The 5 Most Influential Martial Artists of The Last 100 Years

The Great Man Theory doesn’t remotely explain all of history, but it is at the least a source of lively discussion. In that spirit, who are the most influential figures in martial arts in the last 100 years?

The question is subjective to a significant degree, but a central factor considered is how many millions of people were influenced to take up the practice of the particular martial art. Further, notable weight is lent to those individuals who created a martial art with legs – one that maintained its integrity, and did not splinter into sometimes unrecognizable pieces. And lastly, as the title indicates the figures had to be legitimate martial artists in their own right, rather than figures who promoted the martial arts through political means, or the media.

Our list begins with ….

5. General Choi Hong Hi

Choi Hong Hi, founder of Taekwondo

Choi Hong Hi (9 November 1918 – 15 June 2002) is the father of Taekwondo. As Taekwondo is reportedly the world’s most popular martial art, his inclusion on the list is obvious.

Choi is a figure of no small controversy, and his contributions are minimized in some quarters. That however is politics. Gen. Choi chose to spread the art he developed to North Korea, where much of his family remained after the war, and that did not sit well with the South Korean government, which set up the WTF to compete with Choi’s ITF. But that is politics, not reality.

And for the record, the general’s name is pronounced something like “chwe.” So if someone claims to be an authority and pronounces it Choi rhymes with joy, then you know they don’t know what they are talking about.

4. Bruce Lee

Bruce Lee, founder of Jeet Kune Do

Bruce Lee (27 November 1940 – 20 July 1973) is the father of Jeet Kune Do. His influence is extraordinary.

Lee essentially introduced Chinese martial arts to the world. He was responsible for the martial arts boom in the 1970s, the largest the world had ever seen, inspiring countless millions to take up the practice of martial arts of every imaginable sort. However, his greatest contribution may lie in his freeing martial arts from the classical mess.

Lee found martial arts as a collection of countless strictly organized and controlled contradictory sets of beliefs and practices, each of which believed itself to be clearly superior to the others. It was, truly, a field in which everyone was certain they were better than average.

He left a legacy that truth in unarmed combat lay outside of fixed systems. He showed the world a contest with fighters in fingered gloves, using strikes, takedowns, and tapping out to submissions on the ground.

In short, he left a world that was ready to embrace mixed martial arts.

When MMA came along, a new system was created for the refining of technique. It is as simple as wheels on luggage – to figure out if something works in a fight, just fight. If a technique doesn’t work for you, you’ll know, because you will get hit in the face. The name Bruce Lee gave to his approach – Jeet Kune Do, or The Way of the Intercepting Fist – captures that reality.

3. Rorion Gracie

Rorion Gracie, co-founder of the UFC

Royce Gracie is the world’s best-known exponent of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. Royce’s brother Rickson was historically the best fighter in the family. And the art was refined by Royce’s father Helio. But the man who brought it to the world is Rorion Gracie (born 10 January 1952).

And the way he brought it to the world was by co-founding the Ultimate Fighting Championship, and putting his younger brother Royce in it to win it. The wheels-on-luggage simple idea was that you could test the efficacy of a martial art by actually fighting, rather than by blabbering about it in the barbershop or in the dojo. The result was the UFC, which in turn ushered in the fastest revolution in martial arts training in history.

So although he did not found an art, Rorion Gracie, is our third most influential martial artist in the last 100 years.

The other co-founders of the UFC deserve honorable mention: Campbell McLaren, Bob Meyrowitz, David Isaacs, and above all, Art Davie. Davie is the single individual most responsible for creating the UFC, but not being a martial artist himself, he’s not on this list.

2. Gichin Funakoshi

Gichin Funakoshi, founder of Karate

Gichin Funakoshi (November 10, 1868 – April 26, 1957) is the father of karate. He was one of the Okinawan karate masters who introduced the striking art to the Japanese mainland in 1922; but the word “karate” then had different meaning than it does today. Funakoshi founded Shotokan, which, along with Kyokushin, is one of the two best-known styles of karate in the world.

Kyokushin founder Masutatsu Oyama, who deserves an honorable mention, was in fact one of Funakoshi’s students. Funakoshi had changed the name of karate to mean “empty hand” instead of “China hand,” creating the word and meaning that spread more than any other martial art.

For better and for worse karate has splintered into countless directions. Karate can be two players wearing foam floaties bouncing up and down, or it can be the exclusive practice of kata, or it can be bare-knuckle knockdown style, or it can be Karate Combat, and the list goes on and on. However, Gichin Funakoshi is the figure who brought it to the world, and that is why he is the second most influential martial artist of the past 100 years.

1. Jigoro Kano

Jigoro Kano, founder of Judo

Kanō Jigorō (10 December 1860 – 4 May 1938) is the founder of judo. Judo was the first Japanese martial art to gain international recognition, and the first martial art to become an official Olympic sport. Kano’s innovations include the use of black and white belts, as well as dan rankings. He sent emissaries across the planet to proselytize, including Mitsuyo Maeda, who landed in Brazil, and taught techniques to the Gracie family. That led to the birth of Braziian Jiu-Jitsu, which in turn led directly to modern mixed martial arts. Another student, Vasili Oshchepkov, is the co-founder of Sambo.

While most martial arts have split off into widely varying directions, judo has remained judo for over 100 years. And while there have been innovations and evolution, it is so tremendous a martial art that there remains just one judo.

And that is why Jigoro Kano is and remains the most influential martial artist in the last 100 years.

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Who’s The Best Student to Ever Come Out of NESF?

Being knocked down in training is a signature moment in a fighter’s career or lack of one. Perhaps half the people quit not long after it happens, typically without realizing why. It’s a big deal, getting knocked down, and bigger still to stand up. That’s why the Japanese proverb “Nana korobi, ya oki” (“Fall down seven times, stand up eight”) holds so much meaning in mixed martial arts.

No fighter so well personifies the resilience, optimism, and self-belief contained in those words than does Roxanne Modafferi, who had her final fight at UFC 271 on February 12, 2022. It was her 50th bout, breaking the record for most fights by a female competitor in MMA history. 

“The Happy Warrior” is the last active fighter from a time when female athletes in “cage fighting” were an oddity. The fact that her “Happy Warrior” nickname was a suggestion from a fan on MySpace gives some indication of how long she has been in the game.

Kirik was in her corner for her first fight, and her last, and many in between, in Los Angeles, Japan, and Asbury Park, New Jersey, among other locales. Below he offers a look back at her career.

Origin Story of “The Happy Warrior”

In 2001, Modafferi walked into my fight gym as a college freshman. She was not a gifted athlete and was kinder than a hippie. I didn’t bother to ask if she had aspirations to fight; I wasn’t even certain at the time if she could catch a frisbee. I’d be more inclined to believe a sighting of a yeti wearing a Pats jersey, than what was to follow.

However, Modafferi possessed a relentless curiosity, focus, and aptitude for the sport, unhampered by the ego that so typically gets in the way until it is beaten out. Despite a lack of natural athletic ability, she stood out from the beginning. The only time she cried in training was once, from frustration, when I wouldn’t hit her hard enough.

Brazilian Jiu-jitsu at its most fundamental level is a method of reducing the opponent’s options from countless to just three: tap, nap, or snap. Before long, Modafferi was training at several gyms and adjusting the attitude of newcomer frat boys who went too hard, by reducing their choices to just two, or in practice just one. Without the fortitude to go to sleep, they always tapped.

Long enthralled by Japanese culture, she did a junior year abroad in Japan. Already so stalwart a submission wrestler that she was a “Competitor of the Year” for the then regional grappling organization NAGA, the transition to MMA was natural. Roxy went 3-0 in Japanese women’s events, under rules that prohibited face-punching on the ground.

When Roxy returned to the US for her senior year of college, women’s mixed martial arts was barely acknowledged, and when it was, the typical reaction was disparaging remarks about a fighter’s sexual orientation or sexual attractiveness. A normal person would not enter the sport. But she stood up.

Rise Through The Ranks in WMMA’s Dark Ages

The sterling exception to WMMA’s poor reception was perhaps the most underappreciated figure in the history of the sport, Jeff Osborne. His HOOK ‘n SHOOT promotion showcased WMMA to the world with admiration and polish. Jen Howe, the then most dominant female fighter on the planet, was 12-0 with eleven stoppages. When Howe’s opponent for a title fight dropped out, another pioneer, Tara LaRosa, who knew Roxanne from Northeast grappling events and recently lost to Howe under MMA rules, told Osborne that the utterly unheralded Modafferi would win. 

Howe made the title offer, Modafferi asked me, I said no with a warm guffaw, and she flew to Evanstown, Indiana anyway, without my even knowing. And she won. It was impossible. 

Then she entered a one-night, open-weight eight-woman tournament in Japan. In the first fight, Modafferi beat by decision a 200+ pound jiu-jitsu black belt from Brazil in Ana Carolina by decision. I sat in her corner, in awe. In the second fight, she lost by decision to Megumi Yabushita, who had just won her initial fight by breaking Shannon Hooper’s arm with a front roll. Yabushita would go on to win the event when the great Erin Toughill was disqualified for an illegal elbow, that audibly broke ribs.

Next up was a rematch with Howe, and Modafferi won that too. When we went back to the locker room, I threw my sweatshirt over a mirror, as she was pretty banged up. Roxy found the mirror, looked at her face, and smiled.

It took place in Utah, and at the airport the next day, everyone looked pissed off at me. After a few minutes, I realized an older guy standing next to a young woman with a black eye engendered some assumptions; the good men of Utah appeared ready to hang me.

I asked Roxy to take the championship belt out of its case and throw it over her shoulder. Never egotistical, she declined. Not wanting to learn that I can’t fly by being thrown off an airport balcony, I insisted, and she agreed. Thereafter it was all smiles and questions at SLC International. That was “The Happy Warrior’s” first great peak.

Less Happy Times For a Warrior

Then Roxanne went 1-3, losing to Laura D’August, LaRosa, and Shayna Baszler. The sole win was a rematch with Yabushita. Five years into the sport, with a 4-4 record under full MMA rules, on a two-fight losing streak, it would be a good time to retire and move on to other, more fruitful pursuits. But Modafferi stood up again. It was 2006.

Now graduated from college and living and training in Japan, she went 8-1, beating the likes of Vanessa Porto, the far larger Marloes Coenen, and winning a rematch with LaRosa. 

In the Porto fight, which took place in Los Angeles, Modafferi’s French braids got loose. I had everything in my cut kit but a hair tie, so I dashed to a ring card girl and got one. At one point Roxy suffered a monster slam. I was concerned about whether her confidence might have been shaken to some degree after being slammed so hard. But I didn’t want to even hint at mental weakness, so in the corner, I asked how she felt about the slam. “When she lifted me high up and I was heading down, I was thinking ‘Wheeeee,’” replied Modafferi with a thoughtful smile.

That run earned her a shot at Strikeforce women’s bantamweight champion Sarah Kaufman. But Kaufman knocked out Roxy with a slam. 

Modafferi was released by Strikeforce and lost the next four. A five-fight losing streak, after a decade in the sport, nearing 30, is the definition of when it’s time to leave the gloves in the cage. But she stood up once again.

Her legacy was such that she was asked to be a cast member in The Ultimate Fighter 17. Picked dead last, Modafferi won her first TUF fight versus Valerie Letourneau by submission. She lost her second fight to Jessica Rakoczy, but was given a UFC opportunity in the TUF Finale against Raquel Pennington, and lost that too. Modafferi was now on a 1-7 run, in her 30s. That’s a far, far fall. But she stood up.

Syndicate MMA & Evolution to UFC Title Shot

Modafferi loved the training in the US that she received during TUF and left her beloved Japan to move to Las Vegas to train with John Wood and his world-class team at Syndicate MMA. Then she signed with Invicta Fighting Championship. If Jeff Osborne’s HOOK ‘n SHOOT was the slender thread that supported WMMA in the early years, Shannon Knapp’s Invicta FC was by 2014 the deep roots it so desperately needed, and remains so today.

The grappling-based Modafferi developed much-improved striking at Syndicate, and went 4-1 in the premiere WMMA organization. The run was capped with a title shot versus then-flyweight champion Jennifer Maia. The winner would be the best 125 women’s MMA fighter on Earth, the UFC having only a 135 division at that point. “The Happy Warrior” lost a split decision.

Modafferi won two more after the Invicta title fight loss and entered TUF a second time. This time she was picked first. That season was capped with a bout against Nicco Montano for the inaugural UFC women’s flyweight championship. Roxy lost by decision, but it was the “Fight of the Night”, earning her a $50,000 bonus, plus an extra $30,000 in Reebok Money. That was in 2017, and Modafferi fought on.

The Last Run

For nearly five years, at the highest level of the sport, four times Roxanne alternated wins and losses. Then the pattern broke, and she lost two in a row. 

At UFC 271, Roxanne lost her final fight, a controversial split decision to Casey O’Neill.

The secret to a long life is knowing when it’s time to go. As planned, Roxanne left her gloves in the Octagon.

Today

Today, Roxanne lives in Las Vegas and is happily married to an amazing man, and fellow fighter, Chris Roman. He proposed on national television immediately after winning a fight. 

The wedding was magical.

If you want to learn more about the life of Roxanne Modafferi, check out:
Memoirs of a Happy Warrior
Memoirs of a Happy Warrior II: Challenges 

And if you want to develop your own inner happy warrior, check out:
How to be Positive: Mental Training by the Happy Warrior

Legacy of The Happy Warrior

Roxanne Modafferi leaves a lasting legacy.

In the 1940s, much was made of the great heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis being a remarkable African American athlete. Jimmy Cannon set that straight when he famously reminded, “he is a credit to his race, the human race.” Modafferi is a pivotal figure in the history of WMMA, the final female fighter from the sport’s early days. But that misses the greater point. She is the nicest person I have ever met and destroys stereotypes about what women fighters are. But that too misses the point.

Modafferi’s message is larger than WMMA. It’s larger than MMA. It’s “Nana korobi, ya oki” – Fall down seven times, stand up eight. From her very first day, Roxanne Modafferi has lived it like no other.

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What Martial Arts Are Available in This Area?

For the past 50 years, Western Massachusetts has been blessed by the presence of some giants in the field, including Lorraine DiAnne, Wendi Dragonfire, Paul Gallagher, Kalaii Kano Griffin, Larry Kelley, Noriyasu Kudo, Melissa “Dr. Ruthless” Soalt & Mike Haynack, Paul Sylvain, Dr. Marion Taylor, and Kimo Wall, among others. Heck, Bruce Lee even demonstrated at the Big E! Their legacy continues through their students, and as well great new teachers have emerged.

Below are links to some of terrific schools of different martial arts in the area, with a few accompanying words. 

Aikido
Developed by Morihei Ueshiba in Japan a century ago, the practice of Aikido centers on non-violence and spirituality. There are multiple excellent options in the area, including:
Aikido of Amherst
Valley Aikido (in Northampton)

Boxing
Boxing is strangely not considered a martial art in some quarters. Boxing very explicitly fosters character development, has proven to be the best means of defense against multiple opponents, and has a profoundly aesthetic side as well. So boxing is unequivocally one of the greatest martial arts. The Whitley brothers are lifelong martial artists, and share their profound, multi-generational knowledge of the sweet science, at their highly-regarded Holyoke gym.
Whitley Brothers Boxing And Fitness

Capoeira
Created by enslaved Africans in the early 1500s in Brazil, Capoeira is the most beautiful martial art of all, and much more. It is an extraordinary cultural heritage, a tremendous form of exercise, and a powerful means of self-defense.
Capoeira Gunga Do Vale (in Northampton)

Jiu-jitsu
If your interests lie with Brazilian jiu-jitsu as practiced in a gi, Team Link is an extraordinary option. Founder Marco Alvan came to the USA with little but a black belt, ambition, and love; today he inspirationally heads a chain of over a dozen academies, including a number in Brazil, and has put students into top MMA promotions like the UFC and Bellator MMA, and all the top jiu-jitsu competitions.
Team Link Noho, run by a black belt couple, one of whom is a world champion
Team Link Ludlow, run by the association founder Marco Alvan himself.
Another great option is Gabriel Gladiator Training Center in West Springfield, run by the eponymous pioneer of the sport.
West Springfield is also home to the great Alexandre “Vaca” Moreno’s Vaca BJJ & MMA.
And if no-gi jiu-jitsu is your passion, check out the local affiliate from the great and powerful Eddie Bravo’s 10th Planet system.
10th Planet (in Agawam)

Judo
Judo, the gentle way, is a not-always-gentle Olympic sport that centers on throwing an opponent wearing a jacket, as well as pins and submissions. It also offers a central ethical pedagogy. Modern mixed martial arts developed directly out of Brazilian jiu-jitsu, which in turn formed after Judo founder Jigoro Kano sent experts across the globe. One of them, Mitsuyo Maeda, moved to Brazil, where he taught the Gracie family Judo, plus in all likelihood catch wrestling and techniques he developed through his own experience in no-rules contests. Kano is the most influential martial artist in the last 100 years, and his art is undeniably one of the greatest and most respected.
Kuma Judo (in Florence)

Karate
While many of the aforementioned martial arts like Aikido, boxing, jiu-jitsu, and judo are relatively uniform from school to school, the term karate is applied to a wide variety of practices, which evolved from indigenous striking-based martial arts in the Ryukyu Islands, which in turn were influenced by interaction with China. Wendi Dragonfire, mentioned above, was a direct student of Robert Trias, the first person to open a karate school in the mainland USA. Excellent local karate schools include:
Amherst Shotokan Karate Dojo
Northampton Karate

Kung Fu
Kung fu is a general term used widely in English for Chinese martial arts, and the practices are even more varied than in karate. While kung fu has a reputation for not being as practical as some other approaches, its combat sports aspect, Sanda, is drawn almost exclusively from traditional Chinese martial arts, and it is likely the most underappreciated base in MMA. Reputable options in the area include:
Shaolin Kung Fu Center of Hadley
Chinese Kung Fu Wushu Academy (in Chicopee)

MMA 
This writer has been licensed in the martial arts space in 15+ states, and has worked professionally in 30+ countries, and can say definitively that Jeremy Libiszewski is one of the best coaches in the entire sport. And he is a humble, life-long martial artist, who is amazing with world-class fighters, and equally fantastic with kids.
Fighting Arts Academy (in Springfield)

Muay Thai
For over 20 years, Aaron Snow has trained internationally, plus refereed, judged, and coached in the national sport of Thailand, the science of 8 Limbs. He now runs a vibrant Muay Thai program in Leverett, Massachusetts.
Sitmanpong

Self-Defense
Walt Lysak teaches a comprehensive self-defense system that begins where combat sports end – with eye gouges, biting, and worse. As UFC Hall of Famer Ken Shamrock put it, “for the street, there’s nothing better.” In addition to his ferocious self-defense system, Lysak is also a 3rd-degree black belt in jiu-jitsu.
Sento MMA Academy (in West Springfield)

Taekwondo
Taekwondo is a Korean, striking-based martial art with an emphasis on kicks; it is reportedly the most popular on Earth. As expected for a martial art of this popularity, there are multiple excellent options in the area:
Amherst Martial Arts
Elite Taekwondo (in Hadley)
Northampton Martial Arts
Greenfield Taekwondo Center

Wrestling
This is the most vital part of mixed martial arts, as wrestling determines where the confrontation takes place – in the open, on the ground, or against a wall. Further, wrestling is an epic art and combat sport in its own right, arguably the greatest. And lastly, the indigenous form of wrestling in the USA, folkstyle, is even better a base for MMA than are the internationally practiced forms, freestle and Greco-Roman.
Grit and Gratitude (a non-profit in Springfield, with programs for 5 year olds, through adults)

Yoga
Yoga is very much a martial art. However, unlike many dubious martial arts approaches, yoga has integrity, and does not falsely claim to directly impart self-defense skills. That said, in addition to peace of mind and spiritual elevation, the practice of Yoga imparts terrific conditioning, and as the “God of Wrestling” Karl Gotch famously explained, “the greatest hold is conditioning.” If you are a martial artist and want to improve your practice, try yoga.
Shiva Shakti Power Vinyasa Yoga

If one of these martial arts is important to you, but you’ll have to drive a ways to make it, then drive, don’t settle. The practice of martial arts can be really important in our personal development, and going out of your way to find what you want, well, you’re worth it.

Please note, there are undoubtedly tremendous programs in the area that are not mentioned above. If a great local class is not mentioned, the oversight is not pointed, but is simply due to an unfortunate lack of knowledge. Please feel free to leave your suggestions below in the comments section.

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What’s The Best Martial Art?

A usual reply would be many words about how extraordinary the writer’s chosen martial art is. This scene from the dark comedy Foot Fist Way sums it up pretty accurately, with a little off-color language:

There is in reality no best martial art or best school. My mother practices Tai Chi, at a friend’s home; it helps my mother stay healthy, so Tai Chi is to me the most awesome martial art of all. And too Tai Chi probably won’t be a great deal of use in getting out of a rear naked choke. Martial arts can develop a variety of qualities, in varying degrees, including confidence, character development, cultural appreciation, conditioning, peace of mind, self-defense, spirituality, sporting success, and much more. Whatever art provides over time, with work, those qualities that you most want or need to develop is the best art of you.

Emphatically, this is not to say that all martial arts are equally good at everything. Typically, there are approaches that specialize in one area of development over others, and these areas of focus can vary enormously. And too there are countless factually incorrect claims of effectiveness, which, if self-defense is of interest, can or should be a deal breaker. But even if two schools have nearly identical approaches, many less-recognized factors can come into play. A famous gym may not offer the average student nearly the personal attention that a smaller, far less heralded one will. Proximity to your home or workplace plays a big role. How compatible you feel with the membership is a massive factor, as community will invariably play a large role in your development. Further, a great teacher in something that is not exactly what you want will likely take you far farther than will a poor teacher offering precisely what you want. In sum, choosing the best school (for you) can be complex.

So first decide what you want to get out of the practice. Then find a place where you feel comfortable, under a 30-minute drive away, led by an established subject matter expert in whatever is of keenest interest to you, work hard at it, and don’t quit. That’s the best school, for you.

Lastly, keep an open mind about martial arts. Usually, but not always, there is something useful in every approach, albeit sometimes a small one. Unfortunately, practicing a martial art can lead to one’s sense of self becoming too closely identified with the gym or teacher, and then all other schools are viewed as inferior. MMA adepts can come to see traditional approaches as hopelessly ineffective. Aikido students can view combat sports as nasty, brutish, and short. Believing your Eagle Fang is way more effective than their Miyagi Do is, literally, comedy. So don’t ask whether any given martial art is right or wrong, but rather, ask how is it right. Usually, there is a positive answer.

And in closing, what matters most is hard work. The dictates of the market are such that, most unfortunately, instructors feel compelled to make classes ever easier and shorter. If you observe a class, and it doesn’t look like physical, mental, or spiritual hard work, then you aren’t going to get very far from where you are. And beware, some teachers are skilled at pantomiming hard work, substituting ornate movements, loud yells, and stern facial expressions, for what the class actually needs to do, which is work hard. There are no secret moves, and no shortcuts. All real martial arts are hard work, above all else.

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New England Submission Fighting, the oldest mixed martial arts gym in Massachusetts.

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