~Page8 SP www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Sunday, June 8,2014 JUI-JITSU 101 WHAT'S IN A NAME: There are four commonly accepted variations of the sport's name: jui-jitsui,jui-jitsu,ju-jitsu or jujitsu. ORGANIZATION: There are two governing bodies that oversee the administration of the sport, competition rules and competitor grading system. The governing bodies, which work together, are the Interna- tional Brazilian Jui-Jitsu Federation (IBJJF) and the Confederation of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (CBJJ). COMPETITIONS: The IBJJF conducts more than 50 championships throughout North America, South America, Asia and Europe. Compe- titions range from those for children and novice level to seniors and master levels. Most competitions draw international fields. WEIGHT CLASSES: Like all other combat sports, Jui-Jitsu competitions are broken down by weight class: Men and 30-plus categories: Rooster: Up to 122.5; Super Feather: 122.6 135.5; Feather: 135.6 149.0; Light: 149.1 162.0; Middle: 162.1 175.5; Medium Heavy: 175.6 188.5; Heavy: 188.6 202.0; Super Heavy: 202.1 215.0; Ultra Heavy: Over 215.0 Women: Super Feather: Up to 113.50; Feather: 113.6 124.5; Light: 124.6- 135.5; Middle: 135.6- 147.0; Medium Heavy: 147.1 158.0; Heavy: Over 158.0 -IBJJF HARTT FROM PAGE 1 the (winning) points." It wrapped up a perfect world championship tournament for Hartt, who won six matches and beat 52 competitors for the gold medal. He outscored his opponents a combined 30-0. But that shouldn't have been surprising when competing in his gi, Hartt is unbeaten and unscored upon. But Hartt's wrestling background gives him a little bit of an edge there. "(It's because of) my wrestling background, where I get the base," he said. "I can read how someone is going to move by how they position themselves. I have a good sense of what's going to happen and balance my body and keep a mental note of everything. "Don't get in a vulner- able position and know to get out of them," he added. "But you learn about that in the practice room." And Hartt knows about the practice room. He practices as many as five times a week, traveling to Fort Myers and Naples to do so under the guidance of his mentor, Marcelo Pereira. In other words, it's a lot of work to get to the gym ORIGINS The sports'origin is unclear. Some suggest it can be traced to Buddhist monks in India, who spread it across southeast Asia and Japan. to do a lot of work. He also stopped for a week's worth of training sessions in Midland, Texas, on his way to the world cham- pionship tournament in Long Beach, Calif. "It takes a lot of money and a lot of time," he said. "I had to put my life on hold, my work, nightlife. But it's all minimal stuff for what I achieved." There is plenty more to achieve, even for a world champion. Hartt is only a blue belt, the second level of five in Brazilian jiu-jitsu leading up to a black belt. He still has plenty more to learn. For starters, he has no intention of going back to the world championship tournament next year as a blue belt. He has designs on the purple belt the third rung. "My ultimate goal is to keep training and go as far in the belt system as I can, keep training every day to be a black belt," Hartt said. "It's a long road, but I have no intention of getting off of it." Contact Rob Shore at 941-206-1174 or shore@sun-herald.Com PUNTA GORDA ARCADIA STORE STORE 615 CROSS STREET 6 WEST OAK STREET WWW.AeMXDleYeLX2HOP.eOM PUNTA GORDA 941-039-ACME ARCADIA 808-884-2888 Aighbor Borrow It! (You'll never get it back!) 0 AUTO RACING ROUNDUP AP PHOTO Marco Andretti gets out of his car on the apron of Turn 4 as flames come from the rear of the car during the IndyCar race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, on Saturday. Carpenter outduels Power in Texas By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FORT WORTH, Texas - Driver-owner Ed Carpenter, who drives only on ovals, won the IndyCar Series race Texas on Saturday night after staying in front of Will Power during a two-lap shootout after a late caution. On the final green-flag stop with 35 laps left, Carpenter beat polesitter and season points leader Power off pit road. Team Penske driver Power made things worse when he was penalized for speeding out of the pits. Power was sixth, and Carpenter had a lead of about 18 seconds over Juan Pablo Montoya, when Takuma Sato's engine blew and his car caught fire with 10 laps left. While the top four cars stayed out during that caution, Power went in for fresh tires. He then made POCONO 400 WHO: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series WHEN: Today, I p.m. WHERE: Pocono Raceway, Long Pond, Pa. TV: TNT DEF. CHAMP: Jimmie Johnson a charge after the final restart to finish second. Kyle Larson wins ARCA race: Kyle Larson won the ARCA race at Pocono Raceway in Long Pond, Pa. The 21-year-old Larson used the race to better learn the track for today's Sprint Cup race. He led most of the 80 laps until a bad restart with about 10 left saw him give up the lead to Mason Mitchell. Larson worked his way back to the lead with three laps left and pulled away into Victory Lane. Mitchell finished second. John Wes Townley, Will Kimmel and Justin Allison round out the top five. Rosberg takes Canadian GP pole: Nico Rosberg earned the pole position for the Canadian Grand I AUTO RACING SCOREBOARD NASCAR NASCAR Camping Sprint Cup Series World Truck POCONO 400 After Friday qualifying; race Sunday At Pocono Raceway Long Pond, Pa. Lap length: 2.5 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (11) Denny Hamlin,Toyota, 181.415. 2. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 181.408. 3. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 181.316. 4. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 180.832. 5. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 180.513. 6. (18) Kyle Busch,Toyota, 180.458. 7. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 179.827. 8. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 179.565. 9 (55) Brian VickersToyota, 179.548. 10. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 179.383. 11. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 179.326. 12. (14)Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 179.126. 13. (16)(Greg Biffle, Ford, 179.258. 14. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 179.229. 15. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 179.072. 16. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 179.051. 17. (78) Martin TruexJr., Chevrolet, 178.976. 18. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 178.919. 19. (15) Clint BowyerToyota, 178.777. 20. (48)JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet, 178.678. 21.(47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 178.288. 22. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 178.144. 23. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 178.031. 24. (51) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 177.288. 25. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 178.045. 26. (20) Matt Kenseth,Toyota, 177.968. 27. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 177.908. 28. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 177.83. 29. (9) MarcosAmbrose, Ford, 177.162. 30. (7) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 176.308. 31. (40) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 176.025. 32. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 175.922. 33. (32)Travis Kvapil, Ford, 175.867. 34. (23) Alex BowmanToyota, 175.675. 35. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 175.613. 36. (36) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 174.958. 37. (98) Josh Wise, Ford, Owner Points. 38. (44) JJ. Yeley, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 39. (66)Timmy Hill,Toyota, Owner Points. 40. (26) ColeWhitt,Toyota, Owner Points. 41. (83) Ryan TruexToyota, Owner Points. 42. (33) Alex Kennedy, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 43. (77) Dave Blaney, Ford, Owner Points. WORLD CASINO & RESORT 400 Friday At Texas Motor Speedway Fort Worth, Texas Lap length 1.5 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (2) Matt Crafton, Toyota, 167 laps, 147.2 rating, 48 points, $52,005. 2. (1) Justin Lofton, Chevrolet, 167, 89.5, 42, $39,675. 3. (6) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 167, 83.1, 41, $28,216. 4. (3) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 167, 126.1, 41, $21,100. 5. (9) John Wes Townley, Toyota, 167, 82.7, 39, $15,270. 6. (10) Ron Hornaday Jr., Chevrolet, 167, 107.3,39,$13,100. 7. (4) Johnny Sauter, Toyota, 167,100.6, 37, $12,500. 8. (16) Bryan Silas, Chevrolet, 167, 63.7, 36, $12,065. 9. (19) Joey Coulter, Chevrolet, 167,69.1,35, $12,050. 10. (7) Darrell Wallace Jr., Toyota, 166, 90.9, 34, $13,265. 11. (5) Erik Jones, Toyota, 166, 102.2, 33, $11,915. 12. (11) Jeb Burton, Toyota, 166, 84.9, 32, $11,765. 13. (14) Tayler Malsam, Chevrolet, 166,84.5, 31, $11,725. 14. (18) Ben Kennedy, Chevrolet, 166, 70.2, 30, $12,630. 15. (17) Tyler Young, Chevrolet, 166, 54.5, 29, $12,365. 16. (13) Brennan Newberry, Chevrolet, 165, 54.8, 28, $11,450. 17. (23) Jimmy Weller Ill, Chevrolet, 165, 43.8, 27, $11,360. 18. (21) TJ. Bell, Chevrolet, 163, 41.3, 26, $11,270. 19. (20) Mason Mingus, Toyota, 156, 45.1, 25, $9,880. 20. (22) Jennifer Jo Cobb, Chevrolet, 154, 36.2,24, $10,415. 21. (12) Tyler Reddick, Ford, 148, 61.5, 23, $8,700. 22. (26) Norm Benning, Chevrolet, accident, 59,32.4,22, $8,610. 23. (8) German Quiroga,Toyota, engine, 53, Contact your Scag dealer today! www.FrecdomZmower.con 941-637-0030 5432 Constitutional Ave., Punta Gorda, FL 33982 www.ActionMower.com Prix with a fast lap in qualifying, completing the 4.361 -kilometer (2.71-mile) Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in his Mercedes in I minute, 14.874 seconds. Teammate Lewis Hamilton was second, 0.079 seconds slower. Last year's winner in Montreal, Sebastian Vettel, was third. Also on Saturday, Formula One announced it reached an agreement with the Montreal, Quebec and Canadian governments to keep the race at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve for another 10 years. The Canadian Grand Prix was first run on the track on the lie Notre Dame in the St. Lawrence River in 1978. The governments agreed to share a $17 million (about U.S. $15.56 million) annual payment that will total $187 (U.S. $171.14 million) million over the term of the agreement. Crafton wins Truck race: Matt Crafton raced to his second NASCAR Camping World Truck victory of the season Friday, running the final 61 laps at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, on one tank of fuel. The defending series champion led 118 of 167 laps on the 1 -mile track, and beat pole-sitter Justin Lofton by a race-record 13.302 seconds. 61.6,21, $8,520. 24. (15) Timothy Peters, Toyota, accident, 51,41.1,20,$8,430. 25. (24) BJ. McLeod, Chevrolet, engine, 13, 31.8,19, $8,490. 26. (25) Justin Jennings, Chevrolet, vibra- tion, 3,30.1,18, $8,250. 27. (27) Ryan Ellis, Chevrolet, vibration, 2, 28.5, 0, $8,160. Race Statistics Average speed of race winner: 132.970 mph. Time of race: 1 hour, 53 minutes, 2 sec- onds. Margin of victory: 13.302 seconds. Caution flags: 4 for 23 laps. Lead changes: 8 among 3 drivers. Lap leaders: M. Crafton 1-36; R. Hornaday Jr. 37-38; R. Blaney 39-49; M. Crafton 50-58; R. BlaneyS9-92; M. Crafton 93-109; R. Horn- adayJr. 110-111; M. Crafton 112-167. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): M. Crafton, 4 times for 118 laps; R. Blaney, 2 times for 45 laps; R. Hornaday Jr., 2 times for 4 laps. Top 10 in points: 1. M. Crafton, 232; 2. Sauter, 221; 3. R. Hornaday Jr., 209; 4. R. Blaney, 207; 5. T Peters, 205; 6. G. Quiroga, 200; 7. B. Kennedy, 199; 8.J.Townley, 198; 9. J Burton, 185; 1O.J. Coulter, 177. Formula 1 CANADIAN GRAND PRIX After Saturday qualifying; racetoday At Circuit GillesVilleneuve Montreal Lap length 2.71 miles Third Session 1. Nico Rosberg, Germany, Mercedes, 1 minute, 14.874 seconds. 2. Lewis Hamilton, England, Mercedes, 1:14.953. 3. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Bull, 1:15.548. 4.Valtteri Bottas, Finland,Williams, 1:15.550. 5. Felipe Massa, Brazil,Williams, 1:15.578. 6. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, Red Bull, 1:15.589. 7. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari, 1:15.814. 8. Jean-Eric Vergne, France, Toro Rosso, 1:16.162. 9. Jenson Button, England, McLaren, 1:16.182. 10. Kimi Raikkonen, Finland, Ferrari, 1:16.214. Eliminated after second session 11. Nico Hulkenberg, Germany, Force India, 1:16.300. 12. Kevin Magnussen, Denmark, McLaren, 1:16.310. 13. Sergio Perez, Mexico, Force India, 1:16.472. 14. Romain Grosjean, France, Lotus, 1:16.687. 15. Daniil Kvyat, Russia, Toro Rosso, 1:16.713. 16. Adrian Sutil, Germany, Sauber, 1:17.314. Eliminated after first session 17. Pastor Maldonado, Venezuela, Lotus, 1:18.328. 18. Max Chilton, England, Marussia, 1:18.348. 19 .Jules Bianchi, France, Marussia, 1:18.359. 20. Kamui Kobayashi, Japan, Caterham, 1:19.278. 21. Marcus Ericsson, Sweden, Caterham, 1:19.820. 22. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber, DNS. 0 NBA: Miami Heat look for usual bounce By IRA WINDERMAN SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL SAN ANTONIO The last time Miami lost con- secutive playoff games, Ray Allen played for the opposition, Chris Bosh played off the bench, and James Jones was the first reserve off that bench. Since that June 5, 2012, Eastern Conference finals loss to Boston, every Heat playoff loss has been followed with a victory. Every one. While the sting remains from Thursday's 110-95 loss to the San Antonio Spurs in Game 1 of these best-of-seven NBA Finals, the Heat go into today's Game 2 at the AT&T Center having followed up each of their last 12 play- off losses with a victory. It is the longest such streak in the NBA since Chicago had a similar 12-victory run that ended in 1992. "I think this team, when we are faced with those situations, being in this so many times before, it brings out the best in us," Bosh said before Saturday's practice at the Spurs' practice facility. "We've been in this position many times before, so we know how to handle it." Three times during last year's Finals against the Spurs the Heat responded from losses with victories in winning their second consecutive champion- ship, including such a response after losing their first road game of that series at the AT&T Center. "That's why they are two-time champs," Spurs guard Tony Parker said. "To win championships, you have to face adversity and come back from any situation, and they've proved that over the years. That's why it's our job to stay focused and we know it's just one game." Since the 2011 NBA Finals against Dallas, which remains the only playoff series the Heat's Big Three of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Bosh have lost, panic largely has left the building. Even after the most recent playoff losing streak, when three consec- utive losses put them down 3-2 to the Celtics in 2012, the Heat won the series' finals two games to advance. Since then, there have been eight series without consecutive losses. "We're able to bounce back, go to the film room, take account and not just bypass the mistakes we had in the previous game," James said. "And I think it's allowed us to move on and better ourselves for the next game." That left Friday and Saturday for introspection. "One thing we do is come in, learn from our mistakes, own up to our mistakes," Wade said, "figure out how we can be better coming into the next game and we make those adjustments, and it's worked out for us." HEAT AT SPURS WHO: Miami at San Antonio WHAT: NBA Finals, Game 2, Spurs lead series 1-0 WHEN: Sunday, 8 p.m. WHERE: AT&T Center, San Antonio TV: ABC RADIO: 99.3 FM -Page 8 SP www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Sunday, June 8, 2014 THANK YOU FOR MAKING 112 # I DIKE 2HOP AGAIN! -o.