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2013/06/27

Part 1: Future of world karate thoughts (Kata) 形試合の大会システム向上についての私の考え

 All-Japan National Junior High Championships, March 2013

I often wonder how to improve kata competition and its healthy appeal to more karate-ka.

How can kata, which contains a vast knowledge of the practice of traditional karate, be more well represented from the local to world level within the WKF system?

How can the millions of karate-ka who compete in kata feel competition is more fairly balanced?

How can kata - and its different styles - be better supported by world and regional karate sport organizations, by national federations and by style associations?

The word on the street is kata is on its way out of world competitions, which I don't believe it. First, kata is included in many world events already, and second, competition kata is still popular with athletes from the grassroots level up.

There are probably more karate clubs emphasizing the practice of kata than emphasizing the practice of kumite, especially since kata performance is more connected with rank testing and it is safer to do.

Done well, kata it is a powerful puzzle of skills to accomplish as a personal challenge. It comes from the past, but it is still dynamic in the present if done 'correctly'. Is it the ultimate system to master in order to win any fight? No, as there is no such system. And to worry simply about learning to fight and only fight would be a paranoid exist.

The benefits can be debated elsewhere, as here I want to suggest how competitive kata can be improved.

In order for kata competition to be more fair, athletes should compete against each other using a competitive format that is a equal as possible. And such a format should further promote the technical, historical strengths of the karate world, since it is an integral part of karate's fabric.

Fair kata competition is difficult since judging is speculative as officials themselves have their own ideas of correct and incorrect performances based on their own official's training, their unique time spent actually officiating and they personal experiences with different styles. In addition, coaches and athletes from whatever style have different ideas among them about how to best to perform kata they think balances the accepted parameters of the WKF system and their own understanding of their style association's requirements.

Currently kata competition at times is frustrating because it is hard to truly determine which athlete is performing 'better', especially at higher levels of competition when two different style athletes who are very competent in their style face off against each other.

A great performance of the kata Annan up against a great Superimpei kata performance are two different 'technical obstacle courses' the athletes are demonstrating. Both kata really don't compare well when you think about it, especially when the officials have varied understandings of each kata. Lastly, the performances are from two different styles each with different interpretations of kata requirements for high-level representation.

This is just like how a 100 meter race is not the same as a 200 or 400 meter race. The pacing and even technical form can be different to match the challenge.

Therefore, I suggest kata be re-organized into several new categories for national, continental and world events (but maybe not local as I explain down below);

Suggestion 1
Separate kata competition divisions should be created for each accepted WKF style and judged only by officials certified to judge in that style. Shotokan kata athletes compete in the Shotokan division, Goju in the Goju division, etc.

Suggestion 2
There should be one open kata competition division which only requires shitei kata.

Ok, some might find this a little much, but let it sink in a minute as it makes a lot of sense.

Style only explanation
In both the style-only kata divisions and the open kata divisions, for each round 2 athletes line-up as normal in front of the judges and then one kata from the accepted kata list for that division is somehow chosen at random by the judges for each athlete to perform.
For example, in the Shotokan kata division, the lead judge holds up a sign that says 'Unsu', then the Aka (red) athlete performs it first, followed by the Ao (blue) athlete, after which the judges chose the winner by majority flags.

Yes, the same kata.
Now we have an exciting competition between two athletes. No more head scratching over whether that great Annan was good enough to beat the long, perfectly timed Superimpei.

Same kata obstacle course creates a truly equal opportunity.

Style-only kata competitions would require the WKF technical committee to decide on a list of kata for each approved style like there is now, but perhaps limited to 10-15 kata. And while there are already separate style association world events with kata divisions, a combined style kata division would allow the WKF to reinforce the importance of an athlete's commitment to their style.


By separating the styles, all the main karate styles now get to have their style front and center. The true best of the best of the styles get to shine brighter - sure, kata is still speculative, but everyone knows that going it.


There would have to be some negotiation over what the WKF will accept within the correct parameters of kata style presentation - which they already are supposed to do - and then widely educate the karate community about these parameters - which I explain more below.

The benefits are very good for this idea.

(Now, Richard, your core style is Wado, and Wado kata athletes never make it to the final 8 at the WKF level, etc, etc...)

Sure, totally true, but Wado is a major style that has been part of the universe of karate since karate started to be called 'karate' and not 'te', and Wado, like Shotokan, Shito, Goju and perhaps a few other styles, could benefit from more WKF sunlight.

With style-specific kata divisions, there will be more WKF kata world champions kicking around, a positive development spreading the interest of kata more widely, just like having separate weight divisions in kumite, no different.

At local competitions depending on the make-up of the event, there are two possibilities here.

1. Athletes in the same kata style divisions perform the same kata at the same time in the lower rounds to save time, with the higher rounds having the athletes perform separately as normal.

2. Have all the kata styles compete against they each other as they do now in a full open, again perhaps in the lower rounds the 2 athletes perform at the same time since local competitions normally have numerous entrants from different styles (not a fixed number of qualified athletes like in national, continental and world events). It's just easier to have completely open kata divisions in a local open event since there are never enough qualified officials for each style and if style only there wouldn't be enough time to run through sometimes hundreds or thousands of child kata athletes in one day.

For me, if the limited time allotted for huge open kata divisions (which are normally children) is a concern, instead of using the old number scoring system, I prefer the 2 athletes perform whatever kata they want from the WKF approved list at the same time with the judges using the flag system because this saves time. Time can also be saved by reducing the amount bowing athletes do before entering the ring and by having volunteers line-up each kid on-deck in order for them to quickly enter for the next round. If the volunteers are slow on this point, the time requirement can almost double for one round.

Open style kata division explanation
For open kata competition, I suggest only the 8 shitei kata are used. Sure, if the kata chosen is from one of the athlete's core styles then they may have an advantage.
Or they may not.

Does being a multi-versed karate kata athlete make you better or worse?
In comparison, a golfer and sprinter don't like to change their technical movement from one style to another, but a strong dancer can very versatile switching between different styles of dance.

As a fighter, which kata athletes are supposed to be, is it better in competition they demonstrate the depth of one style or be a comprehensive high-level performer of karate? Or both?

The development I have seen more recently is that the best kata athletes already incorporate different style kata into their tournament repertoire.

How can someone claim to be the best of the best if they can't do the other obstacle courses?

Both of these suggestions may sound radical at first, but they make a lot of sense.

First, a level playing field is created in terms of an athlete being required to perform an equal challenge, the same kata.

Two, the millions of average people who practice karate are style-based and many of these people are much more interested in kata than kumite. Whether as a competitor or spectator, style-only national, continental and world events would suddenly be much more appealing.

Three, emphasizing kata brings it to the foreground again of the karate movement.

I don't believe the recent grumblings that kata performances are getting worse and that's because now there is just too much information to access on how to perform kata better, as more style associations are more active holding seminars and there is loads of good content online if one knows where to look.

In addition, the WKF, style associations and national federations could do a much better job to get better quality information out to the masses and especially the club instructors. For example, the ability to produce low-cost, high quality online web seminars is easy to do if the organizers get it right. Even just Skyping a seminar kata lesson using projectors and large monitors can make in-depth kata learning possible from anywhere to anywhere. Heck, even just on an iPad is possible if the person presenting does a good job explaining - probably it's better than being in a seminar with a hundred people and straining one's eyes from the back to see what's being said up front.

While the quality of club instructors varies, free, widely accessible up-to-date official videos and training programs online will reduce the worry of lack of good information.

At the end of the day, whether individual recreational and competitive karateka incorporate good training and good training habits is up to them.

But I can see a technical director for whatever style every week holding free instructor 'webinars' on the finer points on a certain kata performance that members of that instructor's style can easily log into. No different with a national all-styles sports federation or the WKF itself holding webinars open to anyone.

Next post;
Suggestions for the future of sport karate: kumite...
After that, a change to competition design to improve athlete's performance and 'times at bat'.

2013/06/04

Failed karate IOC bid thoughts 2020年オリンピック競技の最終候補決定についての感想


It's a nice team kata photo, but kata was not part of karate's failed IOC bid so
it's confusing to use it on official promo material.

It's always hard to look at things in hindsight, but as more information about how the IOC Executive considered its decision last week to short-list wrestling, squash and baseball/softball for the final 1-sport vote in September - in the process rejecting karate - it now comes to light that karate really had a zero chance from February onwards.

After spending two years working on my global studies master's thesis on this topic up until graduation in February, for closure I need to dissect karate's IOC bid one last time.

Wrestling gets in on the 1st round with 8 secret votes.
Baseball/softball in 7 rounds with 9 votes.
Squash in 3 rounds with 8 votes.
(source; Asashi Shinbun newspaper online)

Just to state upfront, I think any sport should be able to be included in the Olympics, or any multi-sports event, as long as they are well organized and they have proper streams of recreational to elite competition. There should be a wide recreational base relative to the dynamics of that sport from which emerges increasingly difficult high-performance levels that peak at regularly held regional and world class championships.

Sports should only be withdrawn from the Olympics when something serious inside these two wide qualifications falls short. But they should be clearly warned first and given time to address those concerns - not just yanked as wrestling was in February, which I don't think was fair to that sport community or wrestling's long history with the Olympic movement.

Since there are limits to the size of major events - there are only so many venues and so many people a certain location can handle - if the overall number of well-organized sports in the world increases - and it is - then current Olympic sports should reduce their profile with less categories to make room for the new sports on the block. Isn't this the sportsman/woman like way?

But making room was not what the IOC has worked towards. Well, their initial enthusiasm was for choosing a new emerging sport by making space within the limit of 28 sports by taking out a current sport clearly in decline.

Yet that's not what happened last week and it's clear now is that karate had a 0% chance of getting on the short-list of 3 sports.

Here's a list for reasons in a random order.

1. Since many multi-sport events have both karate and taekwondo - Pan Am Games, Asian Games - there is obviously a precedent set that both can be in the same event. And both are different, more so than Freestyle wrestling & Greco-Roman wrestling, that they can be accepted for their separate and unique approaches to combat sports. But...

... if there was a concern that taekwondo needed to be pulled from the Olympics by the IOC in order to make a spot for karate to enter, then that wasn't going to happen since the IOC president Rogge said after the last's weeks decision that the IOC will never take taekwondo out of the Olympics. The IOC is worried that Asian countries will criticize them for ejecting an Asian sport because most of the sports in the Olympics are Western.


Well then, was this what the IOC executive thinking
from February after they pulled wrestling, added it to the long short list of 8 sports
and then qualified each sport for its differences into these 3 categories?

If so, karate had no chance since the executives
would have known in February, without a shadow of a doubt, wrestling
would get back in as there is just too much support for this
original Olympic sport.

Bach also wants to be the new IOC president from September.
I have still to read about his opinion on adding
new sports though.

3. Another IOC executive member Dennis Oswald has thrown his name into the hat of candidates seeking to be elected as the new IOC president too and he has said in interviews he wants to see new sports added to the Olympics. He critized this bid process because it was not encouraging new sports to be short-listed since getting new sports into the Olympics was the goal (I might end up saying this again).

So, if he gets elected, maybe he will support
taking out some sports since he mentioned the whole
process of getting new sports to send bids to the IOC
is for the IOC then to choose a new sport.


It looks like he wants to 'streamline' Olympic
sports to have less categories to make room
for new sports too.


This is probably the most important Olympic
news for the karate community since the short-list
rejection.

If Oswald is elected, he might - might - be able to
convince the IOC to accept new sports.

4. In the interview above Oswald states he's
positive wrestling will return to Olympics.
So again karate had zero chance since February.

5. Russian President Putin made a personal appearance 
at the IOC meeting to support wrestling, hence with a
leading world politician taking the time to back-up wrestling,
karate just couldn't compete. Maybe if the Prime Minister
of Japan had showed up for the karate presentation, but
Japan is clearly supporting wrestling since former Olympic champion
Saori Yoshida is heavily promoted on Tokyo 2020 bid billboards all over Japan.

6. Insidethegames.com poll found that wrestling is very popular and karate is not. It's not a perfect reflection of actual sentiment and it leaves open many questions - were those in the wrestling community more aware and more enthusiastic about voting in this poll, were those in the karate community less aware or perhaps even of the 100 million of karate-ka that there are, are there less people with access to the internet, was language a barrier since it was only in English, were there other polls in other languages I and others (IOC) never heard of, etc, etc.

Still, it's a curious result. The total number of votes was just over 300,000 with only 52,000 going to karate. Other than the fact is was in English, the first question that comes to my mind is where are the other millions of karate-ka? Why not more awareness and interest online?

Are the karate community's online efforts weak?
Are not enough things happening online for fans to follow and beware of sport karate in general.

(More on what the world karate community should do in my next post...)

In terms of those numbers, a statistician will have to explain it better to me.

7. In the history of the Olympics, new sports getting added is a rarity.
There were no new sports from 1936 to 1964 - WW2 had something
to do with that since the Olympic movement was on hold for
1/2 a decade - but from 1964 when volleyball and judo
were accepted (a team sport & an 
individual combat sport), mainly one or two sports
have been accepted every 5 to 10 years.

Disciplines within accepted sports have been added,
but the new sports are rare and the road to
acceptance is long. Badminton made its first
demonstration debut in 1972 and it was 
accepted in 1988 for the 1992 Games.

While sports are in or out now - no more demonstrations -
taekwondo demo'd in 1988, but became a full sport in 2000.

In comparison, the WKF (WUKO) were trying to get
recognition by the IOC from the late '70s, receiving
it in 1985, then losing it in 1991/92 and regaining it
in 1999. For sure the political competition with the
ITKF Shotokan spoiled the IOC's feelings for karate,
but here I can't say where the faults were made.

Karate was short-listed for inclusion in 2005 and
2009 for 2012 and 2016, but was not accepted,
then it didn't even make the short-list last week for 2020.

The mood may be split in the IOC now. On
one hand it could be the summer program
is now locked in at 28 sports and all those sports
are on notice to be better managed (fencing's worries),
leaving no room for new sports for a decade or two.

Conversely, new IOC leadership may want
to re-organize and let new sports in.

What about politics, money, sponsorship and potential collusion or corruption spoiling karate's you might ask? Everyone's whispering this quite openly, but not me. Sure, the IOC hungered for golf and rugby and it got them - big monied sports thoroughly entrenched in the sports industrial complex with equipment, clothing, stadiums, golf courses, TV deals, deep-pocket sponsors, etc, all part of the SIC - over the initial favorites karate and squash in 2009. But, I think the world karate community can still do better with what we offer, and truly in last week's decision, wrestling was coming back in for sure.

8. Finally, I have to salute the WKF bid members
and all the people who were involved.
They did what they thought they had to do
and the slogan 'The K is on the Way'
But, the WKF made mistakes that we can
ponder over. I'm not saying I would have done it
better, but a little 'hansei' (reflection) is needed
to know how to deal with the IOC in the future.

A. The moment wrestling was pulled from the Olympics in February
and then added to the 8 short-listed sports, the WKF should have
complained to the IOC that wrestling must be made to wait for
3-5 years like baseball and softball in order to properly re-organize.
It sounds radical and direct, but the WKF needed to get the
IOC's honest attention.

The IOC started playing real hardball when they pulled this stunt
- remember the same majority of  IOC executives who so
enthusiastically took out wrestling where the same executive group that 
so enthusiastically put it back in only 3 months later in only 1 round of voting.

Therefore, the WKF should have played hardball too and
really questioned if the IOC was being truthful.

Really, how many other Olympic sports had scandals or areas of
poor organization that the IOC addressed without the sport or national
federation getting pulled from the official list?

Examples abound - badminton coaches throwing matches, judo coaches beating athletes at the
London Games, not enough female athletes in certain sports, etc.

Fact: Saudi Arabia did not have its IOC membership pulled for not fielding
enough female athletes or for the simple fact is bans girls from doing sports at all!
A few select private schools offering girls sports is not universal inclusion,
an Olympic ideal.

The WKF could have officially complained or even withdrawn their karate bid in protest that the bidding process was not genuine.

But since they didn't drop out in protest, being up against wrestling - the clear favorite to get back in - the presentation strategy should then have been very aggressive.

B. An aggresive presentation would have emphasized karate's strengths in how it compares to other combat sports. Some combat sports only punch, some only wrestle & some only kick whereas karate's kumite competition incorporates aspects of all three (and by wrestling I mean our brilliant take-downs...)

The 3 official WKF videos just didn't cut it for me. The fella in his dogi running outside, falling down and bumping into people was painful to watch, and the other two - one of competition videos of athletes getting hit and failing down - and the other more generic video of kumite, crowds, logos and kata - uh, what, kata?!

Is kumite what kata athletes do with gloves on? Are they using kata moves in fights?
That's the first misconception that comes to mind.

All the promo materials could have showed pictures of the globe with creative images demonstrating where the 100 million karate people are and how from 10 million competitors the 108 potential Olympic athletes would have been chosen through numerous levels of high-performance competition.

C. Based on the current bid, if karate did get into the Olympics, while millions would potentially enjoy watching it, practically it would only affect 108 athletes every 4 years. A pinnacle of high-performance, but the WKF made a mistake about making the Olympic dream for karate the #1 goal, thereby creating competitive and organizational decisions all the way down to the grassroots level simply for bettering its IOC acceptance chances. Body protectors? Safety first, but adults really don't need them and most athletes don't like them.

The goal of the WKF should be to make the karate experience for the 100 million karate members better in coordination with national federations and style associations. One aspect of this focus should be its continual goal of ensuring the WKF World Championships are the ultimate event for our community, like the World Cup is for soccer as the Olympic soccer is several ranks down on the ladder of prestige.

This is the scuttlebutt I'm hearing in Japan now.

I don't buy into the common complaint karate getting into the Olympics will radically change karate's technical focus because we do what we want in our own clubs and we chose how to integrate with the wider karate community while also not holding our students back. Whoever wants to compete should be able to. Whoever wants to challenge a dan test or visit another dojo or learn a new kata should be encouraged. So when it comes to supporting the WKF  and the karate community, I'm all for it, while at the same time, the armchair coach/coach potato who yet still earns a living as a pro coach needs to have his say.

I'm kind of guessing that the WKF has already determined wrestling is going to get back in and they're just playing nice, waiting for the new IOC president to be elected and hoping that person works to yank out declining IOC sports in order to add new ones 4 years from now.

In my next post I will outline my thoughts on what the world karate community should do from now.