6-15-2001
Over my first 20 years or so of Isshinryu, I competed, participated in and threw ‘karate’ tournaments.
Almost all of my experience has been in Open competition with very little in “Isshinryu Only” competition. There are a number of observations I can make which I believe are appropriate to this discussion. I hasten to add, this is based on my minor experience at maybe 200 competitions over the years.
The larger the group of competitors, the more you will find scores rise toward the end of the competition.
If you’re judging say 25 to 40 competitors, do you really think the judge can make a fine distinction between the 7 people receiving 6.3 and 4 people receiving 6.4’s they award?
The only real reason for the score is to find a way to distinguish First Place and several consolation prizes. It would be nice to be objective and be able to read much more into the scores, but truthfully even the Olympics which often breaks scores into two categories, cannot really explain what was behind the judges decision.
In that I trained for various periods of time with many different instructors and systems, I found that I would try and be objective to a systems ‘basic’ criteria when I judged somebody from that system. In many cases I knew the forms and knew whether the competitor ‘blew it’ or were in a somewhat acceptable variation from a system norm. On the other hand most judges I’ve been with only knew their own system, and it is often difficult to conclude what standards they are applying.
A judges prejudices almost always play with their decision. For example judges who come from systems which custom craft forms for a competitors abilities, will always accept that as a higher standard than doing traditional forms (IMVHO). Now there may be exceptions, but I suspect they are few and far between.
Now where tight closed system tournaments (and perhaps WUKO with proscribed kata, but as I haven’t seen what happens there so I can’t truthfully say) perhaps the judges have objective criteria, such as a standard ‘perfect’ form to compare the student against? But in Open Competition, there are NO criteria for a judge. I’ve seen tournaments which declare, only traditional forms will receive scores, give wins to individuals with back flips in Seisan kata.
In that there realistically are NO RULES, just like in baseball, ALL JUDGES DECISIONS ARE CORRECT and UNCONTESTABLE. Otherwise there is no sport. Nothing about that says it is Fair or Right, its just the reality of the situation.
Any competitor at any level competing in Open Tournaments who does not understand and fully accept statement No. 7 is going to receive vast disappointments.
There are judges (by no means all or the majority) who will gives scores to humiliate the competitor. Often they are outstanding martial artists too, and feel insulted if the competitor isn’t up to their standards. It is not pleasant to be on the receiving end of a 2.3, on the other hand it can be an educational experience if you take the time to talk to them, understand their decision, and decide if they know what they are talking about. Frankly, such an individual can be a life inspiring experience when you’re a new Dan competitor. On the other hand they are often miserable human beings, especially if they do such against the Kyu competitors.
When I was judging, I refused to humiliate anybody. I would create a standard low score and anybody who did not measure up competitvely (and would not win anyway) would receive it simply for standing up (or rolling up as the case may be). So an individual who blew a form, missed as section I knew should be there, or turned the wrong way… would simply receive a 5.0. I saw and see no reason to give something lower to make a statement.
On the other hand, my own brown belts, or black belts, if they made the slightest mistake only received a “0” from me. Personally for me and them, I see any kata as a life and death experience. There is NO second place in combat. They’ve been trained to accept and understand this. On occasion I’ve had a student win first place in forms or weapons, and heard the audience hush when they saw the score I gave them. They understand and never had a problem with my standard, and follow it themselves.
Not understanding the standard, with so many systems creating forms and extensively modifying forms, for many years I had problems where to place extreme gymnastics in competition. If you have a good division with 3 people doing great traditional forms, and then a ‘modern’ competitor doing a superior gymnastic ability form, I always had a hard problem not taking their superior abilities into account. Eventually I came to my own understanding about what any system of combat should use, and all of that came into place.
Simply, one example, there should never be a ‘dead’ movement in a form, and all techniques should be aligned to generate the maximum power. Thus great gymnastics with a punch pushed out to fill a hole didn’t qualify as a martial form. Of course a great Chinto with a dead movement didn’t qualify either.
Politics and Power do exist in judging. Only a fool wouldn’t realize this. How much and how blatant varies from place to place, and there are no warning signs when this happens.
The largest problem, IMVVVVVHO, is many competitors should not be competing. They should be training instead. I’m not talking about being human and making a mistake. Instead I’m talking about people trying to compete with forms they haven’t mastered, or without body control to sell each technique. This also covers most kobudo competitors, especially Dan’s who have just learned a weapon and feel entitled to compete in the Black Belt Weapons division when they do not have a Black Belt level of ability with the weapon.
If those individuals want to compete solely to gain experience in public, there should be divisions for them to do so, where they stand out in front of everybody and do their forms. But don’t judge them and give awards to the better of them. Competition should be reserved for those who’ve been trained and have worked to be competitive.
Judges who judge and have no idea of what they’re judging are a major problem. Years ago there was a great general dislike of Chinese forms in competition by Karateka, on the other hand, as most of the karate judges didn’t know anything about kung fu, I’ve seen competitors with fake kung fu forms, lously skills, etc. win over good karateka, because the judges deep down inside felt kung fu must really be superior, and since the competitor said they’re doing kung fu, they had to win. It would have been better if the judges simply applied the same standards they used for their karate judging, and more fairer.
Many Weapons Judges don’t do Weapons. Makes you wonder what standards they’re using. Likewise many judges who don’t do a specific weapon may not know what they’re judging. I had a friend who was a very traditional iaido stylist. Once we were judging a kids weapon division together and a young man came out in a spiffy outfit with a sword, and did a credible job jumping and cutting all over the place. As he was physically more in control than the other youth, the other judges and I gave him the highest score, except for my friend who gave him a zero. After the competition I ran up to my friend and asked him what did he see I didn’t. He took me outside and showed me how the young man sheathed his sword. The way he did it would have removed his fingers if the blade had been live and sharp. A year later in New England I saw a similar situation with the judges giving the adult Dan first place. Unfortunately I was watching and also saw he would have lost his fingers…. Hmmm.
Is competition helpful? Yes, provided you prepare correctly. Nothing will burn you in like standing before knowledgeable judges with thousands watching your every movement.
On the other hand I always remember my Debate coach in college and keep this lesson in mind. If all of the people who judge you are idiots and they give you first place, what does that make you?
On a personal closing note, the more deeply I have gotten into my own studies I began to find it too painful to keep judging, I no longer wish to distinguish who does a better job. I see everybody who steps up in a blinding light of hope, and grace and only am interested in assisting those who wish to train to become better. I find it a far more interesting way to spend my time.














