Kenji Kurosaki fra axekickboxing
Many of you have probably heard the name Kenji Kurosaki, but do not know
so much about this man. He was born into an old fashioned Samurai family, on the
15th March 1930, on the outskirts of Tokyo. Around 1951 he joined the Yamaguchi
Karate style of Goju Ryu, and trained there together with Masutatsu Oyama. In
1953 Kancho Oyama, and Kurosaki Sensei decided to make their own style and
called it Kyokushinkaikan.
Kancho Oyama was the one responsible for Public Relations. There are a lot of "myths" surrounding Kancho Oyama but Kurosaki Sensei, who stayed more in the background, was the Instructor and real mean fighter. Kurosaki Sensei is still remembered as the meanest of the mean, and people in Japan still shudder when they hear his name. In I976, due to various political problems with Kancho Oyama and the fact that he was not happy about the commercial direction Kyokushinkai was taking, Kurosaki Sensei broke away from Kancho Oyama.
He started his own Dojo, the Mejiro Gym, (now called the Kurosaki Dojo) which quickly became, and still is, one of the leading Japanese Kick Boxing Dojos in Japan. Among his students, Kurosaki Sensei has had many great Champions. The first was Jon Bluming Sensei who eventually became the only European to be promoted to l0th Dan in Japan. In Thai and Japanese Kick Boxing, his biggest successes were Fujiwara and Fujihira. Today Kenji Kurosaki is a very important and influential man in Tokyo. He still runs his Kick Boxing Dojo
The early 1960s saw the first
time Thai Kickboxers were to set foot on Japanese shores. Unheard of in Japan-
indeed, largely unknown of outside of South East Asia, the enigmatic art of
Thailand was to be pitted against the world renowned Karate fighting style to
see how they measured. Unbeknown to them at the time, the Japanese?s first
encounter with Muay Thai would lead to a rethink in training and attitude to
such an extent as to turn Japan?s Martial Arts world on its head. Many Japanese
Karate practitioners believed that their art was as refined and polished as a
fighting style could be and that their kicking was unrivalled in terms of power,
technique and ability to cause harm on an opponent.
The first matches were held in sold-out stadiums and televised live throughout
Japan. Millions watched as top Karate practitioners, famed for breaking bricks
and boards with their hands and feet, wearing the traditional white Gi with the
coveted black belt around their waists, faced off to prove themselves and their
art against this new foe from overseas. In the opposite corner stood their Thai
nemesis in their ring shorts and a peculiar head garb- the Mongkon. This was the
first time the term ?Kickboxing?Ehad been used anywhere- a word created from the
fashionable English language to aptly describe to the Japanese public a gloved
fighting matched held in a boxing ring but allowing not only punching but
kicking along with knees and elbows.
By the end of the night the Japanese fighters had all been humbled by the power,
athleticism and true professional fighting style of the Thais. After this there
were many more encounters between Japanese Karate exponents and Thai Kickboxers
under various structures; gloved, non-gloved, the Thai wearing gloves and the
Japanese without, and varying time limits. Regardless of this the Thais proved
themselves overwhelmingly dominant time and again but the Japanese were
determined to improve with the aim of competing on the same level. Thai trainers
were brought to Japan to teach and Japanese fighters began going to Thailand to
train. One of these fighters was Kenji Kurosaki (left) who, despite being
defeated time and again, continued to pursue his goal of reaching the standards
set in the rings of Bangkok. He was, however, to make his name as a trainer.
Kurosaki helped develop Kyokushin Karate which was basically a mixture of Karate
values strengthened with the Muay Thai techniques he had acquired. In his Mejiro
gym he discarded the traditional Karate style of chambered kicks in favour of
the hip turning style of the Thais and taught the low-kick which had so often
been effective against traditional Karate fighters.In the late 60s a 21 year old
man named Toshio Fujiwara (below) began training in Muay Thai at Kurosaki?s gym
for recreational purposes. He began to test
himself in the ring and after being on the end of a few defeats decided that he
would fully dedicate himself to the sport and began training in Thailand. Little
did he know at the time he was to be the first non-Thai to reach the top level.
By the time he retired he had fought 126 times with over 50 of these fights
taking place in the Bangkok stadiums and had proved the Thais not unbeatable by
winning the Rachadamnern title. Other Japanese fighters began to emerge as top
ranked exponents- Shima and Sawamura became familiar faces to the Lumpini and
Rachadamnern spectators and the foundations had been laid for Japan to emerge as
one of the top Muay Thai nations in the world today.