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TheMartialArtsReporter.com

"Martial Arts News, Updates, Insights, Training Tips & Chat"

jiu jitsu

A Very Unusual Week In Review At TheMartialArtsReporter.com

I Really Hope Thiago Alves …. - 26 Year Old Brazilian MMA Fighter And Superb UFC-Welterweight FacingThe Biggest Challenge Of His Life.

Do You Punch Like A 7 Year Old? I wish I could punch like this kid. Find out what I mean.

Inglourious Basterds And Infamous Choke On The Ground Got Me Thinking About A way Out.

Move Over, Jackie Chan And Jet Li, Because Here Comes Donnie Yen Who Stars Again As Wing Chun Legend, Ip Man

The Kid From Beaufort Who Became Heavyweight Boxing Olympic Gold Medalist And World Champion And I Had No Idea Until Last Week.

Erin Go Bragh! And Don’t Forget The Shamrocks! Ireland Forever And Boy, Did I Enjoy St. Patrick’s Day In Savannah.

I would apppreciate your feedback to any of my previous posts and even topics that I haven’t touched on yet.

Talk soon.

 

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What Did The First Ever Ultimate Fighting Championship, UFC 1, Look Like?

It’s amazing that more than 15  years have passed since the very first Ultimate Fighting Championship event UFC 1.

In only two weeks from now we are looking at UFC 111!

The original event took place on November 12, 1993 in Denver and was more of a tournament than just individual fights in various weight divisions.

There were 8 fighters and no weight classes and no rules! well, there were some rules such as no biting and no eye-gouging.

One of the basic ideas that the creators had was to get fighters/martial artists from different styles to determine the most effective style.

When everything was said and done the winner was Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu practitioner Royce Gracie, who was by far the lightest fighter beating a number of way heavier opponents.

He won the final match against Gerard Gordeau via rear naked choke and he put BJJ on the map especially here in the U.S.

And fighting would never be the same!

Today, I just wanted to reminisce and look at how it all started:

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Honestly, Are You Really Prepared To Fight If You Have To?

“You talkin’ to me?”

Who doesn’t remember that famous Robert de Niro line in Taxi Driver?!

First, the funny version:

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Now, the real deal that still makes some people shiver:

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Let’s say you’re minding your own business and you encounter some moron who has nothing better to do than try to pick a fight with you.

Being  both mentally and physically prepared to fight if you have to, will mean all the difference. 

And I’m not talking about just being able to throw a bunch of fancy kicks and punches.

I mean being in a prepared stance without exuding belligerence and possibly escalating a threatening situation.

Being in a prepared stance also means that if the moron does decide to attack, you are able to defend yourself quickly and effectively.

Here’s a clip that offers something to seriously think about:

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Stay safe!

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Thursday, March 4th, 2010 combat, fighting, jiu jitsu, kicking, punching No Comments

Valentine’s Day And The Week In Review At TheMartialArtsReporter.com

Happy Valentine’s Day, y’all!

I don’t understand why Cupid was chosen to represent Valentine’s Day.

When I think about romance, the last thing on my mind is a short chubby toddler coming at me with a weapon.

Anyway …

Let’s get back to what really makes the world turn and that would be martial arts, right?! Just kidding around here.

Check out The Week In Review that took us from Russia (with love) to Japan to Brooklyn, New York to Hong Kong to Houston, Texas.

Russian Systema Or Just When You Think You’ve Seen It All

Masahiko Kimura, The Best Judoka Ever?

Martial Artist Wesley Snipes Co-Starring In “Brooklyn’s Finest”

Teenager Tried To Kick Bruce Lee In The Face

Why Kick High If You Can Low?

Linda Denley, Karate Superwoman From Houston, Texas

Have a great Valentine’s Day wherever you are!

I will talk to you tomorrow.

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The Five Virtues Of The Fighting Arts

Today I would like to touch on a topic or better a perspective that I have been thinking about some time now.

With the worldwide popularization of various martial arts or better fighting arts, too many of these disciplines have been extremely misinterpreted and thus falsely represented.

Due to commercialization and dilution for sporting applications, just to name two, it appears to me that the true values of the fighting arts continue to be contorted.

In times of  excessive thirst for fame, power and egotism, it is pivotal to point out how the fighting arts can nurture the human spirit in many gratifying ways.

Countless practitioners of the fighting arts have found a way of life which is referred to as Gojo or “Five Virtues” which were already defined by Confucius (551-479 BC), one the world’s most quoted Chinese philosophers.

Based on the Confucian philosophy, especially the Japanese fighting arts are founded on the these 5 virtues:

  • Benevolence
  • Knowledge
  • Justice
  • Trust
  • Etiquette

Even if a number of fighting arts, which were true martial arts at one time, have been transformed and adapted from battlefield applications to cultivate physical and moral fitness such as Judo, which derived form Jujutsu, they pretty much have similar goals according to martial scholar Dave Lowry, namely:

“A perfection of character, a pursuit of life’s truths, and a polishing of the spirit.”

Just something to think about.

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Saturday, January 30th, 2010 Confucius, fighting, jiu jitsu, judo No Comments

Emil Farkas, “Sensei To The Stars” And A Lot More

Having taught, among others: Herb Alpert, Fred Williamson, Dennis Hopper, Lalo Schifrin, Sherry Caffaro, Mike Connors, Peggy Lipton, Raymond St. Jacques, Irene Tsu, Peter Fonda, Linda Blair, Al Ruddy, Lou Adler, Paul Williams, Ted Mann, James Cann, Phil Spector, Barry Gordy, Jeff Barry and Lorenzo Lamas, our featured martial artist has been dubbed  “Sensei To The Stars”.

Research shows that Emil Farkas is more than that. A lot more.

Hungarian-born American martial arts instructor, author and fight coordinator Emil Farkas started his martial arts career while still a youngster, and before age 20 he had earned his black belt in both Judo and Karate.

Both his parents were Holocaust survivors, and young Emil was born in the Hungarian town of Munkacz right after World War II, and grew up in an Orthodox home.

When he was 7, young Emil started getting into fights with some of his Hungarian classmates and he decidedto study judo at the local sports club.

In 1956, after Soviet tanks crushed a short-lived uprising, the family fled and ended up in Toronto.

Farkas quickly learned that anti-Semitism had preceded him across the ocean and so he was driven to put all his energy into his judo classes and trained almost every night.

Several years later, the first karate instructors arrived from Japan and Okinawa and Emil Farkas was immediately taken by the athletic kick ing and punching techniques.  He became so proficient that he earned his first black belt in judo at 17, and in karate at 18.

In the mid-1960s, the Farkas family moved to Los Angeles and 19-year-old Emil looked for a job to support himself while attending college. He became a bodyguard to music industry mogul, Phil Spector.

In 1970, Farkas’ career really started to take off.  That’s when he founded his own school, the Beverly Hills Karate Academy, which he still runs today. The timing was also good to attract Jewish parents and their kids, especially after the Israeli military victory in 1967.

Working for Phil Spector helped Farkas meet actors and screenwriters in Hollywood.  As martial arts movies started to become popular, Farkas was in constant demand as a stunt and fight coordinator, training stunt doubles, and working with cinematographers on “choreographed action” or fight scenes, in Easy Rider, Killer Elite, Mannix, Spiderman, The Hulk, Mission Impossible and The Fall Guy, just to mention a few.

Sensei Farkas used the long waiting time on the movie sets to write books on the martial arts.  He has co-authored numerous books, including the authoritative “The Original Martial Arts Encyclopedia: Tradition, History, Pioneers.”

As a martial arts instructor, Farkas now focuses mainly on “street-effective self defense” through Shotoka, a branch of karate that Farkas developed. 

 Today he is one of America’s most respected martial arts instructors and is without a doubt internationally recognized as a leading authority on the martial arts.

Currently, Sensei Farkas  holds a 7th degree Black Belt in Karate, 4th degree Black Belt in Judo and a 4th degree Black Belt in Ju-Jitsu.

Not surprisingly, he is also an accomplished expert in realistic street combat, having worked as a bodyguard for many years.

 In 2000, Farkas and Benny “The Jet” Urquidez founded the Los Angeles Film Fighting Institute, which was one of the first schools of its kind in the United States to teach martial artists the intricacies of stunt work.

In 1995, Farkas founded his own federation, The United International Martial Arts Federation, whose goal is to promote traditional martial arts worldwide.

Emil Farkas has shared his vast martial expertise as a Hand-to-Hand combat instructor  to the Canadian Army as well as Women’s self-defense instructor at UCLA.

He has been on the cover of all major martial arts magazines including Black Belt Magazine, Karate Illustrated, World Karate, Inside Kung Fu, Combat, Fighters, Official Karate, Combat Karate and Budo.

In 2000, Farkas was inducted into the International Martial Arts Hall of Fame.

Hats off to Sensei Emil Farkas!  ”You have come a long way since your childhood days in the Hungarian town of Munkacz.”

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Robert Trias, Founder Of The First U.S. Karate School

With today’s post I am continuing my sporadic series of all-time “First …”.

Yesterday, we had “James Cagney, First Martial Artist To Star In  A Movie” and just about 3 weeks ago “First U.S. American Judo Brown Belt And 26th U.S. President“, remember?

Well, today I would like to honor a gentleman who was truly a trailblazer. He is considered the “Father of American Karate”.

His name: Robert Trias.

While stationed on the British Solomon Islands in 1942 (and remember that these were truly world-changing times after the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941), U.S. Navy serviceman and middleweight boxing champion Robert Trias was getting ready for an upcoming boxing match.

I don’t know about you, but I don’t believe in coincidences anymore.

Why do I say that?

While preparing for his match, Rober Trias made the acquaintance of a Chinese missionary on the island.

The missionary just happened to be a master in Hsing-Yi, which Trias wasn’t aware of.

Well, anyway, the missionary, Master T’ung Geee Hsing offered Trias Hsing-Yi lessons in exchange for some boxing.

But according to reports, at first Trias wasn’t very inclined or better, was more pissed off by this dude ruining his concentration during his training.

Finally, he gave in to the missionary’s request with the intention to teach him a lesson the boxing ring.

But things didn’t go according to plan, because Trias didn’t land one punch!

This was a turning point in the life and fighting career of Robert Trias, because from then on he would pursue Master Hsing’s art and thus Karate would become his life.

After being transferred to Singapore, Mr. Trias continued his martial arts training with a different instructor who had been taught Kempo Ju-Jitsu in Japan by Master Fukuda.

The electic style that Grandmaster Trias would later develop is known as Shorei-Goju Ryu, Shorei-ryu and Shuri-ryu and many organizations claim to trace their roots to him and the USKA.

The shorei-ryu system is a blend of the Chinese arts of mo-kempo and pakua and the ancient Okinawan art of Naha-te.

It is a style which is noted for its low stances, powerful moves and circular motions.

 

After returning from his military service in the Pacific Theater during WWII, Grandmaster Robert Trias founded his school in 1946 in Phoenix,  Arizona.

 Through his pioneering efforts in Karate, Grandmaster Robert Trias became the United States’  liaison with Korea, Japan, China, and Okinawa for many years.

He was instrumental in promoting the first world karate tournament in 1963 in Chicago.

His rules for tournament competition are still used today with slight variation.

Trias died in 1989 of cancer leaving the Shuri-ryu system to his daughter Roberta Trias-Kelley (10th Dan), inheritor of Shuri-Ryu and Menkyo Kaiden.

Robert A. Trias is the author of “Karate is my Life”"The Hand is my Sword”, “The Pinnacle of Karate”, “The Supreme Way”, and “Render Yourself Empty”.

 

 

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The Week In Review At TheMartialArtsReporter.com

Thanks again for stopping by and sharing your keen interest in martial arts and related topics.

Another week has flown by and it’s time for The Week In Review.

Enjoy!

Learn The Muay Thai Clinch From Walter “Sleeper” Michalowksi Also Known As Neck Wrestling Demonstrated By A True Professional

FREE: 5 Unique Pushups To Elevate Your Training Program Just About Anywhere, Anytime And Without Any Equipment

“Karate, The Art Of Empty Hand Fighting” By Hidetaka Nishiyama The Best-Selling Karate Book Turns 50 This Year!

Another Glimpse Of Astonishing Filipino Martial Arts This FMA Master Uses Not A Stick, Not A Knife, But A Horse Whip!!

Wing Chun: Chi Sao, Also Known As Sticky Hands A highly important exercise for anybody serious about Wing Chun Kung Fu.

The Talented Mr. BJ Penn, aka ‘The Prodigy’ Learn More About The UFC-Lightweight Champion From Hilo, Hawaii And Most Probably One Of The Best Fighters Of All Time.

Enjoy your Sunday!

 

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Bartitsu, The Fighting Style Of Detective Sherlock Holmes

The latest blockbuster movie starring Robert Downey Jr. as Sherlock Holmes and Jude Law as his trusted asstistant, Dr. Watson, puts some serious martial art skills on display.

People have been asking me what style it actually represents and I must admit I had to do some research which has been a lot of fun.

Here is what I found out:

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, author and the creator of the literary figure, better known as Sherlock Holmes, referred to his main character’s fighting style as ‘Baritsu’, which turns out is just missing one letter to be entirely correct.

The martial art is called ‘Bartitsu’ and was named by E.W. Barton-Wright.

Barton-Wright had lived in Japan in the late 19th century and studied Jiu-Jitsu, among others with Jigoro Kano, the founder of Judo.

Returning to his native London, he conferred with several martial arts experts in boxing, Savate, walking-stick fighting and Jiu-Jitsu, to create his own system which would incorporate several aspects of a ‘Gentlemanly Art of Self Defence’.

Bartitsu became very popular in the very early 20th century, not only among men, but among women, who also very effectively used their umbrellas to defend themselves against big city London thieves and criminals.

Unfortunately, there was a falling out between Barton-Wright and his Japanese star student/instructor and his successful Bartitsu self -defense system along with school literally vanished overnight.

The Bartitsu Society that is reviving this century-old self-defense system provided the following video documentary. Enjoy!

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Abu Dhabi Now Means UFC Mixed Martial Arts

In a recent post “Abu Dhabi And Martial Arts?” I introduced this vibrant Emirate on the  Arabian peninsula as a true epicenter of top-level international submission wrestling.

The driving force behind all this is Sheik Tahnoon Bin Zayed Al Nahyan and his ADCC (Abu Dhabi Combat Center).

Dana White and the Sheik have worked out a deal to host UFC 112 on April 10, 2010 in Abu Dhabi.

One of the exciting fights of this event has been confirmed.

It will be between two true mixed martial arts legends: Matt Hughes vs. Renzo Gracie.

Both are accomplished submission grapplers in their own right and that is an understatement, if there ever was one.

Will this be ‘Wrestling vs. Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu”?

I leave you today with two short videos that will give you an idea of these fighters’ personalities. Enjoy!

Matt HughesYouTube Preview Image

Renzo Gracie YouTube Preview Image

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