'Hachidan' Putin promoted to Judo elite

IANS
Olympics Day 6 - Judo

LONDON, ENGLAND – AUGUST 02: Russian President Vladimir Putin watches Judo on Day 6 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at ExCeL on August 2, 2012 in London, England.

Moscow, Oct 11 – Russian President Vladimir Putin was elevated to judo’s elite Wednesday when the sport’s world governing body presented him with the eighth Dan belt, the third-highest honour.

Putin received the accolade, three days after turning 60, from the International Judo Federation (IJF), which called him “a perfect ambassador for our sport” because of his position as the head of state.

“It is a great honour for our international federation, as well as for the entire judo community, to count among us a very high personality of his reputation and standing,” IJF president Marius Vizer said.

“President Putin represents a high expression of the Judo Values in the world.”

Putin will not need a new belt, as the red-and-white stripes of an eighth Dan belt are identical to his previous sixth Dan belt. Both are rated higher than black belt.

The ranking is known as ‘Hachidan’ in Japanese. Only a handful of practitioners have reached the highest tenth Dan level.

Putin was judo champion of his home town Leningrad, now St. Petersburg, in his youth and starred in the instructional video Let’s Learn Judo With Vladimir Putin in 2008.

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