Yaichihyōe Kanemitsu Explained

Yaichihyōe Kanemitsu
Native Name:金光弥一兵衛
Native Name Lang:jp
Birth Name:Kanemitsu Yaichihyōe
Birth Place:Okayama, Japan
Martial Art:Judo, Takenouchi-ryū, Kitō-ryū
Teacher:Shuichi Nagaoka
Shotaro Tabata
Kotaro Imai
Shigetaro Kishimoto
Rank:Judo: 9th Dan

was a judoka who was influential in the development of kosen judo. He is credited with the invention of judo techniques like sankaku-jime and hiza-juji-gatame, which were subsequently incorporated into other disciplines, including sambo, Brazilian jiu jitsu and mixed martial arts. He was also known as the teacher of Yasuichi and Naoichi Ono, who took part in the earlier Brazilian vale tudo scene.[1]

Biography

Early life

Kanemitsu was born in Okayama Prefecture, Japan in 1892. He started training in traditional jiu-jitsu as a child, learning the styles of Kitō-ryū under Shigetaro Kishimoto and Takenouchi-ryū under Kotaro Imai.[2] After moving to Tokyo in 1910, he joined the Kodokan school and completed his training at the Dai Nippon Butoku Kai and the Budo Senmon Gakko, where he trained under Shuichi Nagaoka and Shotaro Tabata. His previous knowledge about jiu-jitsu was such that he received a shodan or black belt in just 48 days, after which he became a teacher in several schools and universities.[2] [3]

Kosen judo

He was especially active in the kosen judo environment of Okayama, Nagoya and Tohoku, standing out as the third greatest figure of this competition only behind Hajime Isogai and Tsunetane Oda. Kanemitsu had a particular rivalry with Oda, being referred together as and due to their respective teaching places.[4]

In July 1921, just before the 8º national kosen taikai or interschool competition, Kanemitsu was appointed judo teacher at the koto senmon gakko of Okayama (currently Okayama Asahi High School) while Oda was at its Kanazawa counterpart (currently Kanazawa University). This led to an inevitable confrontation between their teams, adding to the fact that the Kanazawa school was having a seven years winning streak that many other schools wanted to break.[4] The day of the tournament, Kanemitsu's team met Oda's at the semi-finals in an event which lasted from the morning to the night. A turmoil took place when the Okayama team put to use a new submission hold taught to them by Kanemitsu, the, which the Kanazawa side protested to be too similar to ashi garami, a technique banned in 1916. The referee, Hajime Isogai himself, gathered a joint of judges to evaluate the technique, but they decided it was legal under kosen rules, which at the time still allowed most leglocks.[4] The final match between the two schools saw Noboru Hayakawa, 1º dan under Kanemitsu, facing Rakuzo Satomura, 2º dan under Oda, in a bout that lasted one hour and 40 minutes before being declared a draw. As neither Okayama nor Kanazawa had the victory, they were both eliminated and the Kumamoto school was declared winner by default after winning its own semi-finals tournament match.[4] The next year, the Okayama school led by Kanemitsu finally defeated Kanazawa. Victory was accomplished in a large part by the introduction of yet another new technique, the, which has been speculated to have been innovated by Yaichihyōe and his student Masaru Hayakawa, Noboru's younger brother, as well as other apprentices like Katsusaburo Ichinomiya and Tokubei Takahashi.[4] [5] Not only breaking the Kanazawa school's winning streak, the Okayama koto senmon gakko under Kanemitsu went to have its own streak, conquering the national kosen taikai eight times from 1922 to 1929. The sankaku-jime was officially adopted and endorsed by the president of the Kagawa Prefectural Judo Federation, Shozo Oyama, and soon met plenty of use both in kosen judo and in mainstream judo.[2]

In 1923, now a 5th dan, Kanemitsu opened the Genbukan Chuo Dojo (later known as Genryukai Dojo) in Okayama, patterned after the Genbukan Dojo opened by his former master Kishimoto. Many successful judoka would be trained there, among them Toshiji Oshima, Chikao Nogami and future 9th dan Kame Nishida.[2]

Late career

In 1924, Kanemitsu took part in the first judo tournament of the Meiji Shrine Games and obtained victory in its senior category. He submitted 5th dan Kazuo Yamauchi by okuri eri jime, pinned Sumitake Shinmen with yoko-shiho-gatame, and went to fight the feared Tokyo judoka Shojiro Hashimoto, who was thought to be as proficient on his feet as Kanemitsu was on the ground.[4] They fought for 20 minutes to no avail and the referee Shuichi Nagaoka called a draw, but their match had been met with so much enthusiasm by the crowd and judges alike that another extra round was granted.[6] This time, Hashimoto tried to finish with ouchi gari, but Kanemitsu countered and took him to the ground, where he pinned him with kami-shiho-gatame for the win.[4]

In 1940, at 8º dan, Kanemitsu was chosen to perform a judo exhibition in front of the Emperor Showa, being paired with Shinaichi Amano. Afterwards, he worked as a judo instructor for the Okayama police department,[7] a job he kept for several years.[4] One of his last trainees would be Jon Bluming, the top foreign judoka at his time.[8]

Death

Kanemitsu died in 1966 at 77 years old and 9º dan, counting the Order of the Rising Sun among his accomplishments.[9] His final rank was criticized by judo writer Takeshi Kuroda, who described Kanemitsu as undoubtedly worthy of the prestigious 10º dan.[2] [10]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Marcial Serrano. O Livro Proibido do Jiu-Jítsu Vol. 7. December 28, 2016. Clube de Autores. 978-85-914075-9-0.
  2. Takeshi Kuroda, Mei Senshu Monogatari 51: Kanamitsu Yaichihyōe 9 dan – Shitei kyodo de sankaku-jime o hatsumeishita ne-waza no taika, January 1984, Kindai Judo
  3. Seiji Noma, Judo Kyoshi, November 1934, Kodansha
  4. Raisuke Kudo, Gakusei Judo no Dento, May 25, 1973, Hiroku Nippon Judo
  5. Takashi Kuroda, Mei Senshu Monogatari 72: Hayakawa Noboru - Kachi kyodai sorotte 8 dan de zaikaijin no ishoku no kyodai, November 1985, Kindai Judo
  6. Naruhiro Matsumoto, Judo Mei Shiai Monogatari, May 1965, Kawade Shobo Shinsha
  7. Raisuke Kudo, Judo Meikan, December 1965, Judo Meikan Kanko Kai
  8. J. Dick Schilder, Geesink vs Bluming - The dream match that became a nightmare, Black Belt magazine, January 1969
  9. Atsuo Yamagata, Judo Daijiten, November 1999, Atene
  10. Kikan Judo magazine, October 1959, Zaidan Hoji Kodokan