Slavic men were always afraid. Legends circulated about their strength and courage. Until now, heroes on our earth who have the power to use their bare hands not only to break an enemy, but also to smash a wooden board with a thickness of more than 10 cm into chips, have not yet transferred. Today we will talk about the Honorable Kancho - Yuri Fedorishin. Kancho is the title of a master who has grasped all levels of mastering and learning karate and subsequently became the head of a school or federation dedicated to the study of direction.
Champion childhood and family
Yuri Mikhailovich Fedorishin, whose biography has its roots in Ukraine, in the Vinnitsa region, in the city of Shargorod, was born on November 30, 1964. He grew up a tomboy, spent all his childhood in his native expanses. In his early youth, he became interested in karate as one of the components of martial arts. After a while, the hobby grew into a favorite pastime, which not only made Yuri Fedorishin famous, but also became the meaning of his life. The champion received two higher educations. He is currently married, happily married, and has two daughters.
On the attitude to training and the title of master
Yuri Fedorishin, whose training does not stop for a single day, takes the matter very seriously. He notes in some interviews that only perseverance can achieve something, and often cites the wise Japanese parable about the teacher’s instructions addressed to his student as an example. The parable goes like this: "Here is a bull in front of you, which you must beat every day no less than 300 times. In a year you can kill him." Its meaning is quite simple: there is no proper battle technique, there is sweat, labor and blood from daily training, after which the student will achieve perfection. Yuri Fedorishin adheres to this wisdom constantly. He trains daily twice a day, and even after all the awards and regalia that he can boast, he does not consider himself a master. Fedorishin notes that he is the one who was able to learn something and just wants to share his skill with other people.
Sports Achievements
Yuri Fedorishin is a participant and winner of many martial arts competitions. Behind him a huge number of victories and ranks:
- 5th Dan Karate Kyokushinkai.
- Jiu-Jitsu 6th dan.
- Kyokushin budokai 7th dan.
Yuriy is a master of sports in hand-to-hand combat, 8 times became the champion of Ukraine in this type of martial arts and karate. At one time he was an instructor in physical and combat training for employees of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation, he taught at the FSB Academy. He currently teaches applied karate in the capital and shares his skills accumulated over many years with his students. His students became champions, and this is the best proof of the skill of Yuri Fedorishin, whose training does not pass without a trace, but give a result and focus on champion performance.
Badiuk about his mentor and friend
Sergei Nikolaevich Badiuk is perhaps the most famous student of Yuri Mikhailovich Fedorishin and, of course, the most titled. Both athletes hail from the Ukrainian city of Shargorod. Many of these enthusiastic people have passed and overcome together. The student, speaking about the strength of his teacher, always notes that Fedorishin achieved a lot thanks to training and willpower.
He states that in order to break through a 5 cm wide board, lengthy training is not required. Even a beginner can do this, but after such a blow he will break all his fingers. But the coach will perform this technique without prejudice to his health, because his body is prepared for this not only physically, but also mentally. At the fingertips of the human hand there are special nerve endings: with a strong blow of the fingers on the hard surface of the piece of wood, a tremendous impact hits them. An unprepared person after such a blow (except for fractures) can lose eyesight, hearing, etc., because the organs of the human body are closely connected with nerve endings.
Speaking about Sergey Badyuk, it is worth noting the fact that he, like his mentor, became a trainer in physical training of the special forces of the Russian Federation, was invited to television first as a stunt director, and then as an actor.
The training system of Yuri Fedorishin
Champion in hand-to-hand combat and karate does not imagine training without makivara. By the way, makiwara is a special device for martial arts, most often consisting of straw attached to a wooden or other elastic projectile, firmly standing on the ground. As a shell, an ordinary tree can be used, growing somewhere in a park or forest. Yuri Fedorishin uses them when he conducts training in the open air. The athlete believes that makiwara is an integral part of karate. In his interviews, he says that sports and martial arts go in close proximity to each other and are inextricable elements. Usually Fedorishin begins his training process with a jog, then proceeds to stretching, then he works out blows on the makiwara, and then enters into sparring with a partner.
Not everyone likes what an athlete does
Yuri Fedorishin, whose biography in sports has long been said and proven, is often subjected to unjustified criticism. This is not surprising, because at the present time someone is trying to stand out from the gray mass not with his merits and achievements, but with ordinary ridiculous statements in discussions and comments related to the athlete’s technique. He has repeatedly said that technology in martial arts does not exist, there are only skills acquired through long training. Many who think differently do not like this. However, in contrast to the technique Fedorishin puts the complete surrender of the enemy, which is the best proof of the correctness of his judgments. Criticism of Yuri Fedorishin takes place, but often the opponent cannot defend his position, because he loses.
The philosophy of life of a master of sports and a champion
Yuri Fedorishin is deeply convinced that man did not come from a monkey and that he was originally born for pleasure, but each individual understands this differently. For himself, the athlete has long set all priorities: firstly, he sees as a source of pleasure the development of new techniques, muscle pain from the exhausting process of training or from blows of an opponent with whom he had the chance to enter the fray. Secondly, he thinks that in no case should you quit what you started just because of laziness, because in the future you still have to start all over again. Well, and in last place on this list is the moral side of life, where every man has the right to decide whether he should play sports in order to be a defender and support for his family, or not. Fedorishin puts this in last place only because he firmly believes in the "greenhouse" conditions of modern life.