Sensei Ken Ogawa
Sensei Ogawa is regarded by Sensei Morio Higaonna as his strongest karate student ever, I had the privilege of meeting him during my training years at the Yoyogi dojo and write about it in my soon to be published book Yoyogi Dojo "74"
Here is part of the chapter dedicated to
the late Sensei Ken Ogawa who truly is the legend of Yoyogi dojo.
He is also mentioned Antonio Bustillos book "Steady Training".
The Legend of Yoyogi Dojo - Chapter 25 (excerpt of Sensei Ravey's soon to be released book)
10 years had past since that first Karate class at Edwin Swale school, I started climbing the ladder of "Karate Proficiency" and was no longer feeling like a beginner until the day I met Sensei Ken Ogawa. I first came across his name written on a hammer used for knocking in nails that had lifted on the wooden Yoyogi dojo floor.
"Who is Ken Ogawa" I asked and then was
told stories, such as Terry O'Neil (the British team captain) had brought
some Shotokan lads to Japan to train at the JKA (Shotokan HQ). Terry
was a friend of Sensei Higaonnas and brought the guys down to Yoyogi
dojo to meet him. As they entered the dojo only one man was training
by himself, Ken Ogawa. They saw him do 100 press ups, then 50 on each
arm and walk out of the dojo into the changing room on his knuckles.
The funny side to the story is that this was the first Goju Ryu practitioner
the English Shotokan team had seen and for a moment thought all Goju
men were of this standard.
I heard that while training for the all Tokyo championships one year,
Ken Ogawa had bunny hopped up and down the Tokyo tower steps (590 steps)
after he ran there from the Yoyogi dojo (about 4-5 km). He had viciously
fought some South African Karate-ka one morning and left them needing
medical attention because he thought they had shamed sensei Higaonna,
apparently the night before they all got pissed in a gay bar, caused
a bit of a ruckus in which the police got involved who in turn called
Sensei Higaonna. He had to bail them out in the middle of the night.
This did not go down well with Ken Ogawa and took it upon himself to
"punish them" the following morning.
I listened to these stories but thought probably that they had been
exaggerated over time as stories tend to, and nobody can be that good,
can they? The I met him...........
Sensei Graham Ravey 6th Dan