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TheMartialArtsReporter.com

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

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Cung Le And The Chinese Fighting Art Of Sanshou

Just recently I heard about a Chinese fighting art ….. on the tennis court!

As I was talking with a team mate, I learned from him that he had been a practitioner of a style  I had briefly heard about years back, but I never really looked into any deeper.

Until today.

Originated in China the style is called Sanshou (free hand) and at times Sanda (free fighting).

It is both a self-defense system and a combat sport.

Sanshou combines a number of  extremely vital and effective elements such as kicking, punching, throwing, grappling and applying joint locks.

One of Sanshou’s special emphasis is the so-called kick-catch, whereby one person throws a kick and the other person catches the kick and then trips the other person’s leg they are standing on.

Thinking about it, that’s what we even practiced way back in my Shotokan karate days. I just made that connection while writing this.

Sanshou as a sport is regulated by a bunch of different rules depending on amateur or professional status and also on the location of where the fights take place like China or the U.S.

Among all the successful and very skilled Sanshou fighters, one practitioner has really stood out for me during the years and he has without a doubt made a name for himself. He is the Vietnamese American kickboxer, mixed martial artist and actor, simply known as Cung Le from San Jose, California.

Cung Le has won too many titles and championships to list here, but I will mention that he won the Strikeforce Middleweight World Championship by beating legendary mixed martial arts champion Frank Shamrock about 2 years ago. Cung Le actually broke his opponent’s arm by executing devasting kicks during their fight.

Cung Le has been actively pursuing his career on the Big Screen and was awarded a role in Bodyguards And Assassins starring Donnie Yen which was released last December.

I found a video clip that I think you will enjoy if you like action-filled fight scenes.      Warning: It can be a little rough and tough at times.

 

 

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Tipping Off March Madness With The Week In Review

“Variety is the spice of life.”

I am trying to live up to that saying by posting about different topics that relate to martial arts or not. Anyway ….

In case you were too busy being busy, here’s what you missed:

Bulgarian Greco-Roman Wrestler Is Big In Japan: The David Beckham Of Sumo

It Happened In 1935 … Sarah Mayer, First Non-Japanese Female Judo Black Belt

The Question Is: “Honestly, Are You Really Prepared To Fight If You Have To?”

With ‘The Sensei ‘, She’s Creating Buzz In The Movie Industry And Let’s Just Face It … With A Name Like Lee Inosanto, She’s Got To Be Good

What Goes Up, Must Come Down. With This Guy, Things Appear To Be A Bit Different. Thai Action Movie Star Tony Jaa Defies The Law Of Physics.

There you have it: The Week In Review At TheMartialArtsReporter.com

Have a great Sunday!

I will be reporting again from here tomorrow.

 

 

 

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Big In Japan: The David Beckham Of Sumo

So far I haven’t touched on the Japanese martial art known as ‘Sumo’.

That is about to change. Right here, right now.

Sumo is a contact sport in which a wrestler tries to force another wrestler out of a circular ring or to get him to touch the ground with anything else but the soles of his feet.

The sport includes a bunch of ritual elements, such as the salt purification, which we will see in detail in the video clip below. This goes back to the days when it was used in the Shinto religion.

From what I have been able to find out is that the daily life of a professional sumo fighter is very strictly regimented by the Sumo Association and that means even meals and traditional dress code.

Oh, by the way, Mongolian wrestling and Chinese Shuai jiao, both offer some resemblance to Sumo.

Most Sumo matches last only several seconds, as one wrestler is explosively ousted from the ring. In far fewer cases, a match can last several minutes, but this is more the exception than the rule.

The wrestling ring itself is 4.55 meters or somewhere around 14 feet in diameter. The whole square surface that holds the ring takes up 16.26 meters or about 140 sq. ft.  I hope my former math teacher isn’t reading this and checking my conversions from meters to feet.

Japan is the only country that offers professional Sumo and there are approximately 700 fighters registered with 54 fighting stables.

Sumo’s hierarchy is strictly based on merit which can also mean that if a wrestler doesn’t continue his winning performances and starts losing bouts he can be demoted and lose his rank. This means serious competition and extreme pressure on fighters to perform at a very high level.

Currently, the Sumo Association only allows 1 foreign fighter per stable, which means a total of 54, right?!

And from what I understand the one foreign fighter who really stands out right now and who has attained the rank of ozeki or Champion  (that’s right below yokozuna or Grand Champion!).

Born in Bulgaria as Kaloyan Stefanov Mahlyanov and former Greco-Roman wrestler, he is now fighting as Kotooshu Katsunori, at times referred to as the ‘David Beckham of Sumo’ and also the ‘Prince of Sumo’.

Kotooshu is 6’8″ tall and weighs 334 lbs., which, believe it or not, is fairly light considering his height and that’s because he is often compared to former Gand Champion Akebono from Hawaii, who at the same height weighed about 517 lbs.

I selected a fight between Kotooshu and Grand Champion Asashoryu that I really enjoy, even though I don’t really follow a lot of Sumo, but I can appeciate the traditional rituals, strategy, tactics and very proficient grappling with a bunch of explosive power.

I hope you like it, too.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ra_-f-3IwTk[/youtube]

 

 

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Saturday, March 6th, 2010 Kottooshu Katsunori, Sumo No Comments

Sarah Mayer, First Non-Japanese Female Judo Black Belt

The same year that Amelia Earhart flew from Honolulu to Oakland Ca (non-stop, of course), driving tests were introduced in Great Britain and Parker Brothers launched their game of Monopoly, the martial art of Judo awarded its first black belt to a non-Japanese female judoka.

This all happened in 1935!

Sarah Mayer started Judo in London, England at the Budokwai, which had been founded by Gunji Koizumi in 1918.

She visited Japan in the 1930′s and studied at the birthplace of Judo, better known as ‘Kodokan’.

Later she went on to study at the Kyoto Butokukai, which had been established in 1890 and was led by founder Jigoro Kano’s representatives, for about 2 years.

On March 1, 1935 the Japanese Times bore the headline “Foreign Woman wins Shodan at the Butokukai”.

To Sarah Mayer’s surprise, she was offered this rank on February 27, 1935 and was the first non-Japanese woman in the world to be awarded black belt rank in Kodokan Judo.

She returned the same year to Britain and practiced at the Budokwai for a while before setting up her own dojo in her home in Burgh Heath.

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Friday, March 5th, 2010 Jigor Kano, Sarah Mayer, judo, kodokan, martial art 1 Comment

The Highest Ranking Female Judoka In The World

As you know by now, it is always a pleasure for me to post something interesting and inspirational about and for female martial artists.

Today we continue our tradition and this a big one!

Our featured female martial artist,  Keiko Fukuda, was born in 1913 in Tokyo, Japan.

It wasn’t until 1935 that she actually started practicing the martial art of judo at the age of 21. Look at those dates again and be amazed like I am.

At that time, Japan and many other industrialized countries were still deeply affected by The Great Depression that started in 1929 and continued for many even until the end of World War II  in 1945.

I don’t consider myself a Japanology expert, but I am pretty sure that Japanese women weren’t necessarily encouraged to pursue a martial arts career in the 1930s.

Keiko Fukuda was even exceptional in those days by flat-out rejecting an arranged marriage to do just that after being being invited to study judo by its founder Jigoro Kano himself in the newly created women’s division!

Kano had been a Jujutsu student of her grandfather, Fukuda Hachinosuke, who at one time had been a samurai. 

Amazingly, today Keiko Fukuda is the last living pupil of Kano.

Empowering and inspring women about the kata (forms) of Kodokan judo, Keiko Fukuda published the instructional book Born for the Mat in 1973.

In 2001, the United States Judo Federation awarded her a rare red belt for her lifelong contribution to judo.

 It was in January 2006  that the Kodokan Judo Institute also awarded her the 9th degree black belt (9th dan).

Keiko Fukuda is currently the only woman in the world to hold a 9th degree black belt from any recognized judo organization.

At the time of writing this post, Keiko Fukuda is close to 97 and I bet some of you are thinking that she probably spends her days just sitting at home in front of the TV watching  The Price Is Right or whatever.

Nothing could be further from the truth, because she still teaches at the Soko Joshi Judo Club in the Noe valley district of San Francisco, California as well as at the annual Joshi Judo Camp, a camp she founded in 1974 to give women judoka an opportunity to train together.

Gentle, Strong, Beautiful, she is judo pioneer, Keiko Fukuda, the highest ranking female judoka in the world.

I am dedicating today’s post to all female martial artists. Past, current and future.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHdPh3CEfGM[/youtube]

 

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Judo: No Kicking And Punching, But It Can Still Hurt Like Hell!

The Japanese martial art of Judo, means ‘the gentle way’ in English. I still haven’t figured out the gentleness of it all.

I took some Judo classes way back when and I gotta tell ya that some of those techniques sure can hurt like hell.

Those guys would grab you and throw you around like a rag-doll.

Slam you down on the mat and then apply a lock or a bar or something else that created the feeling of  “OUCH! *#%!* YOU WIN! CAN I PLEASE GO HOME NOW?”.

There was a lot of tapping  going on. Not the Sammy Davis Jr. or Geogory Hines-kind of tapping.

More slapping the mat like a fish caught on board a trawler gasping and knowing that it’s going to end up in a grocery shopping aisle real soon.

I think you get my drift by now.

Judo doesn’t offer or better doesn’t allow flashy kicks that would make it so much more appealing to the masses.

But let’s face it:

Judo in all its subtle and gentle way is still an extremely effective martial art that was the base for Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu developed by the Gracie family. That’s gotta tell ya somethin’!

I thought you might enjoy a video with two guys who are constantly getting out of their comfort zone by trying a different martial art on a regular base in a foreign country.

Today, they dive right into Judo in Tokyo, Japan, the birthplace of this Olympic martial art introduced by Jigoro Kano over a hundred years ago.

Very cool!

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HhHOKKIsVfs[/youtube]

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FREE: 5 Unique Pushups To Elevate Your Training Program

Every martial artist knows how important pushups are in any training program.

Boy, I sure do. And we did a lot of them in karate, boxing and Muay Thai.

Pushups are considered by many experts the single most effective exercise not only because of the number of different muscles involved.

The primary muscles used are generally, chest, triceps, anterior deltoid muscles.

Also positively affected are lower back, biceps and leg quadriceps.

Depending on how large of a pushup workout you implement, you are even improving your metabolism, circulation and cardiovascular health.

And you’re only using your own bodyweight!!!

I have selected 5 unique pushups demonstrated in a video that is just over 2 minutes.

You’re gonna love it!

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtcH9JUzurY[/youtube]

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The Week In Review At TheMartialArtsReporter.com

Hey guys!

I hope you had a great week and you are enjoying your weekend.

You might have already noticed that I have added a very cool inspirational feature of “The Quote Of The Day” on the right side bar.

So, instead of just 2 quotes a week, you’re getting at least 7 a week, or at least one a day. Sounds like taking your daily vitamin!

Besides that let’s just dive right into all the exciting posts and what else happened this last week:

Honor Student – Muay Thai Style      

Self-Defense From A Pinned Down Position

Bartitsu, The Fighting Style Of Detective Sherlock Holmes

Canadian UFC Welterweight Superstar Georges St. Pierre And “Operation Olympic Wrestling 2012″?

Get Ready For A Western Boxing Prodigy

First U.S. American Judo Brown Belt And 26th U.S. President     

Talk to you soon.

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The First Week In Review In 2010 At TheMartialArtsReporter.com

Again, I would like to wish you guys a very healthy, wealthy and Happy New Year 2010!

Just in case you want to catch up with what happened this past week, here’s the review:

Shotokan Karate De Ashi Barai And Takedown  Incorporate a Judo leg sweep and see what happens.

Happy New Year 2010!    Wishing you health, wealth and happiness!

MVP (Most Valuable Posts) 2009 At TheMartialArtsReporter.com  This has to be one of my personal favorite posts so far!

How Can Anybody Become 2-Time World Champion In Racquetball AND Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu?  Find out more about this allround athlete from Hawaii.

Learn An Effective, Yet Underestimated Self-Defense Technique From Sifu Paul Vunak, The Former Hand-To-Hand Combat Instructor To U.S. Navy SEALS.

Inspirational Quotes To End The Year (And Start The Year)  These quotes will get you and keep you going.

Merry Christmas Everybody!

And as you might already know, it is becoming a tradition around here to end the Week In Review with at least two quotes.

Here is what I have for you today and I hope you enjoy them as much as I do:

“It is an unfortunate fact that we can secure peace only by preparing for war.”   JFK

“Facts are stubborn things.”   John Adams

Stay in touch.

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MVP (Most Valuable Posts) 2009 At TheMartialArtsReporter.com

Where did this year go?

2009  just started and now it’s already over!

I don’t know about you, but I am truly looking forward to another great, make that even greater, year 2010.

Thank you so much for your continuing support and interest.

For me personally, there were numerous moments  that stand out at TheMartialArtsReporter.com in 2009.

Here is my MVP (Most Valuable Posts) 2009 selection and if you have any favorites not listed here, why not just let me know:

“Gracie Jiu-Jitsu - Behind The Scenes In Rio De Janeiro, Brazil” 

“Peaceful Warrior Wisdom For Martial Artists And Others, Too.”

“Abu Dhabi And Martial Arts?”

“My Interview With Jackie Chan”  Is Becoming An Internet Favorite.

“Unfair Karate Fight, Let’s All Lighten Up, Shall We?”

“20 Seconds With Bruce Lee Could Change Your Life Forever”.

“Fighting Legend Benny ”The Jet” Urquidez Offers Great Advice” 

“Pankration, One Of The World’s Oldest Martial Arts”.

“Switzerland Is The Place For Cheese, Chocolate, Skiing, Watches And Wrestling”.

“You Want This Former UFC Champ In Your Corner During A Bar Fight”.

There you have it:

The Most Valuable Posts 2009 At TheMartialArtsReporter.com

I’ll talk to you next year. That’s just in a couple of hours.

 

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