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  2. Tokaido (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokaido_(company)

    Apart from uniforms and belts, the company provides embroidery of Japanese words (such as individual practitioners' or karate schools' names) and rank markings, and also produces badges and labels matching major karate organizations. [1] Tokaido has also produced custom-made uniforms made by master tailors Genzo and Waisetsu. [12]

  3. List of Kyokushin practitioners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Kyokushin...

    He began learning Kyokushin Karate at age seven to defend himself against a school bully. [83] [84] Bas Rutten – UFC Hall of Famer (Pioneer wing, 2015 inductee) [85] and three-time King of Pancrase Openweight Champion. After earning a 2nd Dan Black in Taekwondo, Rutten began learning Kyokushin karate and earned a 2nd-degree black belt. [86] [84]

  4. Joe Corley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Corley

    On June 16, 2016, Master Corley was promoted to the rank of 10th Degree Black Belt, Grand Master, by the Professional Karate Commission (PKC). The certificate was presented by Grand Master Glenn Keeney, president of the PKC, along with Grand Master Allen Steen, and was also approved by Grand Masters Pat Johnson and J. Pat Burleson.

  5. Robert Trias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Trias

    Robert A. Trias (March 18, 1923 – July 11, 1989) was an American karate pioneer, founding the first karate school in the mainland United States and becoming one of the first known American black belts. [1] [2] He also developed Shuri-ryū karate, an eclectic style with roots in Chinese kung-fu, and indirectly some Okinawan karate.

  6. Gosoku-ryu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gosoku-ryu

    Gosoku-ryū (剛速流) is a style of karate which was founded by Takayuki Kubota. [1] Gosoku stands for hard and fast, which suggests a combination of techniques both from the fast and dynamic Shōtōkan style as well as from the strength-focused Gōjū-ryū style.

  7. George Dillman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Dillman

    George Dillman (born November 23, 1942, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) [2] is a controversial American martial arts instructor, who popularized the use of techniques such as pressure points (also known in Japan as kyūsho jutsu (急所術)) among the United States' martial arts practitioners.

  8. Okinawa Seidokan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okinawa_Seidokan

    10th degree red belt in Okinawan Karate and Kobudo Okinawa Seidokan is a style of Okinawa classical karate ( Tode ) and Kobudo founded in 1984 by Shian Toma. It is a synthesis of the Shorin Ryu katas, Motobu Ryu two-person open hand grappling and weapons techniques, and Kobudo katas mostly of the Ryukyu Kobudo lineages.

  9. Matsubayashi-ryū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matsubayashi-ryū

    Matsubayashi-Ryū (松林流), is a style of Okinawan karate founded in 1947 by Shōshin Nagamine (1907–1997) (an Okina Sensei [1]).Its curriculum includes 18 kata, seven two-man yakusoku kumite (pre-arranged sparring) routines, and kobudō (weapons) practice.

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