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I would say that combat sambo has had different origins and iterations. For example the ethnic folks of Koryo-sam (Russian/Korean mix) took the sambo and mixed it with what they knew with Taekwondo and Tang Soo Do. Of course this is not a good answer to give because it lacks proof which is hard to provide due to the time and how secretive people were in that part of the world.
However one combat sambo origin story can be found and traced easy. It starts with Victor Koga who brought combat sambo in to Japan. One of his famous students went on to start Shooto because they were inspired by the idea of hybrid fighting. From there, it gave birth and inspiration to Shootfighting which is the style Ken Shamrock used which revolves around striking and grappling.
Victor Koga - Wikipedia
Gokor Chivichyan was a sambo fighter who earned the adoration and respect of Judo gene lebell when he came to America and defeated all of Genes black belts back to back. From there, they started a local fight team. But back then there was no internet or anything in particular and so fighters and fight teams were not being recorded.
Karo Parisyan at 14 years old ( 1996) was fighting in MMA ( Shootfighting/vale tudo/No Holds barred) back then and it was a thing that was very obscure but hybrid fighting did exist. They had fighters before Karo Parisyan that fought in MMA.
Thank you brother, much appreciated. Anytime I do some (admittedly half-hearted) digging into Sambo, I don't get much further than its very early foundation by those 2 Russian soldiers back in pre-WW2 Russia and then its influence in modern MMA. I remember reading that those two fellas (can't remember the names) simultaneously and independently developed their own respective mixed styles but I didn't realize there were more. From what you are saying it sounds almost like there are regional versions of it, which surprised me at first, but considering the diversity of the population and the Russian love of a good scrap, that would make sense.
But again it seems there is dearth of info in the middle of those two points in history. That's why I was inquiring about the striking aspect.
Had no idea about Victor Koga either, so thank you again. As far as I knew, Volk Han was the guy who put Sambo on the map in Japan.

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