Zitat:
Zitat von rumpf
hat nicht mas oyama mal angeblich einen stier getötet ? 
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angeblich trifft es genau.
Er hat n paar mal auf einen angebundenen alten Eingeschlagen..natürlich ohne ihn groß zu verletzten.
Daraus wurde ein wackeliges Bild und viel Legende gebastelt.
Ein Horn soll er abgeschlagen haben und das war schon mit einem Hammer und Säge vorpräpariert.
Heutzutage würde man den Mann wegen Tierquälerei verklagen und einbuchten.
Btw. die Stiere in Spanien sind auch präpariert.
z.b. Beruhigungsspritzen..die sie müde machen..Vaseline in die Augen...alles schön "fair"
Sein Schüler zu diesem Thema.
There are many stories told about Oyama during this period. "The story about Oyama fighting bulls is not true," says Oyama’s student Jon Bluming. "He never met a real bull, for he never visited Spain. [He did apparently visit Mexico.] I also doubt that he was gored, for he never told me about it, and he used to tell me everything. Kenji Kurosaki was there, and he told me what happened. They went early in the morning to a stockyard in [the town of] Tateyama. Workmen prepared a fat old ox for Oyama by hitting one of its horns with a hammer so that it was quite loose. Oyama did not kill the ox, he only knocked off the loose horn. Bill Backhus and I saw the 16mm movie in 1959. Oyama himself showed it to us. I told Oyama to never show this film in Europe because it looked too phony, and everyone would laugh at him. As far as I know, nobody saw that movie again." In fairness, note that a bullfight featuring Oyama was filmed in Chiba Prefecture in 1954, and the footage subsequently shown in Japanese theaters as Ushito Tatakau Otoko ("A Man Who Fought a Bull".) Furthermore, Oyama himself admitted the oxen were old. So, while the story has grown over the years, there is no doubt that he did some bulldogging in his time. Other aspects of Oyama's wrestling career also are not entirely clear. For example, an article in the October 1953 edition of Argosy magazine said that Oyama "left more than of a hundred of America’s burlier, rougher citizens flat on their back." On the other hand, Oyama said in the 1958 edition of his book What Is Karate that he had just three matches with professional wrestlers plus thirty exhibitions and nine television appearances. As all matches between American professional wrestlers of the 1950s must be considered fixed, that leaves Oyama with 33 exhibitions, nine television appearances, and some steer wrestling to his credit.