Tournament accidents

This is sort of random. I thought we had a thread to stick this on, but I couldn’t find a decent one, so I’ll forge a new one.

Garden City Games: Six kung-fu fighters land in hospital
On July 6, 2011 · In Sports
By George Onah Port Harcourt

No fewer than six kungfu fighters participating in the ongoing Garden City Games 2011 in Port Harcourt , Rivers State , have been admitted for intensive treatment at the Braithwaite Memorial Hospital, BMH.

Vanguardsports gathered that 30 of the sportsmen have so far been referred to the BMH from the City Hall, Moscow Road, while it was learnt that the admitted kungfu men where stretched out of the arena after their bouts.

It was observed that the “Bruce Lee” men and women are usually given first aid by the medics at the venue immediately after the flying and kicking bouts before being referred to the specialist hospital.

The condition of the six athletes could not be ascertained at the BMH because the nurses there told Vanguardsports that “we have orders from above that no visitor must be allowed to see them”.

However, nurse Anagalu at the venue of the combat told the press that there were doctors “at the hospital, who are part of this team taking care of the athletes on admission and of course they would get the best of treatment”.

Another medical personnel explained that “this kungfu thing is a very dangerous game and we are always treating them here after each tournament and we don’t expect any bad situation than what we have seen anyway”.

It would be recalled that one Kungfu athlete died during the last gasmes in Kaduna.

The 17th National Sports Festival has three medical stages for athletes and officials seeking medical attention at the primary, secondary and tertiary stages, which includes mobile medical clinic at the various event centers.

Is this sanshou/san da they are talking about?

I initially saw “garden state” and thought NJ, but apparently not?

It was kung fu guys/gals, so i assume it was a broken nail or jammed finger from the point sparring “fights”. :stuck_out_tongue:

a lot of silk pyjamas were ripped that day…:frowning:

That’s because they never competed before;)

:smiley:

It’s Nigeria

I love the line “this kungfu thing is a very dangerous game”.

[QUOTE=GeneChing;1112652]I love the line “this kungfu thing is a very dangerous game”.[/QUOTE]

If this is sanshou/san da, well, I’ve seen some people seriously messed up… especially when you have professionals vs amateurs, steroid abuse, and “loose” rules about certain things

I remember in '95 at the world wushu tournament in Baltimore, there were a number of people that had to go to the hospital, some of which were even toulu competitors. I remember one guy was practicing two man set with a a teammate and speared his buddy in the ankle gashing him open. One of my sihings was one of the “doctors” althugh he admittedly was only a chiropractor. He was just like “well I can’t do anything about this, you need to go to the hospital.”
I also remember at the WKF tournament during the same weekend, a guy broke a finger or two doing push hands, broke down and acted as though he got his hand blown off by Rambo. How can you look at your kids and the face and tell them you broke your finger and acted like that doing a tai chi excercise.

I broke my finger once practicing with boken with my brother. Yeah… we weren’t using proper safety gear or, well, any safety gear. Anyway it hurt like a motherfuc%er but I got him a good one back, pinged him off the funny bone. :smiley:

What I have seen in my time:
Broken arm, jaw, leg and ribs.
Concussions, KO’s, choke outs galore.
I have seen shattered groin cups, bones protruding, knocked out teeth, huge gashes and lacerations.
One guy being carried out with a possible broken neck ( never found out what happened).
Dislocated shoulders and fingers and even an epelictic seizure !

[QUOTE=sanjuro_ronin;1112671]What I have seen in my time:
Broken arm, jaw, leg and ribs.
Concussions, KO’s, choke outs galore.
I have seen shattered groin cups, bones protruding, knocked out teeth, huge gashes and lacerations.
One guy being carried out with a possible broken neck ( never found out what happened).
Dislocated shoulders and fingers and even an epelictic seizure ![/QUOTE]

Now why don’t you tell us what you saw at the MA tourney’s and not at the local Portuguese bar after the FC Porto -vs- Benfica match.

[QUOTE=brothernumber9;1112668]How can you look at your kids and the face and tell them you broke your finger and acted like that doing a tai chi excercise.[/QUOTE]

lol!!! i remember when i was first learning staff one day my training brother and i both broke each others fingers, but we kept training until the end of class and went to get splints the next day…freakin puzzies.

just throw some jow on it! broken fingers work fine!

[QUOTE=Brule;1112677]Now why don’t you tell us what you saw at the MA tourney’s and not at the local Portuguese bar after the FC Porto -vs- Benfica match.[/QUOTE]

Theres is far too much truth in that !!

SR, i’m about to send you a PM. Just a heads up

[QUOTE=JamesC;1112686]SR, i’m about to send you a PM. Just a heads up[/QUOTE]

I’ll make sure to duck !

this always happens at tournaments, there are always several injuries… I think the medical staff is over-reacting but heck… it made the news;)

At tournaments, I’ve seen:

A broken tibia with the bone sticking out;

Numerous K.O.s, including a few with convulsions;

Dislocated shoulders;

Broken ribs;

In a small Taiwan tournament’s San Da-type match in the '80s (without headgear), one guy’s nose was smashed by two stiff straight punches, and another’s neck/jaw was messed up badly from a perfect, full-out, straight-leg spinning heel kick. Well, okay, these weren’t accidents…

At an open tournament, I saw one of those XMA kids collapse/pass out a few moves into his form. He was out of it for some time (the only single-man form injury I’ve seen in a tourney). Maybe all the over-screaming/hyperventilating along with the fancy jumps?

[QUOTE=sanjuro_ronin;1112671]What I have seen in my time:
Broken arm, jaw, leg and ribs.
Concussions, KO’s, choke outs galore.
I have seen shattered groin cups, bones protruding, knocked out teeth, huge gashes and lacerations.
One guy being carried out with a possible broken neck ( never found out what happened).
Dislocated shoulders and fingers and even an epelictic seizure ![/QUOTE]

and that was just the audience at a futball game

[QUOTE=lkfmdc;1112706]and that was just the audience at a futball game[/QUOTE]

Sheesh…keep up man, read the whole thread.

I didn’t think I’d be updating this one quite so soon

I almost put this in Busted Martial Artists, but then figured this new thread needs more luv. It’s all about going to a tournament and ending up in a hospital.

San Jose cops: Poor loser assaulted opponent at martial arts tournament
By Sean Webby swebby@mercurynews.com
Posted: 07/07/2011 04:56:02 PM PDT
Updated: 07/08/2011 06:14:09 AM PDT

In what martial arts organizers describe as one of the most vicious acts of poor sportsmanship ever witnessed, a 16-year-old Florida black belt bowed to his teenage opponent, shook his hand and then returned and kicked his victor so hard in the face that he sent him to the hospital for immediate surgery.

San Jose police booked the Miami Lakes boy, who is not being named because of his age, on a felony charge of assault with a deadly weapon in an incident that reportedly came after the suspect lost a closely fought taekwondo match in San Jose over the weekend.

Even though no weapon was used, police said the charge can be brought when an assault could produce serious injury or death.

Because he was neither a gang member nor considered an immediate threat, the boy was cited and released to his parents. He told investigators that he was upset with the judge’s rulings that lead to his loss, police said.

Meanwhile the 16-year-old injured boy is recovering at the family’s home outside of New York City, according to his father, a doctor who is also a black belt. He said he had no idea why his son was attacked.

"It goes against everything that is taught,‘’ he said.

National taekwondo organizers said they are considering serious sanctions, including banning the suspect from the sport for life.

"We are black belts,‘’ said Mark Kaufmann, USA Taekwondo’s director of events. "We are supposed to hold ourselves to a higher standard of courtesy and self-control. Obviously, someone did not teach this kid these concepts.‘’

The attack was originally reported to the Mercury News by police as a fight between two contestants before their match.

But the newspaper later learned that the attack – confirmed by police – was reportedly unprovoked.

It came on Saturday afternoon after the suspect and the Long Island, N.Y., teen had fought in a featherweight quarterfinal match at the San Jose Convention Center. The winner had a chance to go on and fight in the World Class division and maybe, one day, get a chance to fight for the national team.

At the end of the match, the New Yorker was declared the winner when the Floridian lost points through deductions for fouls.

About 20 minutes later, witnesses said, the Floridian came back into the arena.

He approached the New York boy, who was sitting in a chair, had no protective headgear on and was scouting his next opponent.

Letting out a martial arts scream, the Floridian with a second-degree black belt whirled around, delivering a roundhouse kick to the face of the oblivious New Yorker, according to witnesses. Martial arts experts say this is one of the most powerful and dangerous kicks. His bare heel struck the boy just below the nose, knocking out some of his teeth, witnesses said. Doctors later told the victim’s parents and coach that the foot missed by inches driving the victim’s nose bone back into his skull and killing him.

J.W. Suh, the coach of the injured athlete, said he was sitting nearby and heard the loud thwack of the foot striking the teen’s face. It sounded, he said, liked a foot hitting a leather target bag.

He looked up to see the teen falling to the ground and the suspect trying to run away. Suh, a former national team member and a national coach, leapt on the suspect and held him down.

"I applaud that coach for not taking a crack at the Florida kid,‘’ Kaufmann said.

Suh said he was just focused on not letting him escape.

"Everything happened so fast,‘’ Suh said. "Afterward, it didn’t seem like either he or his father had any remorse.‘’

Suh said he went up to the father and said, “He almost killed my student. Is this what you teach your son?”

Police separated them.

Suh said the injured teen had been his student for seven years. His father, mother and sister are also martial arts students with him at Suh’s High Performance Taekwondo Performance Center in New York.

“He is a great kid, a leader and a great role model for my other students. That’s what makes this so sad,” Suh said. "What we teach is deadly. It’s supposed to help people who aren’t strong. You have this power to hurt people if it’s taught the wrong way.‘’

Man, San Jose, our own backyard. I know many people who attended this event.