it.<br /><br />Eddie tried jiu-jitsu first at another gym. It fit well enough that we stayed for a while, then found a better situation and moved. That lasted about a year before COVID stopped everything. When things opened back up and it was time to find something again, I did more research than I probably needed to. That research kept pointing me back to one place.</div><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild3235-3534-4765-b932-633663393966/20190207_174920-2.png"><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild6463-6434-4363-b932-666535376337/20190731_161724-2.jpg"><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild6134-3834-4261-a536-393432366330/20230920_155717-4.jpg"><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild3937-6166-4838-a237-383935336132/20231101_164556-2.jpg"><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild3730-3631-4365-a431-653163623932/20240613_153451-2.jpg"><iframe width="100%" height="100%" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/gvJtIep8KiE" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="" mozallowfullscreen="" allowfullscreen=""></iframe><div class="t-redactor__text">Drive to the Pit Martial Arts in Arroyo Grande, CA. As seen driving West on Grand Avenue.</div><div class="t-redactor__text">The Pit Martial Arts sits in a commercial building in Arroyo Grande, CA, that you would drive past without looking twice — except for one thing. On the side of the building there is large Bold Letters that say THE PIT and to the right the logo - a muscular grim reaper wearing boxing. That logo does not leave a lot of ambiguity about what happens inside. There is a parking lot, a roll-up garage door in the back that is usually raised, and whatever class happens to be running when you pull in. I remember parking that first day in March of 2023 — Eddie was ten years old — seeing people moving around through the opening and not being entirely sure what we were walking into.<br /><br />What I knew from the research was that this was not a strip mall martial arts school. The Pit had produced two UFC world champions — Chuck Liddell and Glover Teixeira. That is not a marketing claim. That is a fact that takes most gyms a lifetime to get close to, and most never doI did not know what that would mean for a ten-year-old kid who was a little nervous and had not been on the mats in some time. But I figured it was worth finding out.<br /><br />Eddie's first jiu-jitsu class went well. He came off the mat smiling, which for a kid who doesn't say much spoke volumes.That was also the first time I met Adrian Iriarte ( <a href="https://www.instagram.com/pitblackbelt/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Follow in Instagram </a>)— the jiu-jitsu instructor, a Hawaiian Kempo black belt and a jiu-jitsu black belt who has been teaching at this gym for longer than most of his students have been alive. I did not know much about him yet. I would.</div><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild3034-6561-4933-a538-376438616464/20251101_182956-3.jpg"><div class="t-redactor__text">A few months later Eddie started the kids Hawaiian Kempo program. What happened after that is a longer story — one that involves a contact sparring class, a coach named Tanner who gave a kid a chance when he probably did not have to, and a ten-year-old white belt who turned out to belong there. I will get into all of that.<br /><br />That was the beginning. I have been coming through that entrance ever since, watching, training, and eventually filming. This blog is where I write about what I see. The YouTube channel is where some of it ends up on video. Between the two, I am trying to document something that I think is worth documenting — a real gym, real people, and what it actually looks like to train and compete at a place that takes this seriously.<br /><br />More on all of it as we go.</div>]]></turbo:content>
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