JUDO
History
Technical
There are now seven weight divisions for each sex, and judo bouts last for five minutes unless an ippon is scored and the referee puts his arm straight up, which ends the contest.
An ippon is a single throw which lands your opponent on his or her back.
You can also win a fight by scoring two waza-ari (almost an ippon), pinning your opponent down for 25 seconds, making them concede, or if the referee decides that a serious violation (hansoku-make) has been committed.
If a fight goes the distance, the minor scores – the yuko and koka (the lowest) and penalty scores – keikoku, chui and shido – come into play.
One higher score always beat lots of lower scores.
The Major Players
The Japanese continue to be the dominant nation and, with 35 gold medals, have won more than a third of the Olympic titles awarded since 1964 and they again topped the table at the 2008 Beijing Games with seven medals, four of which were gold. Asian rivals South Korea and China are also proficient at the sport while France are the power house in Europe and currently rank second on the all-time Olympic list having 10 medals. Surprisingly, neither Britain or the United States have ever won a gold medal in the sport.
Beginners’ guide
Judo has formed the basis for many military combatives and defensive tactics training around the world. The Japanese police have trained in judo since 1886, when the sport (at the time known merely as Kano Jujitsu) defeated several other established schools of Jujitsu in a tournament
Useless Information
Hollywood actor James Cagney was a judo black belt. In a fight sequence in Blood On The Sun (1945) his ogoshi throw is effective.







