Hajime Isogai
Hajime Isogai 磯貝 一 | |
---|---|
Born |
October 26, 1871 Miyazaki Prefecture, Japan |
Died | April 19, 1947 75) | (aged
Native name | 磯貝 一 |
Nationality | Japan |
Style | Judo |
Teacher(s) | Kanō Jigorō |
Rank | Judo: 10th Dan |
Hajime Isogai (磯貝 一 Isogai Hajime, October 26, 1871 – April 19, 1947) was an early student of Judo and the second person to be promoted to 10th dan. He was a considered to be a groundwork expert,[1] although is also believed to be the creator of the hane goshi throw.[2]
Biography
Isogai was born in Nobeoka, Miyazaki Prefecture, Japan on October 26, 1871. He was the eldest son of Tsunehisa Isogai (磯貝 恒久 Isogai Tsunehisa), hanshi of Sekiguchi-ryū jūjutsu in Nobeoka. In 1891 he moved to Tokyo and joined the Kodokan where he studied judo with Jigoro Kano. In 1893 he became judo teacher at third high school in Kyoto, as well as the Dai Nippon Butoku Kai, where he competed against several local jujutsu masters. One of his best known victories was against Takenouchi-ryu master Kotaro Imai in 1987 via hane makikomi.[3] In 1899, he was appointed professor of judo at Butoku Kai.
He was famous for his rivalry with Fusen-ryū master Mataemon Tanabe, who was known for defeating multiple judokas in challenge matches thanks to his ne-waza mastery. They fought twice in Fukuoka and Kyoto when Hajime was a 3th dan, ending in a draw in both bouts.[3][2][3] The second fight was specially notable, as Isogai, knowing the field of strength of his adversary, kept the fight standing and threatened him several times with his skill at hane goshi. Still, Isogai was left convinced of the importance of working on ne-waza in order to be a complete fighter.[2]
Isogai and Tanabe fought a third and last time in May 1990, as Mataemon challenged him to met him on a match in an exhibition in Okayama. It would be an uneven fight for Hajime, as Okayama was headquarters for several ryūs opposed to the Kodokan, and the referee of the fight was appointed to be Isogai's old enemy Kotaro Imai.[3] However, this time Isogai had perfected his ne-waza with Kaichiro Samura, a judoka expert in groundfighting who had come from Takeuchi Santo-ryū and worked as Hajime's assistant trainer at the Butokukai.[3] When Isogai and Tanabe met in the tatami, both descended to the ground and began a grappling contest. Though initially even, the match started to be gradually controlled by Isogai, who neutralized all of Tanabe's movements and impeded him to try submissions or reversals. Attempting to force a restart to rethink his strategy, Tanabe dragged them both towards the bounds of the tatami, but Hajime saw his intention and dragged them back again while Tanabe's followers cried for a stoppage. At the end, Imai declared the fight a draw.[3]
Isogai was promoted to tenth dan, the highest rank in judo, on December 22, 1937. He was the second person to be awarded this grade and the first living person to be presented with it.[4][5]
References
- ↑ https://books.google.com/books?id=L13P2hF33PUC&lpg=RA3-PT39&ots=QnkEh-wz1J&dq=Tatsukuma%20Ushijima%20judo&pg=RA3-PT12#v=onepage&q=isogai&f=false
- 1 2 3 Christian Quidet, La fabuleuse histoire des Arts Martiaux
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Raisuke Kudo, Japanese Judo: Hidden Records, 1972,
- ↑ "Profiles of Judo 10th Dan Holders -- Judan", Judoinfo, retrieved August 27, 2014
- ↑ Hoare, Syd (2009), A History of Judo, London: Yamagi books, p. 123