History of Count Koma
It is no novelty in the fighting milieu that a Japanese nicknamed
Count Koma taught Carlos Gracie the art of Jiu-Jitsu in the
beginning of the last century. What many don’t know is that Koma,
whose real name was Mitsuyo Maeda, was the last great Japanese
Jiu-Jitsu fighter, and maybe the greatest of all time. And that he
went around the world proving his art to be superior to every
other, at a time when, paradoxically, the art was disappearing,
obfuscated by the explosion of younger sibling Judo. The history of
the life of the Japanese myth is unique and fascinating, and is
about to be told in detail.
Maeda was born in 1878 in a small town called Aomori, located north
to the Japanese island of Honshu and known for its freezing
winters. As poverty assailed the region at the end of the 19th
century, many inhabitants would move to Tokyo or other cities to
try and make money and escape the cold. This was not the case for
young Maeda, who remained there till 1886, when he finally moved to
the capital. While he resided in Aomori, he went to Hirosaki
school, of the local elite, where he was known as the “sumo-kid,”
because of his fascination for the art his father had taught him.
And, of course, for the several fights he would win against school
mates.
As he arrived in Tokyo, Maeda started going to one of the country’s
most traditional schools and, later, entered a high-class
university, nowadays called Waseda, and acknowledged as a great
teaching centre. There he was taught the techniques of classical
Jiu-Jitsu. Later on, he would knock on the door of Kodokan, a
famous Judo academy that works to this day and at the time was
already deemed the best martial arts centre in Japan. The eventual
master and founder of the academy, Jigoro Kano, was a studious man
who gathered many styles of ancient Jiu-Jitsu to create Judo, whose
apex was reached in 1964, when it began to appear in the Olympic
Games, in Tokyo. But that would happen long after Maeda’s day. At
that time, Kano had just modified the art and left out the the
elements and techniques and striking inherited from the samurais,
who used to learn fighting techniques for when their swords broke
in the battlefields. An art, therefore, bereft of the rules which
characterize today’s Judo – and Jiu-Jitsu.
In that period, fights were held every month at Kodokan. It is
suspected that Maeda practised hard for months before premiering in
these competitions, for he didn’t want to risk doing badly in them.
On December 25, 1898, he finally made his first (and amazing)
demonstration at the academy. Wearing a white belt, he easily beat
five or six opponents and was immediately promoted to purple-belt.
That same day, while the westerns celebrated Christmas, Maeda would
go on to defeat more and more adversaries until, after overcoming
15 fighters in a row, he was granted the first degree of the black
belt. There began the trajectory of an incredible competitor.
A man of average build, measuring 5’6’’ and weighing 150lb, Maeda
wasn’t quite what one would call intimidating. He loved drinking
sake, singing, and wouldn’t back off whenever challenged to fight
on the street. He wouldn’t take long to take or knock down the
naïve challenger. Constantly evolving, he was promoted to the third
degree in 1901 and became a Judo instructor at the universities of
Tokyo, Waseda and Gakushuin.
Challenges abroad
In 1904, master Jigoro Kano summoned prodigy-pupil Maeda to travel
to the United States in order to propagate Judo. Before the
“ambassador” left, he received the fourth degree by the hands of
his professor.
Mitsuyo Maeda left the Yokohama port in November, arriving in San
Francisco, California, soon before the en of the year. At the time,
North-Americans already knew a bit about Japanese martial arts,
since president Theodore Roosevelt, was a big fan of the Japanese
people and its culture – he even had a Jiu-Jitsu tutor called
Yamashita. In order to improve their self-defense, some American
military men were already learning the art at their headquarters.
But to demonstrate the efficacy of the “new” art created by Kano,
Maeda and his mates were appointed to fight the Americans and prove
the Japanese superiority. In the famous military school of New
York, Maeda faced a football player who also practised wrestling.
After falling inside the guard, his back to the floor, which in
wrestling rules would mean he lost, Maeda continued the move and
ended it with an arm lock. The Americans didn’t accept the
submission and proposed a new challenge, this time against Maeda’s
mate, an experienced student of Kano’s called Tomita. The Yankees
believed facing Tomita would be a greater honor, because he was a
more experienced fighter (actually, Tomita was much more of a
professor than a fighter).
Unfortunately, Tomita was embarrassingly defeated, for his opponent
managed to transpose his legs and immobilize him. This was too much
for Maeda, who decided to separate from Tomita and establish
himself in New York, where he maintained himself by taking part in
underground challenges. In the first of these, in front of a
wrestler a foot taller and who liked to be called “The Butcher,”
Maeda knocked the adversary down several times before finishing
with an arm lock. Three fights and three wins later, Maeda decided
to challenge the world heavyweight boxing champion, Jack Johnson,
considered by some specialists to be the best boxer of all time.
Thus the Japanese began the tradition that would be followed by the
Gracies of challenging the boxing champion of their day (Helio
challenged Joe Louis, whereas Rickson aimed at Mike Tyson). The
boxers also created a tradition of their own: that of never
responding to such challenges.
Three years later, in 1907, Maeda went to the United Kingdom, where
he won 13 more fights, then heading to Belgium, where again he won.
He went back to America, this time to Cuba. There he reigned
undisputed. He achieved no less than 15 victories, plus four when
he passed by Mexico. And this is only the fights with official
records. If we count street challenges, in Cuba alone we are
talking something like 400 bouts.
Since he parted from Tomita, in the USA, Maeda had become
independent and, in his travels, he insisted on calling his art
Jiu-Jitsu. This choice may have come from the fact that, brfore
entering Kodokan, he was already familiar with classical Jiu-Jitsu,
and probably used in his fights many of the moves Jigoro Kano had
banned in creating Judo. Naturally, Kodokan’s strict principles
wouldn’t approve of Maeda’s challenges, and this may have been
another reason for the adoption of the name Jiu-Jitsu.
After travelling the world in 1910, Mitsuyo Maeda went to Santos,
Brazil. He stayed for little time there, establishing himself in
Belem, after travelling to the UK, New York and Cuba, where he at
times used the name Yamoto Maeda (“Yamoto” is an ancient word for
“Japan”). But it was only in Spain that he became known as Count
Koma, name of the Jiu-Jitsu academy he founded in Belem. In his
academy, Maeda would teach Jiu-Jitsu to immigrants, as a form o
self-defense technique.
In the early 1920s the already famous count was involved in an
attempt from the Japanese government of founding a colony in
northern Brazil, where Koma met a man of great political influence
called Gastao Gracie, whose forefathers had immigrated from
Scotland. Their friendship grew, until one day Gastao asked Maeda
to teach Jiu-Jitsu to his son Carlos.Maeda died November 28th,
1941, aged 63. It is estimated he fought from one to two thousand
combats, without losing a single one of them. Many Japanese
immigrants and Brazilian friends attended his funeral and thanked
the master. Maeda’s body was buried at Santa Isabel cemetery, in
Belem, Para. Jiu-Jitsu, on its hand, more alive than it has ever
been.
A disciple called Gracie
We have little and yet controversial information about the time
Carlos Gracie was Koma’s pupil. Carlos learned from Maeda for more
than two and less than five years. Koma taught Gracie things like
using the opponent’s strength against them, as well as efficient
techniques for beating anyone in mixed martial arts bouts. His main
fighting method was using stomping and elbow strikes to get closer
to the adversary, before taking them down. In the academy he
developed “randori,” training created by Kano in substitution to
katas (which featured no contact).
In 1925, Carlos opened his own academy. He taught his pupils the
methods he developed himself throughout the years. Meanwhile, Maeda
travelled the country and the planet, but Jiu-Jitsu’s survival was
guaranteed, since the Gracies had taken on the task of developing
Koma’s art.