Doug Rogers
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Medal record | |||
---|---|---|---|
Men's Judo | |||
Olympic Games | |||
Silver | 1964 Tokyo | Heavyweight | |
Pan American Games | |||
Gold | 1967 Winnipeg | Open Class | |
Silver | 1967 Winnipeg | Heavyweight |
Douglas ("Doug") Rogers (born January 26, 1941 in Truro, Nova Scotia) is a former Canadian Olympic competitor in judo. His best results were a silver medal in the 1964 Tokyo Olympics and gold medals at two Pan American Games, in 1965 and 1967. He was a student of Masahiko Kimura, one of judo's greatest competitors.
As a member of the Takushoku University team coached by Kimura, Rogers won the team pennant at the 1965 All Japan University Championships. He was selected as Best Fighter at the same tournament. He had arrived in Japan some five years earlier at the age of 20 with the specific intention of working on his judo. Athletic, as a youth he had won the Ontario Minor Hockey Championships, where he finished the tournament's the highest-scoring defenceman[citation needed]. At age 15 he joined the judo club at the Montreal YMCA. It was not long before his sensei there told him there was nothing left for him to teach and directed him over to Fred Okimura's Montreal Seidokwan dojo. He continued practicing while in high school, winning the Eastern Canada brown belt title in 1958. The following year he won the black belt title. An excellent student, Rogers was accepted by McGill University for studies there but instead, having been accepted to the Kodokan, boarded a plane for Japan in 1960.
The best judo competitors at the time in Japan were coming out of the police academy and universities and they would visit the Kodokan for practice on a weekly basis. Rogers made an effort to train with the judoka from the police academy and nearby Takushoku University (Takudai). It was in this way that he got to meet Kimura, who was the coach of Takudai and one of its most famous alumni.
Able to hold his own against top judoka in Japan[citation needed], the Canadian Olympic Committee, in search of medal hopefuls and, moreover, pleased that he was already in Japan where the Olympics were to be held, recruited Rogers. He decided, however, to return to Canada to compete in the national championships, and the Olympic Committee were at first relunctant to pay for Roger's airfare back to Japan. Eventually they settled for paying a one-way ticket.
Roger's day at the Olympics is best described by Frank Moritsugu, a contemporary of his:
"With coach Frank Hatashita at matside, on that October 1964 day at the Budokan, Doug had an easy time in the early rounds. In the semis he clearly decisioned a tough opponent, the bull- like Soviet competitor P. Chikviladze, eliminating one of the possible winners. Then came the heavy weight finals where his opponent was Isao Inokuma, the all-Japan champion. Inokuma was shorter and many pounds lighter but much more experienced and perhaps Japan's supreme judo technician. And he was an occasional training partner of Rogers at the Kodokan. Theirs was a hard-fought match which we watched agonizingly on our TV sets here in Canada. Neither man could throw the other cleanly although both managed to complete throws which ended off the tatami. At the end of a truly championship bout, it was a narrow decision for Inokuma but with his silver medal, Doug Rogers had become Canada's first judoka to mount the Olympic medal podium at the first Olympics where judo was included."
After the Olympics Rogers trained full time with Kimura and the Takudai team. He felt very close to Kimura, regarded him as a father figure and stayed in touch with him until his death in 1993[citation needed]. His coach demanded a very high level of physical fitness and concentrated on training simple, strong judo moves. His training style was somewhat informal compared to the strict etiquette and bowing rituals practiced in the western world to this day. He often came onto the mats in sweat pants and threw on a judogi only as needed to demonstrate a technique[citation needed].
In the summer of 1965 Rogers participated in the All-Japan University Championships as a member of the Takushoku University team and helped them bring the winner's penant back to Takudai for the first time in several years. Not only was Doug the first non-Asian foreigner to take part in this tournament, he was also named the tournament's best fighter[citation needed].
Despite being encouraged by Kimura to stay another year, Rogers, in need of starting his employment career, decided to return to Canada to pursue becoming a professional pilot, having attained a private operator's licence at age 16. After a summer tour for the Takudai team to a number of Japanese universities, Rogers was seen off by his teammates carrying their winner's pennants and by his coach Masahiko Kimura.
Doug Rogers went on to win gold at two Pan-American games and several Canadian National championships. Another mark of his judo skill is his taking of 4th place at the 1972 Olympics despite having been out of serious training for many years. Once in Canada, he was spending hours a day in a cockpit rather than on the mats. He no longer had Kimura as a coach nor did he have the quality of practice opponents that a world champion needs.
Rogers is now retired from a career as an airline pilot. He is married with four grown-up children (all of whom are outstanding athletes). Although less active in judo today he still frequents local tournaments and from time to time is an invited guest/coach at clubs through out Greater Vancouver, British Columbia.