List of Kyokushin practitioners

Notable Practitioner of Kyokushin Karate From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of highly notable practitioners of Kyokushin Karate.

Kyokushinkaikan founder Masutatsu Oyama fighting a bull at the Denen Coliseum in 1956.

Founder

Oyama's direct students

Shokei Matsui (head of IKO-1)
Jon Bluming (Founder of Kyokushin Budokai and IBK)
Steve Arneil (Founder of IFK)

Japanese nationals

  • Terutomo Yamazaki – the first champion of the All-Japan Full Contact Karate Open Championships in 1969, and has promoted Kyokushin famous through his accomplishments. Because he fought and defeated Muay Thai boxers, he created a reputation for Kyokushin before the First All-Japan Open Full Contact Karate Championships was held.[3][4][5][6] Yamazaki is highly skilled at and an authority on fighting and breaking. When he fought someone, it was usual that he knocked them out without receiving any injuries himself.[7] He is nicknamed "The Genius Karate Fighter" or "The Dragon of Kyokushin", and when he was an active fighter, he was the most popular figure of the time.[3][7][8][9] He has shown off his mixed karate and Muai Thai style of fighting at both full contact karate open championships and kickboxing, and has been noted internationally as a prominent fighter in karate's history, appearing in Black Belt Magazine in the United States.[10][11][12]
  • Yoshiji Soeno, founder of Shidōkan Karate.[13][14]
  • Hatsuo Royama – 9th dan, formerly Kancho (Director) and now Kaicho of the Kyokushin-kan International Honbu.[15]
  • Kenji Kurosaki – He is a 7th Dan Black Belt in Kyokushin Karate and operates various martial schools focusing in different arts. He is most well known as a pioneer of Full-Contact Karate and Kickboxing in both Japan and Netherlands.[16][17]
  • Hideyuki Ashihara – founder of Ashihara Karate
  • Tsuyoshi Hiroshige – founder of Kyokushin Kenbukai
  • Takashi Azuma – founder of the martial art Kūdō.[18]
  • Akira Masuda – 8th dan, Rijichō (chairman) of the International BudoMan Association (IBMA-KyokushinKai)
  • Shokei Matsui (alias Matsui Akiyoshi, born Moon Jang-gyu) – 8th dan and current Kancho (Director) of the International Karate Organization Kyokushin-kaikan aka IKO-1.[19][20]
  • Katsuaki Satō – winner of the 1st World Full Contact Karate Open Championships and All-Japan Championships on two occasions
  • Kenji Midori – winner of the 5th World Full Contact Karate Open Championships and current president of World Karate Organization (Shinkyokushinkai)
  • Seiji Kanamura - 9th dan black belt, he began practicing Kyokushin Karate with Sosai Oyama in 1958. In 1971, he moved to the United States to teach Kyokushin Karate in the New York area. Prior to this, Shihan Kanamura was a special student (uchi-deshi) of Mas Oyama and served as Chief Instructor at the Hombu (the headquarters dojo) in Tokyo. He served as Head Instructor for the U.S. Kyokushin Karate team from 1975 to 1979 for the Tokyo Open Karate Tournaments. He is the founder of "All Japan Kyokushin Union".[21][22]
  • Tsutomu Wakiuchi - He is a 7th dan black belt (shihan), and he is director of the Italian Kyokushin Federation.[23][24]

Japanese relocated overseas

  • Shigeru Oyama – No relation to his teacher Mas Oyama, he was a karate practitioner and instructor who operated a dojo in New York and was head of the US Kyokushin organization for half a century. He taught Kyokushin karate for many years before forming his own organization World Oyama Karate in 1985.[25][26][27]
  • Jōkō Ninomiya – founder of Enshin Karate, he presides over the Enshin organization from the headquarters (honbu) in Denver, Colorado.
  • Seiji Isobe – 8th dan, designated to Brazil, became Shihan after spread Kyokushin through South America, who taught and trained Francisco Filho, Glaube Feitosa and Everton Teixeira.[28][29]
  • Miyuki Miura – 8th dan, operates independently as Miura Dojo in Oak Park, Illinois, and works with other full contact dojo internationally through his Global Budo Karate Alliance.[30][31][32]

Non-Japanese expatriates

Celebrity

  • Sir Sean Connery – was awarded an honorary Shodan in Kyokushinkai by Sosai Mas Oyama.[52]
  • Masashi "Milton" Ishibashi – worked as a Karate instructor at the Oyama Dojo and Kyokushin Kaikan during his early days as an actor. He was also instructor for Sonny Chiba[53][54] and Terutomo Yamazaki.[54][55]
  • Sonny Chiba – popular Japanese actor and martial artist.[56] While he was a university student, he began studying martial arts with Sosei Oyama (whom he later portrayed in a trilogy of films), which led to a first-degree black belt on 15 October 1965, later receiving a fourth-degree on 20 January 1984. Although supervised by Oyama, Chiba was mainly trained by Masashi Ishibashi.[53][54]
  • Etsuko Shihomi – actress who specialized in action films
  • Kyosuke Machida – Japanese actor. When he was a child, he became Mas Oyama's pupil.[57] He now serves as an advisor for the International Karate Organization Kyokushin-kaikan.[58]

Knockdown Karate

Kickboxing

Mixed Martial Arts

Celebrity

This lists celebrities, who were not directly trained by Mas Oyama:

See also

References

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