Last month, Zoltan Bathory, guitarist for metal band Five Finger Death Punch, was awarded 4th Dan Black Belt in Judo.
The musician’s Instagram post read:
“I tied my first Judo belt around my waist over 40 years ago… and stepped onto the tatami without knowing that the code of martial arts, the Bushido, would become my compass in every arena of life.
“Martial arts is not something you casually do. You *become* a martial artist. It rewires your mind and forges your personality. I owe my success to the philosophy and discipline that Judo and Jiu Jitsu instilled in me.
“Last night I was honored as my heroes and inspirations, the absolute legends of the sport who later In life became my friends – Olympians and world champions Mike Swain and Joe Marchal – presented me with my 4th Dan in Judo, formalizing the next step in a journey that began at age 9 and still continues…
“Around twenty years ago, as a Judo black belt teaching takedowns to Jiu-Jitsu players, I realized Jiu-Jitsu was the missing Ne Waza of Judo. So I put on the white belt once again and, alongside my Judo, began my Jiu-Jitsu journey with humility, starting from the bottom. (Today a first-degree BJJ black belt.)
“Because Still and forever, I will remain a student… sharpening the sword… grateful to my teachers, my brothers, and the Judo and Jiu-Jitsu family. 🫡”
At 47, with a 4th-degree black belt freshly recognized by the United States Judo Association, Bathory’s journey on the tatami began not in the spotlight, but in the gritty dojos of Eastern Europe. He was just nine years old when he first bowed to the mat, honing his throws and grips under the unforgiving rigor of a system that demands precision over power.
Immigrating to the U.S. as a teen, Zoltan carried judo’s principles like a hidden tattoo: maximum efficiency, minimum effort. “Judo isn’t about brute force,” he once shared in a martial arts interview. “It’s a chess match on the ground—anticipating, adapting, controlling.” Those early sessions, crafting homemade nunchucks in his youth, evolved into a lifelong ritual. Even as Five Finger Death Punch’s tours scorched arenas worldwide, Bathory refused to let the road erode his edge. He built a private dojo in his home and mandated that his band’s security team—all Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belts—double as rolling partners, turning hotel rooms into impromptu training grounds.
Today, as a takedown coach for the Gracie Humaitá Las Vegas team, Zoltan weaves judo’s explosive entries into modern grappling, earning silver medals in U.S. Nationals super heavyweight divisions. For him, the mat is more than sweat and submissions; it’s the quiet forge where metal meets discipline. “Never quit,” he advises aspiring fighters and fans alike. In a world of chaos—riffs, crowds, life—judo remains his unyielding anchor.






















