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In judo's promotion system as originally finalized by Kanō around 1926 there was no maximal dan rank, and judoka holding 10th dan (and above) would normally wear a red belt, but also could wear a white belt (the same color as the lowest kyū rank), or a black belt.
The judo sport in West Germany was organized as a sport from 1949 to 1954 in the Deutscher Athletenbund (DAB). On 8 August 1953 the German Judo Association was founded by Dan-bearers of the German Dan-Kollegium (DDK) like Alfred Rhode of the 1st German Judo-Club (1st DJC in Frankfurt am Main).
For this reason, the colors of yellow, orange, and green were reserved for practitioners under the age of 16. (Both children and adults of any age begin training as a new student wearing a white belt.) In the 1990s, Brazilian judo clubs began awarding grey belts for children advancing from white belt.
Germany: Sport: Judo: Weight class –100 kg: Rank 2nd dan black belt [1] Achievements and titles; Olympic Games : World Champ. (2013, 2015) European Champ.
Olympic judoka for West Germany (19 P) Σ. German judo biography stubs (146 P) Pages in category "German judoka" This category contains only the following page.
The intent to promote Capellettti to this rank was announced in July 2017, with the promotion being awarded in August 2017 at the Senior World Judo Championships in Budapest. Jean-Luc Rougé (France, 1949–) IJF 10th dan (promoted in December 2023). Peter Herrmann (Germany/Australia, 1941–) IJF 10th dan (promoted in October 2024).
The International Judo Federation publishes a list of all judokas for each continent across all gender-based bodyweight categories to assign these quota places according to their world ranking points. Eligible judokas with the highest number of points on the ranking list will secure a continental quota for their respective NOC at the Games ...
In 2003, after earning a black belt under Jean-Jacques Machado, Eddie Bravo opened his first 10th Planet Jiu-Jitsu school in Los Angeles, California.Bravo's system emphasizes developing students for submission-only grappling competition rather than points, he focused his jiu-jitsu training without the traditional gi, becoming one of the first jiu-jitsu schools in the US to do so.