Asenjo BJJ ranks #36 nationally with just 39 fighters, delivering 1.72 golds per athlete — nearly double the national median and placing them in the top 25% for efficiency. Their grey belt program drives this ranking: 10 fighters with a 77% championship rate (top 15% nationally) and an exceptional 80% finishing rate that's among the highest in their division. Four athletes compete at elite/prodigy tiers, including Noah S Camacho Araujo at 99th percentile — rare production for a mid-sized program.
The data reveals a finishing-focused system that scales across belt levels. Grey belts dominate with 80% technical victories, yellow belts maintain 54% early stoppages, and even their advanced blue+ division finishes 71% of wins early. Combined with consistent 65-77% gold rates across all divisions, this 67% overall submission rate (75th percentile) indicates systematic technical development rather than grinding out decisions. Recent tournament activity shows concentrated success: 32 golds across 5 Florida events while struggling in Texas competition.
Orlando families seeking technical development over volume should consider Asenjo's proven track record. Their 1.72 golds per fighter significantly outpaces larger Florida programs that dilute coaching attention across 100+ rosters. However, parents wanting extensive tournament travel or massive team environments will find better fits elsewhere — this program maximizes individual development through focused coaching and consistent finishing techniques rather than scale.
Win rate across 42 tracked tournaments, benchmarked against medium-size academies.
Among 657 medium academies, above average gold rate.
Finish rate, scoring patterns, and how Asenjo BJJ closes out victories.
Similar-size avg: 50%
Placement distribution across all tracked competitions.
Similar-size avg: 5% gold
Fighter tier distribution across the competitive roster.
49% of roster is Elite or higher
Performance metrics segmented by belt level.
Strongest: White (28 fighters)
Match frequency and competition cadence over 13 months.
Similar-size avg: ~396/year
What percentage of athletes return after their first competition.
Similar-size avg: 49%
Cross-belt consistency and ranking performance.
Similar-size avg: 2%
| # | Fighter | Belt | M/F | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ian S Camacho Araujo | Grey | 62-5 | ||
| 2 | Lukas S Camacho Araujo | Grey | 49-7 | ||
| 3 | Audrey Mae Hurd Pagara | Grey | 41-2 | ||
| 4 | Lorenzo Lopes | Grey | 61-14 | ||
| 5 | Felipe Riccioppo Asenjo | Yellow | 41-8 | ||
| 6 | Natalia Juliette Gordon | Yellow | 32-2 | ||
| 7 | Noah S Camacho Araujo | Grey | 39-6 | ||
| 8 | Gabriel Riccioppo Asenjo | Blue | 26-2 |
| # | Fighter | Belt | M/F | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ian S Camacho Araujo | Grey | 62-5 | ||
| 2 | Lukas S Camacho Araujo | Grey | 49-7 | ||
| 3 | Audrey Mae Hurd Pagara | Grey | 41-2 | ||
| 4 | Lorenzo Lopes | Grey | 61-14 | ||
| 5 | Felipe Riccioppo Asenjo | Yellow | 41-8 | ||
| 6 | Natalia Juliette Gordon | Yellow | 32-2 | ||
| 7 | Noah S Camacho Araujo | Grey | 39-6 | ||
| 8 | Gabriel Riccioppo Asenjo | Blue | 26-2 | ||
| 9 | Sabrina Maya Harriz | Grey | 58-10 | ||
| 10 | Austin Keith Hurd Pagara | Grey | 34-13 | ||
| 11 | Dom Rezende | Grey | 20-16 | ||
| 12 | Leon Garcia Lopes | Grey | 44-15 | ||
| 13 | Sara Amira Harriz | Grey | 32-21 | ||
| 14 | Max Palinkas | White | 12-6 | ||
| 15 | Benjamin Botelho | Grey | 6-1 | ||
| 16 | Miguel Malpica | Grey | 7-1 | ||
| 17 | David Medeiros | Grey | 5-2 | ||
| 18 | Santiago Rodriguez | White | 5-7 | ||
| 19 | Bryan Lima | Grey | 5-5 | ||
| 20 | Sarah Alves | Blue | 2-0 | ||
| 21 | Lorena Vieira | Grey | 3-2 | ||
| 22 | Giulia de Oliveira Paiva | Blue | 11-7 | ||
| 23 | Sebastian Santiago | Yellow | 31-30 | ||
| 24 | Bryan Cruz | White | 3-1 | ||
| 25 | Elizabeth Francke | White | 2-2 |