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Sensei Frank Brennan 6th Dan
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Frank
Brennan was born in the City of Liverpool on the 6th of May, 1960.
He was always sport-oriented, and he took up Gymnastics while at
school. At the age of 12 he tried to join the Red Triangle Karate
club, but he was told to go and join the Judo club for a year, as
he was too young. This was particularly galling, as his brother
was accepted for the club, but it made him all the more determined
to gain membership. In 1973, he was successful and started to train
at the club under the tuition of Andy Sherry.
His introduction to Karate competition was in 1974, when he competed
in the KUGB Northern Regional Championships. He entered the Junior
Kata event, which he won. He was a 4th Kyu at the time, and it was
indicative of things to come that he won the first competition he
ever entered. His introduction to Kumite Shiai was even more dramatic.
In 1975, while fighting for the Red Triangle team, Bob Poynton broke
his leg in one of the matches. The team has no reserves, so the
young brown belt, who had only entered the Kata event, was suddenly
in the final of the Team Kumite event against Leeds. He fought one
of Leeds' most experienced fighters, Andy Harris, and decisively
beet him with a fast Mawashi Geri combination to held Red Triangle
win yet again.
His first international appearance was with the KUGB Squad in the
European Championships in Sweden in 1978, where he came 2nd in the
Senior Kata event. The next year, in Belgium, he won the Grand Championship
of Europe, taking both Kumite and Kata events, a feat that he has
achieved no less that four times.
As a fighter, he is rather unique, in that he has no particular
speciality - he is equally at home using hands or feet, and quite
often surprises his opponents with very dynamic combinations of
some of the more unusual hand or foot techniques. As a senior member
of the KUGB International Squad, the most recent highlight of his
career was leading his team to victory in the 1990 World Shotokan
Championships in Sunderland. He is held in great respect internationally
- in an interview at the World Championships, the Japanese team
coach, Ex-World Champion Masahiko Tanaka said that the one man that
the whole Japanese Team were specifically trained to beat was Frank
Brennan.
He is a staunch and loyal supporter of the KUGB, and works very
hard to further the aims of the Association. Asked recently what
he thought were the main strengths of the KUGB, he replied:
"The KUGB is fantastic. It has shown itself to be one of the
great associations of the World, and I'm not just speaking about
success in competition. I refer more to the attitude and dedication
displayed by its members - people who are in the KUGB do Karate
for the benefit of Karate, rather than for personal gain, and that's
what I really like about it. Nothing is perfect, and there may be
some glitches on the route, but it is a bit like life, like evolution
- things change and get better, and I can see the KUGB getting better
all the time."
Return to Instructor
Profiles
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Sensei
K. Enoeda
9th Dan
1935-2003 |
| Sensei
Enoeda was born in Kyushu, an island in the South of Japan, on July
4th 1935. A strong and natural athlete, he initially took up baseball,
kendo ... more |
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