Yosh Uchida

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Yoshihiro "Yosh" Uchida (b. 1920) is an American businessman, entrepreneur, and educator who is best known for his contributions to judo. Uchida has been the head judo coach at San Jose State University for over 60 years, and was instrumental in the development of the martial art into a competitive sport.

Uchida is the child of Japanese immigrants who worked as farm laborers in California's Imperial Valley.[1] Yosh studied biology at San Jose State, and in 1940 was made the student-coach of the Physical Education Department's judo program.[2] He was drafted into the United States Army during World War II, and served as a medical technician. He returned to San Jose State in 1946 to complete his degree and to restart the judo program.

After graduating in 1947, Uchida remained the coach at SJS, a part-time position, while working as a laboratory technician at O'Connor Hospital and then at San Jose Hospital, before buying and operating a medical laboratory in 1956.[1] During this time, Uchida and University of California, Berkeley judo coach Henry Stone began developing rules to allow their students to compete against each other, including a weight class system, moving judo away from a martial art for self defense to a sport for competition. Stone and Uchida persuaded the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) to sanction judo in 1953; the first AAU National Championship in judo was held at San Jose State in that year.[3]

Uchida was elected president of the Judo Black Belt Federation for 1960–1961. As president, Uchida represented the United States at the International Judo Federation meeting in Paris in 1961. At that meeting, the IJF voted to include the weight class system for all future international judo competitions.

In 1962, Uchida organized the first National Collegiate Judo Championship, which was held at the United States Air Force Academy. Uchida's San Jose State Spartans won the first of their over 40 national championships under his leadership at the inaugural tournament.

Uchida represented the United States as the team coach of the first Olympic Judo Tournament at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. The team included two of Uchida's students from San Jose State, Ben Nighthorse Campbell and Paul Maruyama. James Bregman won a bronze medal in the under-80 kg class, becoming the first American to medal in the sport.

Uchida continued promoting the sport after the 1964 Olympics. He organized the first U.S. High School Judo Championships and the first U.S. Open tournament, both hosted at San Jose State. As of 2007, his San Jose State Spartans judo teams have won 42 of the 46 National Collegiate Judo Championships.[4] In February of 2007, the San Jose State program was named one of six USA Judo National Training Sites.[5]

By 1989, Uchida's laboratory business had grown to include forty locations. He sold the business to Unilab in that year for $30 million. He used the funds from the sale to found Uchida Enterprises, which is involved in real estate redevelopment in San Jose's Japantown neighborhood.[1]

For his contributions to judo, Uchida was awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasure with Golden Rays in 1986 by Emperor Hirohito of Japan. He was inducted into the San Jose Sports Hall of Fame in 1996.[6] Uchida has also received many awards from San Jose State, including the university's highest award (the Tower Award) in 1992 and an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters in 2004. Additionally, the building on campus that houses the judo dojo was renamed "Yoshihiro Uchida Hall" in 1997. Ironically, Uchida's parents and brothers were processed in this building prior to being sent to an internment camp during World War II.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c 2004; Yeh, Emerald; ""Yoshihiro Uchida"; Asian Pacific Fund; url accessed January 1, 2007
  2. ^ "History"; San Jose State University Judo; url accessed January 2, 2007
  3. ^ 2002; "History of American Martial Arts: Judo"; American Black Belt Academy; url accessed January 2, 2007
  4. ^ National Collegiate Judo Championships. San Jose State Judo (March 25, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
  5. ^ USA Judo Announces Three New Training Sites. USA Judo (February 17, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
  6. ^ Inductees, Members of the San Jose Sports Hall of Fame. San Jose Sports Hall of Fame. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.