Ron Angus

Ron Angus (born 16 November 1956, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada ) is an author, judo coach, and a public speaker on physical fitness. He is a Rokkudan 6th degree black belt in judo and has taught and studied the sport in 15 countries. He lives in Burlington, Ontario and is married to Tracy Angus, also an international judo competitor and coach, having represented Canada over a 22-year period. He has also competed in sombo in which he was at one point ranked third in the world.[1]

Angus has acted as tournament director for the Ontario International Judo Championships, and ran the Full Circle Judo Club.[2]

Competition history

Representing Canada

World Judo Championships 1989 Yugoslavia,

Kano Cup

Shiroki Cup

1986 Commonwealth Games

1988 Pan American Championships

1988 Francophone Games

Commonwealth Championships: 1993 Ireland (3rd), 1995 Malta (3rd)

Other awards

Angus has won national and international medals including:

British Open 2nd

US Open 2nd

Scandinavian Open 3rd

European Team Championships 5th

Canada 3rd

1991 World Sambo Wrestling Championships 3rd

1992 World Games – Sambo Wrestling 3rd

1994 World Amateur Sumo Championships

Angus was on the British judo team from 1979-1984.

Training

During his Judo career Angus has trained under coaches and with world champions.

Angus has also competed in or trained in Great Britain, Australia, Japan, the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Poland, Hungry, Malta, USA, Czechoslovakia, Sweden, Finland, Yugoslavia, Italy, Argentina, Denmark, Madagascar, Morocco, Austria, New Zealand and France.

Coaching highlights

Angus is part of the Provincial N.C.C.P. Committee.

Authorship

Angus has authored Competitive Judo for Human Kinetics' Judo series. ISBN 0-7360-5744-7.

Judo Jiu-jitsu

Angus is the creator of Judo Ontario's Judo Jiu-jitsu programme, which has as its aim making Judo more popular through:

  1. Teaching Judo's use for combat and self-defence, including holds and strikes not permitted in sport Judo tourneys
  2. Reviving early Judo competition rules that minimize stops and penalties and maximize the athletes' freedom to enjoy the sport
  3. http://www.fullcirclejudoclub.ca/

Publications

References

  1. Prozes, Darin (1995) "Civic Recognition Award: Black belt named city's top athlete Angus captured three gold medals at world games]", The Hamilton Spectator, June 29, 1995, p. T3
  2. Cameron, Grant (1998) "Teen gets a belt out of judo bouts", The Hamilton Spectator, August 17, 1998, p. N6
  3. Churchill, David (1994) "JUDO MASTER Angus feted for 32-year career", The Hamilton Spectator, November 9, 1994, p. T8, retrieved 2011-04-29

See also

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