Everyone who has watched a Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) match or tournament has heard of "the kimura," a specialized arm lock that many people try to use, but few are successful in applying.
He died on April 18, 1993 at the age of 75, arguably the best Judo competitor ever-and one of the Most important Judo figures ever to be mistreated by the leaders of his art..
Hospitalized after surgery, and in his 70s, Kimura started doing push-ups in his room.
A life-long smoker, Kimura was diagnosed with lung cancer.
Although his rank was frozen at 7th dan from the age of 30 until his death at 75 by the petty vindictiveness of the Kodokan authorities, Kimura never lost his spirit.
He taught Judo at his alma mater, Takushoku University, from 1960 until his death in 1993, training Olympic bronze and silver medalists and an All-Japan Champion.
Despite these setbacks, Kimura\'s spirit never wavered.
Sadder yet, Kimura entered the shadow world of professional wrestling, largely to make money, where he was betrayed and humiliated.
Because he had awarded Judo promotions without the permission of the Kodokan Headquarters, his promotions were frozen, and he watched as his juniors and inferiors surpassed his 7th dan for the next 40 years.
Kimura\'s return to Japan was not greeted with acclaim and plaudits, however.
Paradoxically, the loss made Gracie even more famous.
Refusing to surrender, Gracie suffered a broken arm, and Kimura was declared the winner.
He saw the opportunity to apply his favorite ude-garami ("kimura") lock.
His bout became legendary: after exhausting minutes of scuffling for position and successful throws, Kimura finally downed Gracie and followed up with an attempt to smother him into submission.
Financially stretched trying to pay for his wife\'s medical care on a teacher\'s salary, in 1951, Kimura accepted an invitation to travel to Brazil to teach and compete with the increasingly famous Helio Gracie in Brazilian-rules competition.
Through the late 1930s and early 1940s, Kimura dominated the Judo competition circuit, repeatedly winning the All-Japan championship; he resumed his winning ways after Judo was reinstated in 1947.
For this performance he became the youngest fifth dan in Japan.
In 1935, shortly after entering college, he defeated eight fourth-dan opponents in a row, losing only to the ninth man he faced.
A Judo prodigy in high school, he reportedly lost only four formal Judo matches in his entire career, all during his freshman year in college.
He was, and remained, one of the strongest Judo competitors throughout the 1930s and 1940s-strongest in both its senses.
In an age before weight lifting became an integral part of Judo practice, Kimura was an avid weight lifter and body builder.
The "kimura" is named after perhaps the best Judo competitor who ever lived, Kimura Masahiko (1917-1993).
The story is at once fascinating, inspiring, and tragic.
Few, even among jujutsu and MMA aficionados, however, know what the lock called a "kimura" was derived from an early link to karate as well as Judo and jujutsu.
Everyone who has watched a Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) match or tournament has heard of "the kimura," a specialized arm lock that many people try to use, but few are successful in applying