Julien Brulard has been travelling the world with his judogi for several years. In the last chapter of his adventure, he had just arrived in Japan, the cradle of judo, and was ready to explore the country. Discover what awaited him for this second episode there, which is actually already the 30th since he left France.

"When I arrived here, I had a personal goal of doing judo in all of the 8 regions of Japan. Last time, I was about to enter Kansai, one of the strongest judo places in the country, with Osaka, Kyoto and the prestigious Tenri University.

On my way, I met one student who invited me to her dojo in a place called Tottori. It was far away from my place so we went by car. There I met high-school students of a very good level, even though the place was far from any big city. I also met the family of the judoka who took me to Tottori and they invited me for a party at their workplace.

In the morning we left late and rushed to the judo session. As I arrived, I could see immediately that the training would not be easy at all. Many people were present, not only high school players.

I managed to train but at some point my conditioning got the better of me. I was tired; I launched a drop tai-otoshi, my tokui waza, but injured my hips a little, where I had surgery a few years ago. When it happened the discomfort was bearable and I could even finish the session. The next day I couldn’t walk properly so this forced me to take a break of 2 weeks, slowing me down with my goal. So, I decided to go at an easier pace after that.

I met an old friend who I knew from Tokyo. He is now a doctor at Konan University which is in Kobe, where Jigoro Kano was born. He invited me to see the students and I could even train a bit while being very careful; lovely people again! It was good to catch up with someone familiar and I’m really thankful he invited me.

With Joichi Hirao

My goal was to train at Tenri but I knew I couldn’t go if I wasn’t 100% healed so I decided to meet another friend who I met on social media. Joichi Hirao invited me to his dojo and I stayed there for nearly a week. That was the first time since I arrived in Japan that I slept in a dojo. It was a nice experience. I could also live with his family and it always feels good to have those moments.

Himeji Castle (Kansai)

Joichi speaks perfect English and even some French since he used to be a sparring partner for Antoine Valois Fortier of Canada. Joichi learned judo a bit differently from others; he had a sensei who would do a private lesson with him once a week to work on ne-waza. He became really strong at it. He won the All Japan Championship at -81kg and the Lisbon Grand Prix. Most of his contests were won in ne-waza. He has the fastest transition and guard passing I’ve ever seen. When he was in Canada, Joichi decided to teach Kosen Judo which is much more focused on ne-waza but he had to leave because of Covid 19. Today he still continues teaching it and even made an online course. I’ve learned a lot from him and did an interview so he could explain all of that in more detail.

In the meantime, I was speaking with my contact at Tenri but sadly I didn’t get permission to film as they were preparing for an important competition. Because of my physical condition and the fact that I couldn’t film, I decided not to step on the mat, though I still went to see how it is and so I made some valuable contacts. I didn’t share much about it on social media but it was an interesting time, I promised I would do my best to be back after I finish my goal in Japan. The deal is that if I can film, I’ll be back and make a nice video about Tenri.

Later I was contacted by the Vanuatu team, which I coached for during the last Olympics. Their coach would not be coaching at the next competition and so they asked me to join, which I happilly accepted. This competition will be at the beginning of July in Palau, the 2025 Pacific Mini Games. It is a bit like a small Olympics for the countries of the Pacific region. I’ll be there with the team beforehand so we can do a training camp. I will have time to learn more about the athletes and it will give me a break from Japan and give me the opportunity to renew my visa.

Before that, I decided to go to one more region in Japan, the 5th region visited. I went to the Chubu area and headed to Nagoya where a Japanese friend I met in Australia was waiting for me. He took me to the high school he used to study at and we also went to visit a famous place nearby, a well-preserved old Japanese town called Magome. This city is on the route of the Nakasendo, which is the old path of Samurai. I was happy to visit the place before going to training. That was the first time since I was back to training that I felt good in my hips, I could do judo normally and I felt confident now to enter the Tokyo area and some of the strongest universities.

Now, I will stay two weeks with the team in Palau as a coach, which will give me time to train myself as well, at a manageable level. This offer helps me a lot because I’ll be there free of charge in a moment when my financial situation has become harder, though I’m now confident to say that I should be able to finish the Japan part in August.

Thank you for reading and I’m looking forward to meeting new judoka from all around the world soon!

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