After watching Josh
Barnett’s victory again tonight. I did some brief research on the topic of
Catch Wresting. This is what I found.
Catch wrestling is a style of folk wrestling that was
developed and popularized in the late 19th century by the wrestlers of traveling carnivals who
incorporated submission
holds, or "hooks", into their wrestling to increase their
effectiveness against their opponents. Catch wrestling derives from a number
different styles, the English
style of Lancashire
Catch-as-Catch-Can Wrestling,Irish Collar-and-elbow, Greco Roman
Wrestling, styles of the Indian subcontinent
such as Pehlwani and Iranian styles such as Varzesh-e Pahlavani.
The training of some modern submission
wrestlers, professional
wrestlers and Mixed martial arts
fighters is founded in Catch wrestling.
Karl Gotch
was a catch wrestler and a student of Billy Riley's Snake Pit in
Whelley, Wigan. In the film Catch:
the hold not taken, some of those who trained with Gotch in Wigan talk of
his fascination with the traditional Lancashire style of wrestling and how he
was inspired to stay and train at Billy Riley's after experiencing its effects
first hand during a professional show in Manchester, England. After leaving
Wigan, he later went on to teach catch wrestling to Japanese professional
wrestlers in the 1970s to students including Antonio Inoki, Tatsumi Fujinami, Hiro Matsuda, Osamu Kido, Satoru Sayama (Tiger Mask) and Yoshiaki Fujiwara.
Starting from 1976, one of these professional wrestlers, Inoki, hosted a series
of mixed martial
arts bouts against the champions of other disciplines. This resulted
in unprecedented popularity of the clash-of-styles bouts in Japan. His matches
showcased catch wrestling moves like the sleeper hold,
cross arm breaker,
seated armbar,
Indian
deathlock and keylock.
Karl Gotch's students formed the original Universal
Wrestling Federation (Japan) in 1984 which gave rise to shoot-style matches. The
UWF movement was led by catch wrestlers and gave rise to the mixed martial arts
boom in Japan. Wigan stand-out Billy Robinson soon
thereafter began training MMA legend Kazushi Sakuraba. Catch
wrestling forms the base of Japan's martial art of shoot wrestling. Japanese
professional wrestling and a majority of the Japanese fighters from Pancrase, Shooto and the now defunct
RINGS bear links to catch
wrestling. Randy Couture,
Kazushi Sakuraba,
Kamal Shalorus, Takanori Gomi, and Josh Barnett, among other
mixed martial artists, study catch wrestling as their primary submission style.
The term no holds barred was used
originally to describe the wrestling method prevalent in catch wrestling
tournaments during the late 19th century wherein no wrestling holds were banned
from the competition, regardless of how dangerous they might be. The term was
applied to mixed martial arts matches, especially at the advent of the Ultimate
Fighting Championship.
Does anyone know about schools in Wisconsin
that teach Catch?
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