Hanshi
Jerry Piddington
"Let us
bring the spirit of our martial art ancestors into this
new age through WorldBlackBelt for the greater gain of
all. We can kindle our fire and transform our great
heritage into greater achievements."
"And,
in this corner, Jerry Piddington"... was the title of an
article written about Mr. Piddington in the 1974 issue of
Karate Illustrated which he appeared on the
cover. Mr. Piddington was described in that article by
his fellow karateka as one crazy dude, an animal, and a
crazy animal that you needed a chair and a whip to fight.
A lifelong rebel who purportedly won one match by
flustering his opponent with a kiss, Mr. Piddington is
still turning heads with his long hair and bushy beard,
which earned him the nickname --- The Untamed Lion.
As
a pioneer of American Sport Karate, Jerry Piddington
traveled all over the country placing and/or winning every
major tournament in the United States from 1972 to 1976,
not only in fighting, but in kata competitions as well.
Mr. Piddington faced off against some of the top
tournament competitors of the 1970's --- including Joe
Lewis, John Natividad, Darnell Garcia, Bob Allegria, Steve
Sanders, Jay T. Will, Artis Simmons, Joe Corley, Byong Yu,
Ken Knudson, Everett Eddy, Roger Greene, Reily Hawkins,
Jack Motley, Vic Guerro, Jeff Smith, and Pat Johnson ---
just to name a few. He began his competitive career in
1969, winning the Four Seasons Karate Championships as a
brown belt. He later captained the five-man team which
triumphed over the highly successful Chuck Norris-led team
at the 1974 International Karate Championships in Long
Beach, California. Mr. Piddington held a long list of
titles over the years and in 1973 was rated #9 in the USA
and #1 in the Southeast by the Black Belt Yearbook
and #12 in the USA by Professional Karate Magazine.
Mr. Piddington is still punching and kicking! He recently
participated in the Canada AM Championships and helped the
American team defeat the Canadian team by scoring the
winning point.
"I enjoyed
fighting the bare-knuckle matches," says Mr. Piddington.
"In that era the fights were much tougher because there
were no pads and head gear. The art of kime and control
with good stances was an important part of how we fought,
unlike today's sport karate of jump and tag." Mr.
Piddington remembers some of his injuries: a broken thumb
at the U.S. Team Championships in Long Beach, California,
a broken jaw at Kang Rhee's Nationals in Memphis,
Tennessee, and a broken leg at the 1973 Grand Nationals in
Anderson, Indiana.
Mr.
Piddington has a martial arts career that spans four
decades and has studied with some of the most famous
martial artists in the world. His first teacher was
Caylor Atkins, a Shotokan stylist. Mr. Piddington
received his first black belt from Tom Crites in
Shorin-ryu. Continuing his career, Mr. Piddington trained
in Hawaiian Kenpo with Michael Stone, Japanese Goju-ryu
with Chris Armstrong, Kempo with Ed Parker, and Shorin-ryu
with Master Tadashi Yamashita. Mr. Piddington was also a
student and friend of Robert Trias -- Father of American
Karate.
Grandmaster
Robert A. Trias took notice of Mr. Piddington and invited
him to create his own style. On May 2, 1972, Mr.
Piddington was declared the Headmaster and founder of
American Open Style Karate under the USKA sanctified
charter, established by Master Trias, which was
internationally ratified on May 30th, 1975. In February
2000, Mr. Piddington was declared Headmaster of American
Shorei/Shorin Karate by Hanshi John Pachivas, Grandmaster
of Shuri-ryu Karatedo, and was awarded his 9th degree
black belt.
Hanshi
Piddington is an actor in live theatre and stage combat.
He is a fight choreographer and stunt man with several
movie credits including: Killer Inside Me,
A Reason to Kill, Night Realm,
The Quest, starring Jean-Claude Van Damme
and Roger Moore, and Bloodsport II, starring
Daniel Bernhardt, Pat Morita and James Hong.
In the 1970's,
Mr. Piddington was one of the four promoters of Mike
Stone's Four Seasons National Tournaments, along with
Algene Caraulia, Pat Burleson, and Mike Stone. Mr.
Piddington pioneered kickboxing on the east coast by
promoting five major kickboxing title fights in Charlotte,
North Carolina. He was co-writer with Joe Corley,
establishing the rules for the Professional Karate
Association (PKA), which is documented in the 1974 issue
of Sports Illustrated. As Founder of the
National Karate Association (NKA), Mr. Piddington promoted
the first eleven-round world title kickboxing match, with
Jeff Smith winning a decision over Keith Haflick for the
1975 Light Heavy Weight Championship of the World. Also
under the NKA sanction, Mr. Piddington promoted the
first
World Tag Team Kickboxing Championships with the
Gold Dust Twins, Ricky and Randy Smith defeating
Dale Cook's double pro team from Tulsa, Oklahoma,
considered by many as some of the best kickboxing action
to this date. Mr. Piddington founded the Charlotte
Warhawks, an undefeated five-man kickboxing team
that included some of his most notable fighters ---
Danny
McCall,
Keith Haflick,
Jimmy
Horsley,
Ricky
Smith,
and
Randy Smith.
The team was coached by Danny Wilson and managed by Gene
Smith
Jerry
Piddington currently resides in Oregon with his wife, Eva
Marie, and continues to teach his art form of American
Open Style Karate. He is an avid fisherman, hunter, and
loves adventure seeking such as high diving and extreme
water sports. He has four children and four
grandchildren. Mr. Piddington not only demonstrates the
fighting spirit of a lion, but also the heart of a lion,
by working full-time with kids who are educationally and
physically challenged with ADD, ADDHD, dyslexia, alcohol
syndrome, autism, etc. Hanshi Piddington believes that
the aesthetic value of martial arts can absolutely help
kids by giving them a way of life. He is the Founder of
American Karate Academies National Association (AKANA) and
travels across the United States conducting Black Belt
tests for his AKANA schools. He is currently available to
conduct symposiums, seminars, or clinics to help improve
any schools' martial arts endeavors.
You can contact Hanshi Jerry
Piddington by emailing
shihan@mighty.net.
Check-out the master!!!!!!
Click here- YouTube - Bloodsport
2(Daniel Bernhardt) Demon fights in the Kumite