Mark Colby Sensei began studying Kodokan judo in 1969 in the
USA. The majority of his training took place under Japanese and
Japanese-American teachers at Seikikan Dojo, one of Washington
State’s oldest schools of judo. He successfully competed in
numerous tournaments, often placing first, qualifying to compete
in the United States Judo Federation Nationals, and winning medals
in the AAU Junior Olympics.
He received his first dan in 1976 from the Northwest Yudanshakai,
United States Judo Federation, and Kodokan Judo Institute in Japan.
His tournament success continued, and in 1979 he began training with
the U.S. Olympic Judo Team at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado
Springs.
He married a Japanese woman, and he moved to Japan in 1980, where
he started practicing judo with the Koichi Riot Police. The training
in Japanese police dojo is notoriously rough, and the riot police are
known as the roughest of the rough. Colby Sensei practices with the
Koichi Riot Police to this day, and he has trained weekly at the
Kodokan for over 20 years. The Kodokan is the birthplace of judo,
and it’s widely regarded as an international Mecca for judo
practitioners. He also trains at the Nippon Ne Waza Kenkyujo, a dojo
devoted to researching ground grappling within judo.
He lives in the countryside of Chiba Prefecture, where he also
practices at the Kokusai Budo Daigaku (International Budo University).
He was a member of the elite Kokusai Budo Daigaku Judo Team in 2005.
Two of his biggest tournament wins were the USA-Canadian
Championships in 1981 and the 1985 Maroto Kaigai Championship in
Japan. He was the Grand Champion at both events, winning every
weight class. This is a feat usually accomplished today by
heavyweight competitors. Colby Sensei is of average height and
build. His win at the Maroto Kaigai Championship harkens back
to the days of classical judo when smaller judoka competed in
tournaments without weight classes and sometimes won overall.
The Maroto Kaigai Championships is a particularly important event,
and Colby Sensei’s victory is significant. So impressive was this
triumph, that he was featured on NHK national television in Japan.
Colby Sensei teaches and practices traditional judo in the USA
and Japan. His daughters have both studied at the Kodokan since
childhood, with Julie Colby winning the United States Judo Association
Nationals in her weight class in 1997.
An author and artist, Colby Sensei is also a successful businessman.
He is CEO of Colby Group International (www.colbygroup.com), which
specializes in medical professional communications. Based in Tokyo,
CGIKK creates and implements innovative solutions for medical
associations, healthcare professionals, and the medical industry.
Given his belief in preserving traditional judo and his lifetime
of training, much of it under legendary teachers in Japan, the SMAA
is honored to welcome Mark Colby Sensei to our Board of Advisors.