Ryohei Kanokogi
Ryohei Kanokogi | |
---|---|
Born | Ryohei Kanokogi Tokyo, Japan |
Style | Judo, Karate |
Rank | 9th degree red belt in judo |
Children | 3 |
Ryohei Kanokogi was an early pioneer for judo in the United States.
Personal life[]
Ryohei is the grandson of a samurai.[1] He had two children with Rusty Kanokogi,[2] plus a son, Christopher, from a previous marriage.
Martial arts career[]
Ryohei was also the high school Judo champion of Japan.[1] Ryohei Kanokogi was former all-weights judo champion of southeastern Japan.[3] He was also a champion in karate.[2] Ryohei later attended Nichidai University as a member of the judo team.[1] He was featured in a number of Sports Illustrated articles including Confessions Of A Judo Roll-Out.[4]
Martial arts coaching career[]
He was known for his courtesy and expected good behavior from his students.[5] Along with his wife Rusty Kanokogi, he was influential in the establishment of women's judo. Ryohei was the judo coach for Japan during the Judo at the 1964 Summer Olympics,[6][7] and later immigrated to the United States with the help of Jerome Mackey.[6] While in New York, he initially taught at Judo, Inc,[6] where he and his wife were featured in an article in Sports Illustrated.[6] He served as a coach for Olympic Bronze Medalist Allen Coage.[8] Later, Ryohei taught at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy.[9] He later served as a US Olympic Team judo coach.[9]
Media[]
Kanokogi has appeared in commercials for Samsonite luggage and the after shave Hai Karate.[10]
- The Goodbye Girl (1977) - Japanese Salesman [11]
- Carlito's Way (1993) - Japanese Club Patron
References[]
- ^ a b c Black Belt. July 1965.
- ^ a b Sherrow, Victoria (1996). Encyclopedia of Women and Sports. ISBN 9780874368260.
- ^ "CNN Sports provided by Bleacher Report - CNN.com".
- ^ "CONFESSIONS OF A JUDO ROLL-OUT". SI.com.
- ^ THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF SPORT. 1967.
- ^ a b c d Jeannette Bruce (1967-05-22). "Muggers beware. He woulThis white belt, possibly one of the - 05.22.67 - SI Vault". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 2014-02-03.
- ^ "'Mother of Judo' receives her gold 50 years on - Rediff.com Sports". Rediff.com. Retrieved 2014-02-03.
- ^ Black Belt. February 1977.
- ^ a b "About Phil". The Judo Club. Retrieved 2014-02-03.
- ^ Osnos, Evan. "Thank You, Rusty Kanokogi". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2014-02-03.
- ^ "Ryohei Kanokogi". IMDb.
- American sportspeople of Japanese descent
- People from Tokyo
- Japanese emigrants to the United States
- Japanese male judoka
- American male judoka