Brazil’s female judo coach makes history
RIO DE JANEIRO: Judo is about throwing adversaries to the mat, but in becoming the first female head coach of the Brazilian men’s national team, Yuko Fujii has taken down one of the biggest obstacles of all in the world of sports.
On being named to the position at the end of May, the soft-spoken, 35-year-old black belt made history — and not just in Brazil. Fujii, who is from Japan and was previously an assistant coach with the squad, is now one of the very few women in the world to head any top-level male sports team, let alone judo. In judo powerhouses such as France, Japan and Russia, men coach not only the male but the female athletes, and certainly in Fujii’s homeland the idea of a woman taking over the men would be pretty much unimaginable. “Japan is more traditional and macho than Brazil. The men’s team doesn’t have a single woman — well just one, the nutritionist,” Fujii told AFP at Brazil’s national training center in Rio de Janeiro.
A similar picture unfolds across much of the rest of the sporting spectrum, where female coaches of elite women are rare and female coaches of men practically non-existent.
For example, Brazil briefly had a woman, Emily Lima, coach its female football team but she was fired in 2017 and replaced by a man. The same thing happened in 2015 when Spain sacked its first ever female Davis Cup captain, Gala Leon. Brazil’s new judo coach, though, is receiving a warm welcome. “Sensei Yuko has made quite a difference. With her as our sensei, our technical level has already improved,” said Ruan Isquierdo, a giant heavyweight member of the Brazilian team, calling his coach by the Japanese honorific roughly meaning “teacher.”
At 309 pounds (140 kg), Isquierdo literally towers over the diminutive Fujii, but for all his strength he says he’d take nothing for granted in a judo bout with his sensei. To Fujii, the gender wars are an abstract issue compared to the immediate goal of winning battles on the judo mat, or tatame.
This attitude helps explain her surprise selection by the Brazilian Judo Confederation, which had reportedly been looking at an all-Brazilian shortlist, headed by former Olympic medalist Tiago Camilo, to replace outgoing coach.
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