The Mission Behind Compete Next Combat Games
When people think of Mixed Martial Arts, the first things that come to mind are powerful punches, brutal takedowns, and slick submissions. We idolize the strikers, the grapplers, the knockout artists. But there’s a missing piece in how we define combat readiness—one that’s just as vital, yet too often overlooked.
That missing piece is physical performance.
And for Coach D, it’s not just an element of preparation. It is combat.
Coach D Using His Life Lessons As A Coaching Tool
Before he was “Coach D,” he was just a kid on the track, running mile after mile, chasing time and discipline. He was a long-distance runner, then a high school wrestler, then a United States Marine—and every step of that journey added a layer to the mindset he teaches today.
Running didn’t just teach him endurance; it taught him how to suffer with purpose.
Wrestling didn’t just teach him technique; it taught him how to dominate with pressure.
The Marines didn’t just teach him toughness; they taught him how to weaponize intensity.
Add to that years of training and competing in Kenpo Karate, and you have a blueprint not just for a fighter—but for a combat performance system rooted in grit, control, and mental dominance.
With more than 25 years of coaching he doesn’t coach from theory—he leads from experience. From track to wrestling mats, from military barracks to karate dojos, he has lived every step of the journey he’s asking young athletes to walk. That’s why he’s hands-on in every class. That’s why he’s building this system—to shape the future of MMA through the kind of performance training that for too long has lived in the shadows.
Mixed Martial Arts is evolving. And as the sport grows, it must make room for the idea that combat performance is just as important as striking or grappling. The athlete who can outlast, outwork, and outthink their opponent through superior conditioning and mindset doesn’t just win—they dominate.
The Birth of Compete Next Combat Games
Through his personal journey and decades of experience, Coach D created the Compete Next Combat Games—a system that transforms physical performance into a combat art of its own.
This isn’t just strength and conditioning.
It’s learning how to fight fatigue like it’s an opponent.
It’s teaching athletes to weaponize pressure.
It’s building mental toughness that breaks others before the bell even rings.
The Combat Games are designed to test and develop an athlete’s ability to perform under stress, push their limits, and apply that performance edge inside the cage. It’s where wrestling, striking, and submissions meet VO2 max, lactate threshold, and mindset conditioning.
It’s where performance becomes combat.
Final Thought
We praise fighters for knockouts and submissions—but should we start giving just as much respect to the athlete who never lets their opponent breathe? The one who controls the tempo and breaks the will of their rival with unrelenting performance?
Maybe it’s time we stop seeing physical performance as preparation…
…and start seeing it as combat.
Are we finally ready to treat performance as its own combat art?





