Kendo
History
How to Watch Kendo
Point Areas
Used in Kendo
Kendo History
A brief history,
coming soon.
How
to Watch Kendo
Individual matches
are played two out of three points over a two to five minute time
period (the length of which is announced before the competition).
A scoreless or tied match may be extended at the referee's discretion.
There are also team competitions in which a winner is determined
by either the total number of points or the total number of winners.
There are four
designated target areas, each worth one point in a match. There
are strikes to the head (MEN), the wrist (KOTE), the body (DO) and
a thrust to the throat (TSUKI). Competitors call their target in
a strong voice (KIAI) as they strike. Blows must be delivered with
clarity and precision, using theh outer third of the SHINAI. The
referees look for good form and a strong follow through that leaves
a player in a position to continue immediately with no letup of
spirit. Unnecessary roughness or poor sportsmanship carries penalties.
The three referees
indicate points scored by snapping red or white flags over their
heads (with each match, the two competitors wear either a red or
white streamer attached to their backs). At least two judges must
agree. A fast criss-cross of the flags below hip-level means the
official did not see a valid point. The lead referee's word is final
in all cases although he may on occasion summon his colleagues for
a brief conference over application of the rules.
Play is stopped
after each successful point, to be resumed at centre court on the
referee's signal. Two points scored simultaneously cancel one another
however, and the match is not stopped. If two players are locked
in a sword guard tangle for too long (TSUBAZERIAI) and there is
no sign of impending movement, the referee may stop play and separate
them by their swords' length to start again. If a player is forced
out of bounds of drops his SHINAI, a penalty point is called. If
a second such foul is called, the player concedes a point to the
other player.
Click
here to see a diagram of the point areas used for scoring
in Kendo.
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