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The Quiet Genius of Robert Follis

Robert Follis has helped revitalize Xtreme Couture. | Photo: Dave Mandel/Sherdog.com



LAS VEGAS -- Robert Follis, one of the more respected trainers in mixed martial arts, compares training a fighter to enjoying a breakfast of cinnamon rolls on a Sunday morning.

Follis, one of the lead trainers at Xtreme Couture and a black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, teaches classes in the discipline to established Ultimate Fighting Championship stars and anyone who walks in off the street wanting to learn the Gentile Art. However, Follis does not consider BJJ his forte and does not just focus on that aspect of the game to get his fighters ready to square off in the cage.

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“I don’t think BJJ is my specialty; MMA is my specialty,” Follis told Sherdog.com following a September workout with Danny Davis Jr. and Bristol Marunde. “I happen to be a very good BJJ practitioner. I have my black belt and I’ve grappled for many years with it, but I’ve been wrestling and I’ve been working on striking for the same amount of time. I happen to teach BJJ more here than the striking portion of teaching.

(+ Enlarge) | Photo: Dave Mandel/Sherdog.com

Couture saw something in Follis.
“In team, I work with all my fighters on their striking, integrating it into their game. There is an old saying that it’s the space between the notes that makes the music, and that is one of my favorite sayings,” he added. “I see a lot of people who still train in compartmentalized fashion. They do BJJ one day, work with this guy doing kickboxing, they go over here and do wrestling, have a strength and conditioning coach over here, and most coaches might meet up on fight day.”

Those fighters win or lose in spite of the training, Follis said, adding that fans of the sport are starting to see a trend of more MMA coaches blending wrestling, striking and traditional martial arts in their training sessions. While Follis might have a black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, he is also well-respected for training his fighters to improve their striking and wrestling -- but what does all that have do with cinnamon rolls?

“[Imagine] if I invited you over on Sunday morning for homemade cinnamon rolls, and you don’t smell any cinnamon rolls,” Follis said. “I tell you they are on the table. You walk over, and there is a bowl of flour, bowl of butter, bowl of cinnamon and a bowl of sugar. I tell you to dig in, and you go, ‘Whoa! A cinnamon roll is not just a bunch of ingredients. It’s how you mix and prepare them that make them a cinnamon roll. It’s what makes them delicious.’

“MMA is the same thing. A lot of people get confused by specialty, and they don’t think of someone as a MMA coach because at the very beginning, everyone started out with a specialty,” he added. “But, it has kind of come on at a time where we were mixing martial arts. I can separate and teach BJJ for the sport, but I really feel like where I’ve been world-class is in how that gets mixed out and orchestrated together rather than as separate pieces.”

Finding Inspiration


Follis, who turns 46 in November, knows all aspects of the sport well. He has been involved with MMA since he was in his early 20s. He was a bartender who was also working security at some pretty active fight bars in Oregon.

“I didn’t want to get my ass beat at work,” Follis said, “so I started training.”

Around that same time, the Ultimate Fighting Championship debuted. Follis watched UFC 1 with some friends and fell in love with the sport, especially with how eventual UFC 1 winner Royce Gracie was winning his fights.

(+ Enlarge) | Photo: Dave Mandel/Sherdog.com

Tate wants another shot at UFC gold.
“We were jumping up and down and couldn’t believe this skinny Brazilian was whipping these guys,” Follis said. “It was enthralling. I grew up with boxing, and every now and then you’d see these karate, kickboxing-type matches, but muay Thai wasn’t the norm in America at that point. Really, you’d watch boxing as a combative sport, but watching takedowns and armbars was unheard of. I remember when Royce finished [Jason DeLucia] with an armbar [at UFC 2]. We were all jumping up and celebrating, but we were like, ‘What did he do?’ No one even knew what an armbar was back then.”

Follis and his friend, Shawn Gregory, began training in Gregory’s garage, as often as their bodies would allow them to train on carpet or concrete. Follis and Gregory eventually found a gym that taught jiu-jitsu, kickboxing and other self-defense fighting disciplines. After a few years of training, Follis answered a call from future UFC hall of famer Randy Couture for sparring partners with kickboxing experience who could also execute takedowns. Couture was preparing to fight Maurice Smith for the heavyweight title at UFC 15.5. Couture won the fight, and he continued to work with Follis.

“Then, things just led to another,” Follis said. “Randy and Dan [Henderson] opened up Team Quest, and they asked me to come on board.”

Long Road Back


After a long career training many of the legends of the sport, Follis has not quite achieved the same level of fame as trainers such as Greg Jackson or Firas Zahabi, but that does not seem to affect him. He knows what he has done throughout his storied career and is at peace with himself.

His MMA training helped him through some dark times in his 20s. Follis eventually left Team Quest after 10 years because all the training and travel had taken a toll on him. He stepped back, taking some time off to enjoy life again. Part of that included moving to Las Vegas, where he trained military, police and casino security units, but the lure of MMA training was still there. Dennis Davis -- a fighter he had worked with for years in Oregon -- was now coaching at Xtreme Couture and kept asking Follis to come on board and coach again.

“Finally, I said let’s see what we can do and have a little fun,” Follis said. “It wasn’t a plan of mine to be here, but it has turned out phenomenal for me. I’ve had a ton of fun helping out, revitalizing the team and working with Randy again. With our background and as far back as it goes, it has been a really good experience.”

Follis was instrumental in helping to reshape the team at Xtreme Couture, which had started to flounder after Couture retired and other gyms opened up offering to train fighters for free.

“Vegas is a really interesting place, and fighters here have a tendency to bounce around to whatever is new and hot,” he said. “People invite them in and give them this for free, and then after a while, they want you to pay. In Oregon, we had a team, and everyone trained there. It wasn’t like here where they train at seven different gyms. Guys just kind of bounced around, and it wasn’t because there weren’t good things going on here. I really think it was more of the fabric and vibe of Vegas at the time. What happened here was twofold. I get a lot of credit for what has happened to the team here, which I appreciate and I feel I had a lot to do with it, but it was a huge team effort.”

Training the Mind to Compete


(+ Enlarge) | Photo: Dave Mandel/Sherdog.com

Lee has a bright future.
Follis has injected life into Xtreme Couture with his unique training style and knowledge of the sport. During the training session with Davis Jr. and Marunde, he talked to his fighters about certain situations.

“Head to your under hook,” he advised. “Give me your head, and my odds go up substantially.”

After that training session, he went over the mental aspects of a fight, talking about the differences between winning and losing rounds. He also quizzed each fighter on how to get out of certain situations and how to take advantage of others.

That aspect of the game drew Ryan Couture to Follis. Currently fighting under the Bellator MMA banner, he said Follis will often sit down at the end of training sessions -- and even his regular gi classes -- and line out why things are done a certain way, why he teaches what he teaches and what the benefits are. The son of Xtreme Couture founder Randy Couture, Ryan Couture has won four straight fights after losing back-to-back bouts and being released by the UFC.

“His Jiu-Jitsu, striking and all-around MMA knowledge is as good as anybody you can ask for,” Ryan Couture said. “He’s been in this sport for close to 20 years now, and just having that wealth of knowledge and experience in training people has been a great help. More specifically to me, his style and mine match up so well. We’re both long, lanky guys, so a lot of technique that works so well for him has transitioned well into my game. He’s been a good fit for my style.

“He’s helped me refocus on my strengths and fighting the style that is best suited to my body and my skill set,” he added. “He does a good job of always bringing me back to focus on that instead of what might distract me with new things I may be learning that should not necessarily be my top priority.”

One of Follis’ top young fighters is rising lightweight star Kevin Lee, who holds an 11-1 record and is scheduled to meet Leonardo Santos at UFC 194 on Dec. 12. He has recorded four consecutive wins since he lost a unanimous decision to Al Iaquinta in his promotional debut at UFC 169. Lee proves Follis’ point. He works with Follis because of his wrestling expertise and his overall MMA strategy.

“I like him because he is different,” Lee said. “You see him show techniques. He shows it in a different way, but he still conforms to my style, especially with the wrestling aspect. The guy has been around the game since the 90s -- since I was a baby, before I even knew what MMA was.”

Fighters Raise Profile


Lee’s emergence has helped increase Follis’ profile among hardcore MMA fans who know him from his work with the Coutures, Chris Leben, Ed Herman and Chris Wilson, among others. Follis now teams with Miesha Tate, who has pieced together a four-fight winning streak since she lost to UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey at UFC 168. One of those victories was a decision over Jessica Eye at UFC on Fox 16, and many, including Follis, believed she had earned another shot at Rousey. The UFC elected instead to bypass Tate in favor of the unbeaten Holly Holm.

“Those are things out of our control,” Follis said. “We are focused on whoever they are going to give us next and just go win fights until we can get that title. There is nothing else to do. Disappointment -- you can carry it around and lament about it or you can say, ‘Hey, look, there are only a few things I know for sure, and one of those is life is not fair. Being a good person and doing the right things does not mean everything will work out how you want it.’ When these things happen, you have to get right back to work and get after it.

“I know Meisha feels that way,” he added. “I know she is disappointed. We talked about it, and she was like, ‘Hey, they can’t keep me from that title forever. Keep winning fights, and they cannot deny us.’”

Bryan Caraway has also shown improvement since he began working with Follis. He earned a unanimous decision over former World Extreme Cagefighting champion Eddie Wineland at UFC on Fox 16 and now finds himself ranked in the Top 10 at 135 pounds. Follis thinks Caraway can win a title someday.

There is an old saying
that it’s the space
between the notes that
makes the music, and
that is one of my
favorite sayings.


-- Robert Follis, Xtreme Couture trainer

While Follis is happy to see his fighters succeed, he does not seem to care about the fame that comes with being one of the hot trainers of the moment. He is more content with working with people he actually likes. He counts Tate and Caraway -- who are in a longstanding relationship -- as dear friends. He also admires the professionalism Lee displays, which is rare in a 23-year-old athlete rising through the ranks.

“At this point in my career, I can pick who I work with,” Follis said. “These people are not just good fighters, they are good people. They are people I like. When we go on the road, I don’t feel like, ‘Oh man, I’m stuck with these people for a week.’ I look forward to being with them. They are solid people, good friends, do good things that are upstanding, good athletes who train hard, and they are a joy to work with.”

Of course, if Tate, Caraway, Lee or any of the other young fighters he currently trains get the opportunity to win a belt, Follis’ status among even the casual MMA fans will certainly increase.

“It seems to be kind of a cyclical thing,” Ryan Couture said. “I feel like every year, two years or three years, there is a new ‘it’ coach that they are talking about, and it kind of coincides with whoever is training the most UFC titleholders. That is who you hear Joe Rogan and Mike Goldberg go on and on about on all the broadcasts, and that is who everybody else is talking about. They forget that there is a ton of other quality coaches out there who deserve just as much attention.”

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