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UPDATED: New Year’s Resolutions — Day 3

Welcome to “About Town,” your guide to all that you need to know and all the juicy tidbits you may have missed.

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Literary Shout Out

Kiki Howell is the author of titles including The Sorcerer’s Song, The Witch’s Beast, and The Healing Spell. She is working on a new series and the first book will take place right here in Salem. She was inspired to pen the new series after a trip to our city this summer. Salem, you are so inspiring.

Kick Butt

Want to kick some butt of your own in 2011?Dragon Within Mixed Martial Arts will hold its first self-defense class for women on Feb. 12. The class is $30 and proceeds benefit local non-profitHAWC. This could make a really fantastic Girls Night Out for you and your friends.

Save!

I received a great gift for Christmas — the 2011 Boston Area Entertainment Guide. The book is filled with discounts and coupons for stores, amusements, restaurants and more. I was so excited because I can start using it immediately right here in Salem. Participating Salem locations include: Daily Bagel CafeDamatas PizzaStar Dry CleanersUncle Bob’s Self StorageSubwayMcDonald’s, and Green Land Cafe.

Salem Tops the List

A new article by Maria Olia came out to celebrate the New Year. The on-line magazine iStopOver published “Make the Most of 2011: A Dozen Places to Take Your Kids in New England.” Salem was named as the hot destination for the month of October (duh). But congrats Salem for making the news again!

Get Involved

Hoping to get involved with the local theatre this year? The Salem Theatre Company is holding auditions for the production of Sarah Ruhl’s “Dead Man’s Cell Phone.” The company is searching for two males and four females to fill parts. Auditions will take place tonight and Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the theatre.

Fit to the Core

It is day three of your New Year’s Resolution — how are you doing? If you need a little bit of butt-kicking, sign up for Core Conditioning for Runners. The eight-week class starts on Jan 12. Karen Giroux will be your trainer and get your core strengthened and into tip-top shape! Contact Salem Park, Recreation & Community Services for more info.

http://salem.patch.com/articles/new-years-resolutions-day-3

Salem MMA school giving back with youngsters

December 9, 2010

By Jean DePlacidocorrespondent

 

Dennis Cregier, owner of Dragon Within Mixed Martial Arts School in Salem wants to give back to the community. One way he is doing it is by going out to the schools. He and his head children’s instructor Greg Jackson have been running a unique program at the Saltonstall School in Salem where they go every Friday morning for two hours to instruct youngsters not only in mixed martial arts, but respect for each other and their surroundings. The goal is to give the children, ranging in age from seven to 13-years old, confidence, and they focus on awareness of bullying.

“The kids love the program, and we can see a big change in a very short time,” said Jackson, who grew up in Salem and Beverly. It’s a mixed martial arts class, but we teach much more. Bullying is such an important issue these days, and our main goal is to make them all aware of it when it happens to them or a friend.”

The program, which ends this week, is six weeks long and part of the Friday Club program run by volunteers at the school. The 22 children involved get a tasted of martial arts with special emphasis on respect for each other, their teachers, and parents.

“We go beyond martial arts in the teaching, and try to emphasize life skills that will continue beyond the Friday Club. It’s important these kids know what to do when bullying happens to them or one of their peers,” said Jackson, who is 24 years old and attended Beverly High. “We’re training them to learn through Mixed Martial Arts which not only teaches technique, but attention and listening to other people.

“Fighting is only one part of it; discipline, respect, and confidence are the big three. Kids that age are not used to the discipline part, and it can change their life. I did a summer program for kids at the Kernwood Country Club last summer, and really enjoyed it. This is the first time I’ve gone out to a school. It’s a very popular program, and I’d love to do something like this again.”

Jackson said he was very active as a youngster, but got lazy in his teenage years. Since he has been training in mixed martial arts the past five years he’s back in shape.

“I wish there was a program like this when I was a kid,” said Jackson. “I work with kids as young as three and a half at our Studio, and they range all the way up to age 14. You have to use varied techniques and routines with the age groups. I try to make it a lot of fun by doing a lot of different things to keep them interested. It takes dedication and you can’t learn everything about mixed martial arts in a short time, but this is a great way to get them interested.”

“Greg is a very talented and humble person,” said Patricia Cregier, who works with her husband at Dragon Within. “The kids love him, and he’s a well respected instructor.”

 

Check out the results written in youth1.com about Juan Lopez’s Naga results

Teens No Gi Expert: 14&15 yr old Middleweight
Juan Lopez’s armbar secured victory for the DWMMA teen fighter in the finale of the 14&15 yr old Middleweight no Gi division. Lenny Guerrero Baez of Kimura BJJ put up a great fight, but in the end he had no answer for Lopez’s submission attempt and ultimately had to tapout.

Teens No Gi Expert: 16&17 yr old Middleweight
Gracie Berra represented as their fighter Cody Anderson, took on and beat Juan Lopez of DWMMA in an extremely hard fought match. With both grapplers leaving everything on the mat, it was Anderson’s one last effort that earned him the 10-8 victory and 1st place title.

http://www.youth1.com/teens-no-gi-expert-division-northeast-championships.html

Jean DePlacido column: Cregier trains all from MMA fighters to youngsters

Learning Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) was a good way to survive for Dennis Cregier, who grew up in a tough neighborhood in Mount Kisko, N.Y.

Now 27 years later, the 41-year-old owns his own mixed martial arts school called Dragon Within and is about to celebrate the first anniversary at its current location of 11 Franklin Street, just off Route 114 in Salem.

“When I was growing up it was a tough place, but my hometown has changed a lot since then,” said Cregier, who holds a black belt in kickboxing/jujitsu blend and a purple belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. “My wife is from Marblehead, which is how I ended up here.”

Cregier has been in business for six years, first in Salem and then Peabody before moving back to the Witch City. He has spent the last 12 months at his current location.

“We have classes for ordinary people looking for a different way to get in shape, and I also train people wanting to fight,” he said. “We have a lot of kids as well as women and men of all ages. We can design a program to fit any goal.

“This is something you can do your whole life with good coaching and safe training. Quite a few women do it not only for fitness but also self defense, so our kickboxing classes are very popular.”

The ordinary person, he said, is mainly looking for a different way to exercise. “We give people a schedule to follow; some are here every day and others twice a week. Many add yoga or something else into their routine,” said Cregier. “We can accommodate whatever a person’s needs are.”

Cregier, who competed in both kickboxing and boxing in his home state, also trains the most serious MMA athletes who are preparing for a fight. Currently there are five in this special group of serious fighters training at Dragon Within, including one young woman.

“That’s not the majority of my population. Out of 50 people, I’ll have one or possibly two fighters,” said Cregier. “They may do some workout sessions with our regular groups, but they mostly train separately from everybody else. We’re not going to let them go up against the average person taking a class.

“(Lynn’s) Shannon Harney is getting ready for her fourth fight Oct. 30 at the Combat Zone in Salem, N.H. She only goes around 120 pounds, but she’s a little dynamo.”

Cregier said his most famous fighter is Salem’s own Greg Jackson. “He’s done quite well,” he said. “He hasn’t fought in about a year and is now helping me run our kids’ program. Another up-and-coming guy is Peter Wellman, who is from Arlington.”

Cregier said he uses the same training as the fighters do in his classes for the general population, but it is not as strenuous. In order to succeed in MMA fighting, Cregier stressed that fighters need to be adept at all facets of the sport.

“It’s part kickboxing, wrestling and clinching as well as grappling, which is like Brazilian ground fighting,” said Cregier. “You start out standing then take your opponent down, which is where the ground fighting takes over. The sport is growing in leaps and bounds. In five to 10 years they are predicting it will be one of the biggest around.

“I think the reason why (the sport) has taken so long to get big is because some people look at MMA as barbaric, but in fact it is very safe. You have to put in rigorous training sessions for seven weeks to get ready for a fight. Amateurs go three 3-minute rounds while pros have five 3-minute rounds. You have to be in great shape to do it because you go all out every second.”

DWMMA offers all kinds of martial arts with classes in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Thai kickboxing, kids karate, adult karate, cardio and circuit training, strength and conditioning for people of all ages and every fitness level.

• • •

Jean DePlacido is a part-time writer and columnist for The Salem News. Contact her at jmdeplacido@aol.com.