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30 Years, Four Failed Gyms, One Brampton Lot: How Master Mignon Built Doggpound MMA

Stand in the middle of Doggpound MMA in Brampton, Ontario, and the room makes its case before anyone says a word.

Twenty-five thousand square feet of mats, bags, a ring, weights, and a row of kids running between adult classes. A boxing wall on one side. A jiu-jitsu corner on the other.

Master Donnie Mignon walks Alex Cuevas through it like a man giving a tour of a home he built with his own hands. Which he did.

Thirty years ago, this same building was where he rented a racquetball court to teach a Taekwondo class.

Cement walls. No mats. He cut a window in the side for ventilation.

Between then and now, three or four other schools didn't make it.

The story of how the kid from Calgary who couldn't sit at certain tables ended up owning the whole lot is the only one worth telling.

If you want to watch instead, the whole episode is here:

A Calgary Kid Who Couldn't Sit at Certain Tables

Donnie Mignon started training in Taekwondo as a kid in Calgary under a man named Master Everald Wright.

Master Wright wasn't just a teacher—Mignon still calls him a father. When asked what martial arts gave him, he doesn't reach for the obvious answer.

Straight to the point, if it wasn't for martial arts, and I would say the guidance of my instructor, my master, I'd be there in jail.

Master Donnie Mignon, founder of Doggpound MMA
MASTER DONNIE MIGNON
Founder, Doggpound MMA

He was a rambunctious kid, by his own description. The discipline came from the mat. So did this:

"I always say, don't be afraid of me. Respect me," he tells Alex. "Because when people are afraid of you, you don't know what they're going to do. But if they respect you, they're going to give you the honor and the glory that you deserve."

There's a moment in the interview where he talks about growing up Black in Calgary and playing hockey.

"There was only two black things on the ice, me and the puck."
THE THREE PILLARS:

Forty-eight years into teaching, Mignon still opens with the same first lesson: discipline, respect, confidence—in that order. Discipline comes from the mat. Respect is what you give back. Confidence is the byproduct, not the goal.

The Brother Who Was Supposed to Run the Business

The original plan for the gym had two people in it.

Donnie was going to be the master at the front of the room. His younger brother was going to handle the math.

They'd talked about it. Sketched it. Then his brother died in his sleep after graduating from college.

The gym Mignon eventually built carries that weight, and the version of it standing today exists because someone else stepped into the seat his brother was supposed to fill.

"My wife is like the brain," he tells Alex.

She handles the systems and the front of house. The books, too. She's also the one who pushed for this building when Donnie thought it was too big and too expensive.

The early version of the deal had an investor in it. That fell apart fast.

I had an investor. We pulled out. And then it was just me and the wife. So we're already here, so we can't go back.

Master Donnie Mignon, founder of Doggpound MMA
MASTER DONNIE MIGNON
Founder, Doggpound MMA
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Three or Four Locked-Out Gyms Before This One

Mignon doesn't hide the failures. He brings them up himself.

I failed many times. I've had three or four gyms been locked out. Leonard kicked me out. Couldn't pay the rent. Couldn't do this. Couldn't do that. Business was rough. It was tough. And I kept going.

Master Donnie Mignon, founder of Doggpound MMA
MASTER DONNIE MIGNON
Founder, Doggpound MMA

The Doggpound MMA name was formalized in 2009, co-founded with Brendon Aldridge, who has since moved on to other ventures.

But the actual martial arts career goes further back—more than 30 years of teaching bullyproofing and self-defense in Peel Region elementary and high schools, in women's shelters, in programs for kids with disabilities.

The gym is the version of that work that finally had a building of its own.

The previous building lasted 14 years. The current one is where he is now, on Hansen Road, in the same Brampton lot where the racquetball court used to be.

"Even if I fail now, which I'm not planning on failing," he says, "I'd be okay with that because I did it."

No Shortcut to the MMA Room

THE CURRICULUM GATE:

New students take fundamentals in kickboxing or Muay Thai. They take fundamentals in Gi Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. Three months minimum in each, then—and only then—does the MMA room open up.

The fastest way to get told no at Doggpound is to walk in and ask to start with MMA. It happens often enough that Mignon has a standing answer.

"A lot of guys come in here, students, as you say, come in here and they want to do MMA. So they just want to jump into my MMA class. It doesn't work like that here."

The path through the gym is a curriculum. You don't pick what you want first.

New students take fundamentals in kickboxing or Muay Thai. They take fundamentals in Gi Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. They take it for a minimum of three months in each, and only then does the MMA room open up.

"At minimum three months of each style," he says, "then if I see that they're able, then we introduce them to the MMA."

The same philosophy runs through the belt-testing side of the academy. Doggpound runs Taekwondo and Jiu-Jitsu as belted programs, and Mignon is blunt about how he uses that.

I don't test students unless they're ready. If I know you're not ready, I'm not going to test them just to make money.

I also don't believe in giving anyone participation medals or certificates. It's either you win or you lose.

Master Donnie Mignon, founder of Doggpound MMA
MASTER DONNIE MIGNON
Founder, Doggpound MMA

He's writing a book about this. The working title: You're No Damn Black Belt. He's been working on it for a while. It's nearly done.

The thesis, as far as the transcript reveals it, is the part of the modern martial arts business he won't participate in: belts handed out on schedule, McDojo testing fees, kids walking around with rank they didn't earn.

"I also don't believe in giving anyone participation medals or certificates," he tells Alex. "It's either you win or you lose."

Brampton's 25,000-Square-Foot Fight Venue

Twenty-five thousand square feet doesn't just hold classes. Four or five times a year, the mats come out, 500 folding chairs come in, and the room becomes a sanctioned fight venue.

One Boxing Ontario-sanctioned card so far. Three KW Fighting Series kickboxing events sanctioned by WAKO Canada.

Fourteen to eighteen fights per night. Fighters bused in from Mississauga, Scarborough, Sudbury, across the border.

If you've run the math on hosting a sanctioned card off-site, you know what's coming.

"If I was to do this somewhere else, before I even started, before the day of the fight, I've already spent over 10 grand. But I have the space."

The same room that runs Little Ninjas Taekwondo at 5 PM runs sanctioned amateur kickboxing on Saturday night. The same lights, the same air handling, the same parking lot.

Mignon runs two other businesses out of the same career—a high school martial arts program in Peel Region schools and a security training company called Last Dragon Security Service.

The Paper-and-Pen Guy Crosses Over

Mignon will tell anyone who asks that he was the wrong person to put on gym management software. He says it without apology.

I was against it. I didn't want to do it because I'm old school. But when she showed me because of the magnitude and the numbers of students we have now, there's no way we could have done it without that.

Master Donnie Mignon, founder of Doggpound MMA
MASTER DONNIE MIGNON
Founder, Doggpound MMA

His wife introduced him to Gymdesk about seven to nine months before the camera arrived. He fought it. He says so on the record.

"I was against it. I didn't want to do it because I'm old school. But when she showed me because of the magnitude and the numbers of students we have now, there's no way we could have done it without that."

What he uses it for is the unglamorous list.

Who paid. Who didn't. Who tested. The kid who hasn't shown up in two weeks.

The same things every owner needs to know, surfaced fast enough that he can stay on the mats. The next plan—his wife's idea—is to put Last Dragon Security Service on the same system. One backend, two businesses.

Index cards work fine at 25 students. At 297, you're underwater.

The owner who refused the software until 48 years into his career is the same owner who says, on camera, that he wouldn't run this version of Doggpound without it.

Twenty Years In, the Kids Are Bringing Their Kids

Alex asks Mignon, late in the interview, for the story that still sticks with him.

Not a fighter who won a belt. Not a tournament kid. Something quieter.

I have students that I had 20 years ago bringing their kids to me today. There's no other story to tell because what's better than that?

Master Donnie Mignon, founder of Doggpound MMA
MASTER DONNIE MIGNON
Founder, Doggpound MMA

His youngest student is his own three-year-old son. His oldest is 67.

Parents sit in a viewing area he designed deliberately so they can watch their kids learn. Everyone who walks through the door is known by name.

"No stranger," he says, more than once. The same word he uses to describe the room is the word other people use to describe the gym they wish they had.

What 30 Years on the Same Lot Actually Built

The version of Doggpound MMA that exists in 2026 was built out of four pieces nobody planned in advance.

A brother who didn't get to run the business. The wife who stepped in. And three decades of teaching in schools, shelters, and gyms before this building existed.

And a kid from Calgary who, when he got locked out, kept going.

The room is the proof. So is the curriculum. The kids of the original kids are the rest.

A no-shortcut model and a back office that can actually keep up with it are what make a 297-member, multi-discipline, fight-venue academy something other than a story about a busy gym.

KEY TAKEAWAYS:

The room does the work. Doggpound's 25,000 sq ft holds classes Monday through Friday and turns into a sanctioned fight venue four or five times a year—same lights, same parking lot, same overhead already paid.

The curriculum is the gate. Three months of fundamentals in kickboxing/Muay Thai and Gi BJJ before any student touches the MMA room. No shortcuts, no participation medals, no testing fees for rank that wasn't earned.

The back office finally caught up. A paper-and-pen owner of 48 years switched to gym management software at nearly 300 members because the math stopped working—and now says he wouldn't run this version of Doggpound without it.

Head into the Gymdesk Originals series for the rest of the episodes, or take a look at Gymdesk's martial arts software if the back-office math has started catching up to you, too.

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