Personal information | |
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Born |
Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada |
January 26, 1941
Residence | Vancouver, British Columbia |
Height | 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in) |
Weight | 118 kg (260 lb) (1964) |
Sport | |
Country | Canada |
Sport | Judo |
Rank | Rokudan (6th dan) |
Club | Takushoku University, Tokyo |
Coached by |
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Alfred Harold Douglas "Doug" Rogers (born January 26, 1941) is a Canadian former Olympic competitor in judo. He is an honoured member in the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame. His best results were a silver medal in the 1964 Tokyo Olympics and gold medals at two Pan American Games, in 1965 and 1967. He was a student of Masahiko Kimura.
Doug Rogers arrived in Japan in 1960 at the age of 19 with the specific intention of working on his judo. As a youth he had won the Ontario Minor Hockey Championships, where he finished the tournament's the highest-scoring defenceman. At age 15 he had joined the judo club at the Montreal YMCA. It was not long before his sensei there told him there was nothing left for him to teach and directed him over to Fred Okimura's Montreal Seidokan dojo. He continued practicing while in high school, winning the Eastern Canada brown belt (ikkyu) title in 1958. The following year he won the black belt title. Although Rogers was accepted by McGill University, having been accepted to the Kodokan, Rogers boarded a plane for Japan in 1960.
The best judo competitors at the time in Japan were coming out of the police academy and universities. These competitors would visit the Kodokan for practice on a weekly basis. Training at the Kodokan, Rogers made an effort to train with the judoka from the police academy and nearby Takushoku University (Takudai). It was in this way that he got to meet Masahiko Kimura, who was the coach of Takudai University and one of its most famous alumni.
Able to hold his own against top judoka in Japan, the Canadian Olympic Committee, in search of medal hopefuls and, moreover, pleased that he was already in Japan where the Olympics were to be held, recruited Rogers. Rogers decided, however, to return to Canada to compete in the national championships, and the Olympic Committee were at first reluctant to pay for Roger's airfare back to Japan. Eventually they settled for paying a one-way ticket.