Kyuzo Mifune 三船 久蔵 Mifune Kyūzō |
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K. Mifune |
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Born | April 21, 1883 Iwate Prefecture, Japan |
Died | January 27, 1965 Tokyo, Japan |
(aged 81)
Style | Judo |
Teacher(s) | Kanō Jigorō |
Rank | 10th dan judo |
Kyuzo Mifune (三船 久蔵 Mifune Kyūzō , April 21, 1883 – January 27, 1965) has been categorized as one of the greatest exponents of the art of judo after the founder,[1] Kanō Jigorō. He is considered by many to be the greatest judo technician ever, after Kanō.[1]
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Mifune was born on April 21, 1883, in Kuji City, Iwate Prefecture, on Honshū Island in Japan, a year after the Kodokan was founded.[2][3][4] He was reportedly incorrigible as a boy, always performing some mischief or organizing others in a similar pursuit.[2] When Mifune was 13 years old, his father, a strict disciplinarian who finally gave up on the youngest of his seven children, sent the boy to a junior high school at Sendai, in northern Japan.[2] There, the young Mifune discovered judo, and decided to dedicate himself to it.[2] At age 14, he defeated nine opponents in a row at one tournament with another high school.[2]
After graduation, Mifune was sent to a Tokyo preparatory school, anticipating entry into Waseda University.[2] He immediately attempted to join the Kodokan.[2] In those days, this required a personal interview with Kano, upon the recommendation of ranking judoka, and then signing a blood oath.[2] Mifune did not know anyone at the Kodokan, but picked out Sakujiro Yokoyama, who then had a fearsome reputation, as 'Demon Yokoyama,' whose fast, powerful judo had gained much reputation for the Kodokan.[2] Mifune literally camped at Yokoyama's doorstep until the latter consented to recommend him to Kano.[2] In July 1903, Mifune joined the Kodokan.[2] His father, finding out he was spending more time at judo than studying, cut off his allowance, and Mifune, now 22, went out to find work.[2] He began a newspaper, sold advertising, and built it into a thriving enterprise.[2] He was able to sell it at a substantial profit, and entered the economics program at Keio University.[2]
After 15 months of training, Mifune achieved the rank of shodan ('beginning dan,' indicating 1st dan ranking) in Kodokan judo,[2] and after the remarkably short time of four more months, nidan (2nd dan).[2] Through timing and speed, Mifune quickly gained a reputation, and was never defeated at the annual Red and White Kodokan tournament.[2] By 1912, he was ranked rokudan (6th dan) and an instructor.[2] He was already being called the 'God of Judo.'[1] He was 30. His father recommended a girl in his hometown, and, for only the second time since he had left home, he returned to marry.[2]
During the next 20 years, Mifune's reputation continued to grow.[2] When he was 40, he was challenged by a 6' tall and 240 lb. sumo wrestler. Mifune, 5' 2" tall and 100 lb., finally slammed the wrestler with his trademark 'airplane' throw (kuki nage or uki otoshi).[5] He ate sparingly, slept on a Western-style bed, and did not smoke.[2] In 1937, Kano promoted Mifune to the rank of kudan (9th dan).[2]
With Kano's death in 1938, Mifune became the most influential instructor.[2] Students had long complained that Mifune would get carried away with lectures, and he was "feared more than loved."[2] On May 25, 1945, he was promoted to judan (10th dan), the fourth of 18 judoka to ever be so honored.[6] In 1956, he wrote his classic book, The Canon Of Judo, still a remarkable exposition of judo history, philosophy, and technical description.[2] To E. J. Harrison, he wrote a book foreword that was simple but expressed Mifune's philosophical nature: "Freedom in continuous change!"[2]
Trevor Leggett, a frequent visitor to the Kodokan over many years, remarked that judo was much 'rougher' at the Kodokan prior to World War II than afterward; this was, perhaps, the influence of Mifune.[2]
Mifune died on January 27, 1965, in the Nichidai University Hospital in Tokyo.[2][7]
In his book The Fighting Spirit of Japan (published in 1913), E.J. Harrison writes about an anecdote as told to him by Sakujiro Yokoyama: