Black Belt Magazine

Martial Arts Community Bids Farewell to TERUYUKI OKAZAKI

Teruyuki Okazaki was a bully. That may not be the most flattering way to remember one of the principal leaders of karate in the West, a student of Gichin Funakoshi and a protégé of Masatoshi Nakayama — not to mention one of the art’s most incredible technicians and talented teachers — but he admitted to the bullying himself.

Okazaki told the story — as was often the case when he became excited or particularly involved in one — while slipping sometimes into the from Funakoshi in the late 1950s, after failing the test a couple of times. It was not for lack of technique, he said, but because of his attitude. Most of the other students back then hailed from Tokyo. Okazaki said they looked on his “always ready for a fight” kind of assertiveness and “stubborn” mentality as a sort of two-fisted cowboy roughness. It didn’t go over well with the big-city sophisticates or with the gentlemanly Funakoshi.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Black Belt Magazine

Black Belt Magazine1 min read
Fit To (film) Fight
If you’ve ever watched Scott Adkins play Yuri Boyka in the Undisputed franchise, you know that he not only can bulk up while maintaining muscular definition (aka “be swole and shredded”) but also can exhibit the flexibility needed to do 720-degree sp
Black Belt Magazine3 min read
Martial Arts Anatomy 101 Physiology Of The Liver Shot
BY BARRY A. BROUGHTON, PH.D. When it comes to incapacitating an opponent, experienced strikers know that a well-placed liver shot can be as effective as a knockout blow to the head. Most martial artists, however, are not aware of the cascade of event
Black Belt Magazine3 min read
Community
An error found its way into “Master the Armbar: The Results From the Groundbreaking Armbar Research Study Will Serve as Your Secret Weapon!” which Barry A. Broughton, Ph.D., wrote for our Spring 2023 issue. It’s on Page 54. Figure 4 and Figure 5 shou

Related Books & Audiobooks