< BACK

The 41st National High School Judo Championships

第41回全国高等学校柔道選手権大会 内閣総理大臣杯争奪
Sports Dance and Performance art

The 41st National High School Judo Championships

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

That may refer to

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

Date: Wednesday, March 20, 2019
Open: 8 o'clock / Opening ceremony 9 o'clock / Start 9:20 / Awards ceremony: 16:30
Men's individual game (60 kg class, 66 kg class, 73 kg class, 81 kg class, indiscriminate class)
Women's individual battle (48 kg, 52 kg, 57 kg, 63 kg, indiscriminate class)
March 21, 2019 ( Thu , Holiday )
Opening 8 o'clock / Opening ceremony 9 o'clock / Starting the game 9:20 / Awards ceremony / closing ceremony 17 o'clock
Men's team match (five players, winning match)
Women's group match (three-player game)

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

Venue: Nippon Budokan (2-3 Kitanomaru Park, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo)map
Host: All Japan Judo Federation (public interest), National High School Physical Education Federation (public interest)
Sponsorship: Sports Agency, Tokyo Metropolitan Board of Education, Japan Budokan , Kodokan ,
Asahi Shimbun , Nikkan Sports Newspaper, NHK
Main pipe: National High School Physical Education Federation Judo Professional Division, Tokyo Metropolitan Judo Federation,
Tokyo High School Physical Education Federation Judo Specialty Division
Cooperation: Kanto High School Physical Education Federation Judo Professional Division

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

Judo was created as a physical, mental and moral pedagogy in Japan, in 1882, by Jigoro Kano (嘉納治五郎). It is generally categorized as a modern martial art which later evolved into a combat and Olympic sport. Its most prominent feature is its competitive element, where the objective is to either throw or takedown an opponent to the ground, immobilize or otherwise subdue an opponent with a pin, or force an opponent to submit with a joint lock or a choke. Strikes and thrusts by hands and feet as well as weapons defenses are a part of judo, but only in pre-arranged forms (kata, ) and are not allowed in judo competition or free practice (randori, 乱取). A judo practitioner is called a judoka.
The philosophy and subsequent pedagogy developed for judo became the model for other modern Japanese martial arts that developed from koryū (古流 , traditional schools) .
The early history of judo is inseparable from its founder, Japanese polymath and educator Kanō Jigorō (嘉納 治五郎 , Jigoro Kano, 1860–1938) , born Shinnosuke Jigorō (新之助 治五郎 , Jigorō Shinnosuke) . Kano was born into a relatively affluent family. His father, Jirosaku, was the second son of the head priest of the Shinto Hiyoshi shrine in Shiga Prefecture. He married Sadako Kano, daughter of the owner of Kiku-Masamune sake brewing company and was adopted by the family, changing his name to Kano. He ultimately became an official in the Shogunal government.

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

Jigoro Kano had an academic upbringing and, from the age of seven, he studied English, shodō (書道 , Japanese calligraphy) and the Four Confucian Texts (四書 , Shisho) under a number of tutors. When he was fourteen, Kano began boarding at an English-medium school, Ikuei-Gijuku in Shiba, Tokyo. The culture of bullying endemic at this school was the catalyst that caused Kano to seek out a Jūjutsu (柔術 , Jujutsu) dōjō (道場 , dojo, training place) at which to train.

Early attempts to find a jujutsu teacher who was willing to take him on met with little success. With the fall of the Tokugawa shogunate in the Meiji Restoration of 1868, jujutsu had become unfashionable in an increasingly westernised Japan. Many of those who had once taught the art had been forced out of teaching or become so disillusioned with it that they had simply given up. Nakai Umenari, an acquaintance of Kanō's father and a former soldier, agreed to show him kata, but not to teach him. The caretaker of Jirosaku's second house, Katagiri Ryuji, also knew jujutsu, but would not teach it as he believed it was no longer of practical use. Another frequent visitor, Imai Genshiro of Kyūshin-ryū (扱心流 ) school of jujutsu, also refused. Several years passed before he finally found a willing teacher.

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

The National High School Judo Championships is a high school judo tournament held every March at the Nippon Budokan in Tokyo. It started as a national convention for men's group games in 1979. Also known as "spring martial arts hall" or "spring high". However, it will be held at Gunma Sports Center in 2019 for the Budokan renovation work. Group games and individual games by weight are held. The individual war was temporarily abolished when the women's team war was newly established in 2006, but was revived in 2010.

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

It is one of the three major high school judo tournaments that is the same as the national high school general athletic meet (inter high) and the Kim Jong Il national high school judo tournament. The Prime Minister's Cup is awarded to the group competition winner school. It used to be broadcast on TV Asahi series, but is currently broadcasted on NHK BS1. The men's group's winning flag has the remnants of TV Asahi as part of the organizer. The match time is 3 minutes to the semifinals. Only the final 4 minutes. The 33rd Annual Conference in 2011 was canceled due to the impact of the Great East Japan Earthquake.

Schedule & Ticket

There is no schedule or ticket right now.

Place information

Visuals help you imagine

More photo & video

Other languages

Chinese (Simplified)  English  French  German  Korean  Malayalam  Russian  Thai  Vietnamese 
More languages

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Judo", "Tokyo", "National High School Judo Championships", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
Content listed above is edited and modified some for making article reading easily. All content above are auto generated by service.
All images used in articles are placed as quotation. Each quotation URL are placed under images.
All maps provided by Google.

Buy Ticket >