Wrestling Foundations
Born in 1970 and raised in New Jersey, Jeremy Glick built a formidable grappling foundation through dedicated pursuit of two demanding combat sports disciplines. As a high school competitor, he earned all-state wrestling honors in New Jersey, distinguishing himself as one of the region's elite young grapplers. His early training sharpened the technical essentials — takedown mechanics, clinch control, and mat pressure — that would define his athletic identity for years to come.
Judo Black Belt and National Title
Glick's judo career matched his wrestling pedigree in distinction. He claimed a national collegiate judo championship — a rare and prestigious achievement in American judo — and earned the rank of black belt, reflecting deep mastery of the discipline's throwing, gripping, and groundwork principles. Judo's ne-waza, or ground techniques, share foundational concepts with Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu: pin transitions, choke setups, and positional control following a throw. The combination of wrestling's explosive takedown power and judo's structured ground awareness gave Glick a well-rounded submission grappling skill set that practitioners across the grappling arts would readily recognize.