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GeneChing
07-23-2010, 11:53 AM
This could go in Martial Arts World Records and Stunts (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=52601) but I felt it was *awesome* enough for its own thread. ;)

Dr. John Williams: 70-Yr-Old MMA Fighter Setting Guinness World Records (http://bleacherreport.com/articles/424035-dr-john-williams-70-yr-old-mma-fighter-setting-guinness-world-records)
By James Ryan
(Featured Columnist) on July 23, 2010

"Age does not depend upon years, but upon temperament and health. Some men are born old, and some never grow so.”—Tryon Edwards

To the amazement of many, Dr. John Williams, a 70-year-old Mixed Martial Arts fighter, has willingly scheduled himself to take on Larry Brubaker (age 49) as part of the “Wild Card” event for Elite 1 MMA Productions at the Casino New-Nouveau Brunswick in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada, on July 24th.

Dr. Williams, a current Guinness world record holder, will attempt to break two new Guinness world records with the assistance from Mr. Brubaker, as the oldest fighter to ever compete inside of an MMA cage, as well as the oldest combined age for any two fighters in the history of MMA.

All of this begs the question—is age really just a number?

Well, Dr. Williams certainly thinks so.

In fact, despite certain criticisms, this 34th generation Gunshi, in Saigo Ha Daito-Ryu Aiki Bujutsu (a 1200-year-old Samurai Art) is out to prove it.

In researching Dr. Williams, I have quickly come to the realization that it is near impossible to condense this man’s entire life into a few simple paragraphs that will in any way do justice to his amazing and unique life experiences.

Nevertheless, I will try…

Dr. John J. Williams (a.k.a. Gray Wolf) was born on March 7th, 1940, in a small town in Eastern Canada. His parents were both French-speaking Native American Indians of the Wabenaki tribal nation and he is the direct bloodline descendant of the Wabanaki War Chief, Madockaweando.

Dr. Williams began training in martial arts and boxing back in 1947 at the age of 7.

By the age of 16, Dr. Williams had already been introduced to Olympic-style weightlifting, Kodokan Judo and Tani-Ha Jiu-Jitsu.

By the time he was 23-years-old, Dr. Williams was giving strongman demonstrations such as bending spikes, tearing phonebooks and licenses plates in half, and holding two jeeps from going in the opposite directions. His most impressive feat of strength however, was a one hand dead-lift with 500 pounds.

In later years, Dr. Williams also went on to study Taekwondo, Hapkido, and Kyokushinkai Karate.

As fate would have it, Dr. Williams eventually became the inheritor of Saigo Ha Daito-Ryu in 1972 after his master, Pok Shen, was diagnosed with lung cancer. Since there were no other senior students studying under Master Shen, Dr. Williams was asked to become the successor.

In 1987, Dr. Williams set his first Guinness world record for breaking multiple blocks of ice with a single punch (11 inches thick, by 22 inches wide, by 42 inches long, and 10 stacks high).

Fast forward to 23 years later and amazingly, this record still stands today (although his son Tim is the only other man to tie the record).

Throughout his years of travelling and living in the USA, Dr. Williams participated in several university courses, such as psychology, philosophy, hypnotism, and eventually, he became a legally ordained Baptist minister.

He was later awarded a Doctorate in Theology and eventually taught as a professor at Holland College and Success College, as well as the Julian College of Arts & Sciences.

In 1989, Dr. Williams completed a course in Hypnotherapy and he began treating clients for various ailments. By 1995, Dr. Williams had completed his course in EFT (based on Chinese acupuncture), which he combined with hypnotism to treat sexual assault victims.

In 1996, Dr. Williams was awarded a Doctorate in Linguistics from the Cyber College out of Japan for his work teaching the English language to Japanese high school students over the internet.

By the year 2000, Dr. Williams was acknowledged by the Canadian Court System as an expert on the Eastern Woodland Indians and their treaty rights.

Currently, Dr. Williams is the site coordinator for Elite 1 MMA Productions.

Wow.

I am truly honoured to have been granted an interview by such as esteemed and accomplished martial artist.

Please enjoy.

James Ryan: Hi there John, how are you today?

Dr. John Williams: Fantastic, James! And yourself?

James Ryan: I’m doing great! Thank you for agreeing to share your amazing story with me.

Dr. John Williams: My pleasure.

James Ryan: Before we begin, let me just start by saying that I have a lot of respect for what you are about to do, and as such, I have designed my questions to help address some of the potential concerns that I think some people may be having about your upcoming fight.

Dr. John Williams: I understand that there are concerns. But to me, life is about living, not just surviving or existing, but living life to its fullest and taking risks.

The risk takers are the ones who understand that the meaning of life is simple—you live!

James Ryan: I like that—‘you live!’ Very well put.

What has the overall reaction been to this fight by the media and the public?

Dr. John Williams: The reaction has been mixed. Mostly positive so far, but a few negatives as well.

It’s been kind of a curiosity thing—lots of questions. Why do it? When is it going down? Can we do it? What if? Etc.

But I really don’t give a rat’s ass what a lot of other people think. In the end, these critics will be living their dreams through me like everyone else, which is what sports are all about.

James Ryan: [Laughs] Very true.

It’s rare that any martial artist would fight because he or she has anything to prove to anyone but themselves. What is your personal motivation for this fight?

Dr. John Williams: I really have nothing to prove here. It’s not about beating my opponent or feeding my ego. Plus, this will be the 3rd Guinness record that I will be trying to set.

My life has always been about reaching my goals. I doubt that many other people out there have achieved as much as I have or have accomplished so many different life experiences. But still, it's more than that.

I’m 70 years old—that's a fact. But I'm not dead yet. I run my wind sprints like I always have and I’m just as strong as I was 40 years ago. I’m still pretty fast too, so for me, it’s too soon to give up on life like a lot of others my age and younger have already.

As you know, men usually peak physically in or around their mid 40's, or sometimes even sooner.

I am not just another man. I have been training all of my life—since 1947—day after day, running, lifting, and learning. I haven’t lost it yet.

Will I win the fight? In reality, I win by walking into that cage Saturday night. Even if he knocks me out, I still win, and so does he.

But with that being said, I do plan on beating him, by submission if possible, because the fans expect it to happen. Each degree of pain that I inflict on him is part of my statement—age is just a number!

James Ryan: That’s awesome John, but I’m curious—in what way does this fight add legitimacy to the sport of Mixed Martial Arts?

Dr. John Williams: Personally, I have a real problem with the use of the words ‘martial arts’ in the term MMA.

These fighters are athletes who train in a gym under coaches, not in a dojo, kwoon, or dojang under a teacher.

They are not usually martial artists—they are athletes who compete in a sport, under strict safety rule.

My bout is not an exhibition—it is a test of my martial arts skills under safer rules because I am a martial artist.

Remember, MMA bouts are not real fights—they are just contests. Nobody thinks that they are in a real fight. They all know that it’s just sport. There are rules—no groin attacks, no ear pulling, eye gouging, spine or throat attacks—it’s just a game—nothing more, nothing less.

GeneChing
07-23-2010, 11:54 AM
from previous post

James Ryan: This fight is likely to become a Guinness World Record that will hold for a very long time. When people look back on your life, what do you want them to remember?

Dr. John Williams: Hopefully that I am still alive [Laughs]

Because this is not the end of John Williams. I will seek out other challenges. Maybe a few more MMA fights to show that it wasn’t just a fluke, but I also hope that this will educate the fans to the fact that as we age, nothing mentally or cognitively changes that much. We are still the same person that we were as teens or young adults. A few gray hairs doesn’t mean that we are dumb or unable to perform on all levels.

One thing I want to be remembered for is not for the bout itself, regardless if it’s the greatest fight ever staged inside of the cage. I want to be remembered as the guy who took part of his life and gave it freely to victims of sexual assault. A person who cared about the feelings of others, and who sacrificed so that others could understand that life is about living—about never allowing others to take a minute from him without a fight.

If I could, I would simply want to be remembered for showing others how to live!

James Ryan: Well, you certainly seem to be doing just that.

What special changes have you made to your usual training routine in order to prepare yourself specifically for this fight?

Dr. John Williams: I just train like I always do. None of the extreme stuff, which is the fad today. No steroids, no weight cuts—just normal training like I always do.

I see all these crazy cardio routines out there that make fighters sweat, yet they still gas-out in the bout because they simply do not understand how the body works. I see guys bodybuilding to fit the Spartan image, yet few realize what it was that allowed me to set over 100 strength records—all without the steroid-fueled muscle mass you see today.

Why do 1000 kicks in a workout if the most kicks you will ever throw is maybe 10? I train exactly like I fight. Nothing else is added to fill some fad that doesn’t work.

James Ryan: I see your point.

Given that this is the very first MMA event for both you and your opponent, what were the difficulties in getting the Sports Commission to sanction this fight and how did you meet their satisfaction?

Dr. John Williams: That’s not quite true. I fought a version of MMA way back in the 60's. We wore more safety equipment, but it was similar to what you see today. Plus Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is the exact same groundwork that I did in judo. The standup is the same as with the kickboxing that I did, and the boxing that I did is all the same stuff.

My opponent was a pro wrestler for over 20 years. He was a kickboxer too, so our experience was not an issue with the Commission. It was public opinion about the stereotype of what an old man is supposed to be. But I am not that man. There is nothing that a 30-year-old can do that I cannot do, and that means anything from sports, to sex, to mathematical calculus, to playing the part of a warrior in a cage to entertain the fans.

James Ryan: It has been proven that anything can happen inside of the cage. Men much younger than yourself have even died inside of the cage, proving that age is not a factor in this sport when it comes to safety.

If one of you two men were to get seriously injured this weekend, what negative impact do you think that could have on the overall sport—if any?

Dr. John Williams: I suppose it could potentially kill the whole sport! It could ruin the Commission, the fight Doctor, and a lot of people!

But, this is my life and my choice, so I will take the risks. I will do my best to see that nobody dies or gets seriously injured. But did you know that every day, we risk death in a thousand different ways? Yet, we take those risks without question. Over 250,000 people die every day from car accidents, food poisoning, household accidents, etc. but life still goes on.

There will be life after I die. None of us are immortal. So, we have our place in the sun, then we move over to let others take that place. Right now, it’s my time in the sun, and cage. Soon I move on to open the door for others.

James Ryan: Thank you, John. Best of luck to you and your opponent this weekend as you both make history.

It has been a real honour to get to know you.

Dr. John Williams: Thank you, James.

To read more about this amazing man, please visit: http://www.teamsaigo.com/page19.php

Lucas
07-27-2010, 10:39 AM
do you know how we can find out if he won his match?

GeneChing
07-27-2010, 12:26 PM
Okay, that did take me about 5 minutes to search, which was 4 mins 50 secs longer than I expected.


Elite 1 MMA Results – 70 Year Old Wins (http://topmmanews.com/2010/07/25/elite-1-mma-results-70-year-old-wins/)
By: Cale McGavin

Elite 1 MMA had their Wild Card event last night. In the main event, Chris Johnson defeated Steve Skinner to take the Light-Heavyweight title. In the semi-main event, John Williams submitted Larry Brewbaker with an Ankle Lock to win their fight with a total combined age of 119 years.

Here are the results:

Chris Johnson submits Steve Skinner by Rear Naked Choke in Round 1, 3:07
***Johnson wins Light-Heavyweight title

John Williams submits Larry Brewbaker by Ankle Lock in Round 2, 1:40
Meneka Weva defeats Troy Demerchant by KO in Round 1, 3:48
Shawn Levesque defeats Todd Henri by KO in Round 1, 3:00
Jamie Leblanc defeats Brad Webb by TKO in Round 2, 1:35
Matt Turnbull defeats James Clark Unanimous Decision

Featherweight Tourney
Brad Duguay submits Leo Duciaume by Rear Naked Choke in Round 1, 2:49
Phil Boon defeats David Spence by TKO in Round 2, 3:13
Shelby Murray defeats Chance Whalen by TKO in Round 2, 3:59
Jon Williams submits Justin Bourgeois by Arm Bar in Round 1, 4:21

Lucas
07-27-2010, 01:10 PM
thanks gene! haha he even called it by submission in his interview. BAD ASS

Iron_Eagle_76
07-28-2010, 10:14 AM
Dr. John J. Williams (a.k.a. Gray Wolf) was born on March 7th, 1940, in a small town in Eastern Canada. His parents were both French-speaking Native American Indians of the Wabenaki tribal nation and he is the direct bloodline descendant of the Wabanaki War Chief, Madockaweando
Is this descended from "teh realz" Taekwondo":D Sorry, couldn't resist. Awesome story and great to hear our "senior citizens" are not all prune loving, bad driving, wrinkled up hags.

randyds5
08-01-2010, 09:20 AM
Wow. thats all I can say. Wooooow!! Kudos to him. I hope he does well.

Hebrew Hammer
08-01-2010, 11:45 AM
Great story, I think it would be great to see a MMA/UFC senior league, a masters league if you will, for 40 and ups...there would be some great fights, highly entertaining methinks.

thelegend731
08-04-2010, 05:24 PM
**** that's inspiring

bennyvt
08-09-2010, 02:33 AM
Man i hope Im still alive at 70 let alone doing that.