Masters Alliance Podcast Por Herb Perez arte de portada

Masters Alliance

Masters Alliance

De: Herb Perez
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9th Dan BlackBelt and Olympic Gold Medalist Herb Perez visit with the best and brightest to bring clarity to the future of Martial arts.

© 2025 Masters Alliance
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Episodios
  • Talent ID Camps: Money Grab or Genuine Development?
    May 29 2025

    Three Olympic gold medalists engage in a no-holds-barred critique of USA Taekwondo's latest cash grab – yet another "Talent ID Camp" charging athletes $225 for a chance to be "discovered." The hosts unpack why this approach fundamentally misunderstands how genuine talent identification works in successful sports programs worldwide.

    Drawing from their extensive experience both as athletes and coaches, they contrast USAT's pay-to-participate model with legitimate talent development systems used by countries like Australia and China, as well as private initiatives that return proceeds directly to participating athletes. The discussion reveals a troubling pattern of leadership treating the organization as a "personal playground" while members remain complacent.

    Most revealing is their analysis of how America's most promising taekwondo talents are currently developing outside the national system. Athletes like Michael Rodriguez and North are finding success through private coaching arrangements, raising serious questions about the effectiveness of centralized training programs that force athletes to abandon successful coaching relationships.

    With the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics approaching and America automatically qualifying four athletes as host nation, the team examines what this means for USA Taekwondo's development pipeline and Olympic prospects. Their candid conversation provides an insider's view of the challenges facing American taekwondo and what must change for the U.S. to maximize its potential on the world stage.

    The podcast wraps with exciting predictions about the upcoming Grand Prix Challenge and reflections on what truly makes a champion – the right training partners, dedicated coaches, and the freedom to build on success rather than constantly starting over.

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    1 h y 4 m
  • From Captain Controversies to Equipment Chaos: A Raw Taekwondo Conversation
    May 22 2025

    Three Olympic Taekwondo veterans discuss the controversial Gen 3 chest protector technology causing scoring chaos ahead of the World Championships, while examining how officiating decisions are negatively impacting the sport's strategic diversity.

    • Gen 3 chest protectors showing serious malfunctions at the President's Cup with random point registrations
    • American athletes disadvantaged by training on outdated systems while international events use newer technology
    • Referees increasingly eager to issue deductions rather than allowing fighters to develop their natural styles
    • Rules have eliminated strategic diversity by penalizing defensive tactics that should be respected as legitimate approaches
    • Team culture deterioration has created an "us versus them" mentality between the national organization and independent athletes
    • Historical team captain selection based on seniority and accomplishment has been replaced by organizational control
    • Upcoming Grand Prix Challenge training camp aims to foster collaboration between athletes from various backgrounds

    Our goal with the camp is to bring athletes together for growth and development, not to compete against each other but to learn from one another. It's completely free because we believe in giving back to the sport whenever possible.


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    1 h y 17 m
  • Pimps, Pinky Rings, and Performance: The Truth About Sports Funding
    May 15 2025

    What if everything you thought you knew about creating champion fighters was wrong? In this raw, unfiltered conversation with Olympic gold medalist Herb Perez and bronze medalist Juan Moreno, we crack open the uncomfortable truth about what's really happening in American Taekwondo.

    The discussion begins with a critical examination of the recent Cadet World Championships, where Russia's dominance reveals a stark contrast to America's approach. Despite our supposed advantages in resources and population, we're watching other countries consistently outperform us—and it's not for lack of talented athletes.

    "You take kids from a system they're growing in, just to go there, and then what?" TJ asks, challenging the centralized training model that uproots athletes from their support networks. Moreno and Perez both built their Olympic success outside the system, training in environments where accountability wasn't optional and performance wasn't just measured, but expected by entire communities who knew them by name.

    The conversation takes a fascinating turn when Perez shares insights about his mentor, the legendary Stephen Vizio—one of the first non-Asians accepted into traditional Kung Fu schools who later created an underground fighting system that produced champions across combat sports. His philosophical approach distilled fighting to its essence: "Do what you do well, avoid what you don't do well, and exploit the weaknesses of what other people don't do well."

    Between discussions of "pimps and pinky rings" in sports leadership and the absurdity of talent identification camps for athletes who have already proven themselves, this episode offers a masterclass in what actually develops champions versus what merely creates the appearance of development.

    Whether you're a fighter, coach, or simply fascinated by high-performance mindsets, this conversation will challenge your assumptions about talent development and make you question the systems we've built to create excellence. Subscribe now and join us next week when our hosts share stories about the mentors who transformed their lives.

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    2 h y 16 m
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