1/5 Eric W. 5 years ago on Google
I
was
with
Coimbra
MMA
for
about
2
and
a
half
years.
And
indeed,
it
used
to
be
great
like
the
reviews
say,
at
least
in
jiujitsu.
The
trainer
we
had
then
was
very
dedicated,
and
even
gave
classes
on
weekends
and
holidays.
He
spent
a
great
deal
of
time
with
the
students
and
there
was
a
good
ambience.
Unfortunately,
after
I
returned
from
a
2
month
trip
in
May
2018,
things
had
gone
way
downhill.
They
replaced
the
trainer
with
a
very
bad
person,
who
literally
is
the
worst
trainer
I
have
ever
had.
He
often
comes
late,
flirts
with
the
girls,
talks
to
students
about
other
students,
doesn’t
clean
the
mats
…
Things
also
started
getting
stolen
from
myself
and
others.
Many
people
quit
after
he
came.
I
stayed
on
because
I
really
like
BJJ
and
I
didn't
know
anywhere
else
in
Coimbra
to
go.
When
I
tried
to
talk
to
him
directly
about
the
problem
I
had
with
him,
he
immediately
became
defensive
and
had
it
out
for
me.
He
later
began
harassing
me
a
bit
and
poking
fun
at
the
fact
I
had
2
different
things
stolen
from
me.
I
can
continue,
but
he
truly
is
horrible.
I
complained
to
the
head
of
Coimbra
MMA
about
this.
As
if
by
chance,
after
complaining,
I
got
kicked
out
of
Coimbra
MMA
on
what
obviously
was
a
false
pretext.
I
have
seen
some
good
and
bad
clubs
in
all
my
years
of
training
different
sports.
As
a
matter
of
principle,
I
never
have
written
any
reviews
about
the
bad
clubs.
But
the
BJJ
is
so
bad
that
it
goes
beyond
what
my
principle
dictates.
Of
course,
if
you
absolutely
want
to
do
jiu
jitsu,
you
can
go
there
which
is
what
I
did.
But
if
you
have
other
options
even
if
they
are
a
little
less
desirable,
avoid
that
place
like
the
plague.
Of
course
I
can’t
speak
for
the
other
sports,
and
the
few
trainers
I
know
in
the
other
sports
seem
like
professional
people,
especially
the
Muy
Thai
boxer.
Too
bad
I
don’t
like
Muy
Thai.
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