History Vs French judoka
Thierry Fabre during the
2010 World Judo Championships held in Tokyo attempting to throw
Toshiro Daigo with an
uchi mata in the final of the 1951
All-Japan Judo Championships is a vitally important aspect of judo. In 1899, Kano was asked to chair a committee of the
Dai Nippon Butoku Kai to draw up the first formal set of contest rules for jujutsu. These rules were intended to cover contests between different various traditional schools of jujutsu as well as practitioners of Kodokan judo. Contests were 15 minutes long and were judged on the basis of
nage waza and
katame waza, excluding
atemi waza. Wins were by two ippons, awarded in every four-main different path of winning alternatives, by "Throwing", where the opponent's back strikes flat onto the mat with sufficient force, by "Pinning" them on their back for a "sufficient" amount of time, or by "Submission", which could be achieved via
Shime-waza or
Kansetsu-waza, in which the opponent was forced to give himself or herself up or summon a referee's or corner-judge's stoppage. Finger, toe and ankle locks were prohibited. In 1900, these rules were adopted by the Kodokan with amendments made to prohibit all joint locks for
kyu grades and added wrist locks to the prohibited
kansetsu-waza for
dan grades. It was also stated that the ratio of
tachi-waza to
ne-waza should be between 70% and 80% for
kyu grades and between 60% and 70% for
dan grades. These were further added to in 1925. Jigoro Kano for a long time wished to see judo as an
Olympic discipline. The first time judo was seen in the
Olympic Games was in an informal demonstration hosted by Kano at the
1932 Games. However, Kano was ambivalent about judo's potential inclusion as an Olympic sport:
Use of judo at the Summer Olympic Games At the 57th
general session of the
International Olympic Committee, held in
Rome on 22 August 1960, the IOC members formally decided to include Judo among the events to be contested at the Olympic Games. The proposal, which was placed before the session by the Japanese delegation, was welcomed by all participants. The few who opposed had nothing against Judo itself but against increasing the number of Olympic events as a whole. There were only two dissenting votes in the final poll. For the first time in history a traditional Japanese sport has been included in the Olympic competition. Finally,
judo was first contested as an Olympic sport for men in the
1964 Games in
Tokyo. The Olympic Committee initially dropped judo for the 1968 Olympics, meeting protests. Dutchman
Anton Geesink won the first Olympic gold medal in the open division of judo by defeating
Akio Kaminaga of Japan. The women's event was introduced at the Olympics in
1988 as a demonstration event, and an
official medal event in 1992.
Use of judo at the Summer Paralympic Games Judo was
introduced as a Paralympic sport at the
1988 Summer Paralympics in
Seoul, with women's events contested for the first time at
2004 Summer Paralympics.
Use of judo at the Commonwealth Games Judo was an optional sport included in the three editions of the
Commonwealth Games:
1990 Commonwealth Games in Auckland,
2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester and
2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. From 2022, judo will become a core sport in the 22nd edition of the Commonwealth Games, in Birmingham and also the 23rd edition of the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow.
Current international contest rules , 2007 men's final Penalties may be given for: passivity or preventing progress in the match; for safety infringements (for example by using prohibited techniques), or for behavior that is deemed to be against the spirit of judo. Fighting must be stopped if a participant is outside the designated area on the mat.
Weight divisions There are currently seven
weight divisions, subject to change by governing bodies, and may be modified based on the age of the competitors:
Competition scoring A throw that places the opponent on their back with impetus and control scores an , winning the contest. A lesser throw, where the opponent is thrown onto his back, but with insufficient force to merit an ippon, scores a . Ippon is scored in
ne-waza for pinning an opponent on his back with a recognised
osaekomi-waza for 20 seconds or by forcing a submission through
shime-waza or
kansetsu-waza. If the scores are identical at the end of the match, the contest is resolved by the
Golden Score rule.
Golden Score is a
sudden death situation where the clock is reset to match-time, and the first contestant to achieve any score wins. If there is no score during this period, then the winner is decided by , the majority opinion of the referee and the two corner judges. There have been changes to the scoring. In January 2013, the hantei was removed and the "Golden Score" no longer has a time limit. The match would continue until a judoka scored through a technique or if the opponent is penalised (hansoku-make).
Penalties Two types of penalties may be awarded. A shido (指導 literally "guidance") is awarded for minor rule infringements. A shido can also be awarded for a prolonged period of non-aggression. Recent rule changes allow for the first shidos to result in only warnings. If there is a tie, then and only then, will the number of shidos (if less than three) be used to determine the winner. After three shidos are given, the victory is given to the opponent, constituting an indirect hansoku-make (反則負け literally "foul-play defeat"), but does not result in expulsion from the tournament. Note: Prior to 2017, the 4th shido was hansoku-make. If hansoku-make is awarded for a major rule infringement, it results not just in loss of the match, but in the expulsion from the tournament of the penalized player. ==In mixed martial arts==