- Joined
- Mar 4, 2013
- Messages
- 6,602
- Reaction score
- 4,477
Hi there fellas, there's this thing I've been wondering for a long time, but I never found anyone who knew the answer, and despite squatting the search engine here and googling to the best of my abilities, I haven't been able to find an answer to my specific question.
As you all know, in some combat sports the athletes "noms de guerre" differ depending on the discipline; Muay Thai, Sumo Wrestlers, Capoeiristas, they all have very specific reasons why they pick or get their "combat names" picked for them, it's part of the cultures of these sports and it's easy to look it up.
But now comes the one I haven't been able to figure out; these last few years I've been watching more and more Japanese kickboxers in the lighter weight-classes, between ONE, RIZIN, K-1, Krush, Rise, or the co-promotions events like "The Match 2022" (which was K-1+RIZIN+Shoot-boxing+Rise) I've just been exposed to more and more of these guys, and I've often wondered why their names are, relatively often, just one single name.
Not a first and last name, just one. Sometimes it's their real first name, sometimes it's a nickname, but I just wanted to know if there was a particular reason why; I mean, Japanese MMA fighters don't follow this trend AFAIK.
It's always, from Japan, first name "nickname" last naaaaame (to be read with Lenne Hardt voice).
To list a few examples, I picked some famous guys, like the K-1 GPs veteran (participated in the 2024 one, the 2022, the 2020, the 2019, etc..) & Krush 5x champion for now, who took part in the Tenshin vs Takeru The Match 2022 huge card a few years back,
Riamu
Or to pick someone even more famous, YA-MAN is always introduced as YA-MAN, not Ren "Ya-Man" Sugiyama. But it's a nickname, like back in the old days of K-1 with Masato, Musashi or Kyotaro
(speaking of, what a good surprise it was when after losing to Gegard Mousasi in that kickboxing bout, well both he and Musashi did, but Kyotaro reinvented himself as a boxer, and had succesful career there, becoming the OPBF champion, defending his title and then challenging Daniel Dubois for the WBC & WBO world titles. He came back to kickboxing after that loss and had a handful of fights before calling it a career in 2023, truly impressive, to be honest I thought he was slowing down after the Mousasi loss in 2010 but damn!)
ANYWAY
Just looking at Riamu's record on tapology, a good chunk of his Japanese opponents & contemporaries in kickboxing in the last few years just have names like:
Kenta
Yura
Kazuki
Yuya
Toshi
Hideki
Ryoki
And there's a bunch of Rise/Krush/K-1 fighters who don't have their pictures on Tapology, but have extensive recent records and just a simple one-word name (unlike the JMMA guys who almost always go with their full name & a nickname on top).
For Instance: Masaki, Kazuyoshi, Takaaki, Riki, YOUTA, Urano, Masaya (he's more of a shootboxing guy though, in this thread I'm focusing on pure kickboxers with the odd Muay Thai bout here and there), and countless others.
Anyone more in tune with the current Japanese KB scene than me to nudge me in the right direction?
Cheers!
As you all know, in some combat sports the athletes "noms de guerre" differ depending on the discipline; Muay Thai, Sumo Wrestlers, Capoeiristas, they all have very specific reasons why they pick or get their "combat names" picked for them, it's part of the cultures of these sports and it's easy to look it up.
But now comes the one I haven't been able to figure out; these last few years I've been watching more and more Japanese kickboxers in the lighter weight-classes, between ONE, RIZIN, K-1, Krush, Rise, or the co-promotions events like "The Match 2022" (which was K-1+RIZIN+Shoot-boxing+Rise) I've just been exposed to more and more of these guys, and I've often wondered why their names are, relatively often, just one single name.
Not a first and last name, just one. Sometimes it's their real first name, sometimes it's a nickname, but I just wanted to know if there was a particular reason why; I mean, Japanese MMA fighters don't follow this trend AFAIK.
It's always, from Japan, first name "nickname" last naaaaame (to be read with Lenne Hardt voice).
To list a few examples, I picked some famous guys, like the K-1 GPs veteran (participated in the 2024 one, the 2022, the 2020, the 2019, etc..) & Krush 5x champion for now, who took part in the Tenshin vs Takeru The Match 2022 huge card a few years back,
Riamu
Or to pick someone even more famous, YA-MAN is always introduced as YA-MAN, not Ren "Ya-Man" Sugiyama. But it's a nickname, like back in the old days of K-1 with Masato, Musashi or Kyotaro
(speaking of, what a good surprise it was when after losing to Gegard Mousasi in that kickboxing bout, well both he and Musashi did, but Kyotaro reinvented himself as a boxer, and had succesful career there, becoming the OPBF champion, defending his title and then challenging Daniel Dubois for the WBC & WBO world titles. He came back to kickboxing after that loss and had a handful of fights before calling it a career in 2023, truly impressive, to be honest I thought he was slowing down after the Mousasi loss in 2010 but damn!)
ANYWAY
Just looking at Riamu's record on tapology, a good chunk of his Japanese opponents & contemporaries in kickboxing in the last few years just have names like:
Kenta
Yura
Kazuki
Yuya
Toshi
Hideki
Ryoki
And there's a bunch of Rise/Krush/K-1 fighters who don't have their pictures on Tapology, but have extensive recent records and just a simple one-word name (unlike the JMMA guys who almost always go with their full name & a nickname on top).
For Instance: Masaki, Kazuyoshi, Takaaki, Riki, YOUTA, Urano, Masaya (he's more of a shootboxing guy though, in this thread I'm focusing on pure kickboxers with the odd Muay Thai bout here and there), and countless others.
Anyone more in tune with the current Japanese KB scene than me to nudge me in the right direction?
Cheers!