05 December 2009

Tops

I spent today supporting a girl (let's call her K-chan [*note: the videos below are not her - they are only examples of the kata that she performed]) from my karate dojo (空手道場) as she competed in the 12th Okinawan Junior High School Karate Tournament. Cliff and I had gone to a previous (and unrelated) tournament a few months ago, but we arrived after she had already participated (she also didn't advance as far as she did today). I made sure not to be as late today.

I arrived at the tournament and made my way to the gymnasium seating just as K-chan was beginning her second kata (形, a series of moves done in succession).

Tournaments work like this: two (competing) participants perform a kata of their choice (starting from the second round) on an 8m² mat. One wears a red belt, the other blue. Surrounding the mat are five judges (審判), seated at each of the corners, with the head judge seated in front of the participants starting position. Each judge holds a red flag and a blue flag. When both participants have completed their kata, the head judge blows a whistle and all five judges raise their flags. The participant receiving the most flags out of the five moves on to the next round.

K-chan is very solid in her kata. Our sensei, Taira, works with her closely at each of our practices. She's serious, dedicated, fast and strong (she's also only 12). So the result of her second round was a unanimous 5-0 victory. For her third round, she scored the same, which meant she advanced to the semi-finals (準決勝), or the "Best 4" as it is called here.

K-chan performed the kata Suparinpei, スーパーリンペイ (below), for her fourth round.

The result was another 5-0 victory. Her victory here meant that she advanced to the final (決勝).

The final varies in two ways. First, the participants - instead of performing their kata at the same time - perform them separately (I believe this is to allow the judges to closer scrutinize). Second, there are seven judges, not five. The two additional judges sit to the side of the participants starting position.

Today, K-chan went first. She performed solidly in the kata, Anan, アーナン.

(The woman performing the kata in the video is Azusa Tomishiro. K-chan and her have some striking similarities - hairstyle, a few facial features, and speed come to mind. Not to mention, they're both Okinawan.)

So solid was her performance today that she scored a 7-0 victory, placing 1st for the tournament.

As a result, K-chan will be heading to Hokkaido (北海道) in March to participate in an All Japan (全国) tournament. Of course, her family, along with Taira-sensei will be going. Surprisingly, Taira-sensei asked me...actually, politely told me...to come to Hokkaido to support her there. So that's my spring break plan - head to northern Japan to support our dojo's number one.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

お初でございます。
あなたの空手の先生は、アメリカ人のあなたに対してある種の期待を持っているんでしょうね。

あなたはアメリカ人で英語も日本語もどちらもできるので、将来の沖縄の空手の普及にあなたはうってつけと思われ期待されているんじゃないでしょうか。
武道の精神を西洋人に伝えるのは容易なことではありません。しかし先生は将来のあなたを通して、欧米への空手普及を夢見ているのかなという印象を受けました。

ぜひ先生と一緒に北海道へ行ってください!

japalinka said...

wow. fantastic! not that it's surprising. K-chan is fantastic. Please tell her and sensei that i send my congratulations and good luck for Hokkaido. :)

Unknown said...

Hi my name is Marco. I'm a karateka and i wish to talk with you cause i've some questions about Azusa Tomishiro. I wait for your answer my email is: marco@marcosiino.com

thanks,

bye