A Day at Turkey's 653-Year-Old Oil-Wrestling Tournament
Lube Up! The Strange Art of 
Turkish Oil Wrestling 
When the developers of Street Fighter IV announced that they
 had been working on a character from a martial art no one had seen in a
 fighting game before, speculation ran wild. When the big reveal came 
the gaming community could not argue with the original statement.
 
  Hakan's listed style was unique in the history of fighting games, and 
unlike 'electricity', 'soul power' or 'yoga' it was an entirely 
legitimate martial art. Hakan was a Turkish wrestler or an 'oil 
wrestler', competing in the sport of Yagli Gures, a traditional
 wrestling method whose annual championship can be traced back six 
hundred and forty years. If you haven't seen it before and decide to 
look it up on YouTube, you're in for a surprise.
The tradition of Yagli Gures apparently dates back to the 
Janissaries, the elite soldier class of the Ottoman Empire. Janissaries 
were originally prisoners of war but soon the tradition advanced to 
enslaving children from Christian families and keeping them to a Spartan
 regime of training and education. 
They are peculiar because despite 
essentially being enslaved, Janissaries were given salaries and 
pensions, were well respected, and were considered among the elite of 
Ottoman society. 
The Janissaries trained extensively for combat and 
wrestling was a part of this. Tradition has it that the Janissaries used
 olive oil to either keep their bodies cool, or mixed with herbs to ward
 off mosquitoes through hours of training. At some point the oil became 
inseparable from the wrestling itself and its effects on the matches 
themselves far outweigh anything it can do for sun or mosquito 
protection in the modern era.
Now if you have not grappled much without a gi, the difference a bit 
of sweat can make on grips and control is remarkable. A little unnatural
 grease goes a long way to making a grappler near impossible to grab a 
hold of, let alone submit or pin. The search for a way to achieve this 
without detection in most grappling sports has been on for years. 
 Yoshihiro Akiyama, in a move which should have seen him blacklisted from
 MMA for life, famously had his cornermen empty two bottles of Olay over
 him when he fought Kazushi Sakuraba. 
 Akiyama getting caught doing this
 basically undermined his judo career too because he had repeatedly been
 accused of greasing his gi pretty consistently—retorting that he was 
just a sweaty guy.
 Georges St. Pierre got in trouble over vaseline 
applied to his shoulders by a second against B.J. Penn, Anderson Silva 
globbed on some extra in his second fight against Chael Sonnen (and 
proceeded to grab a fist full of Sonnen's shorts whenever he needed to).
 The classic method for grapplers who are desperate for even the 
slightest edge is to take a hot shower shortly before competing, shovel 
on moisturiser with an ice cream scoop while the pores are open and then
 towel off the excess. When the wrestler begins sweating in the match he
 sweats out the moisturiser as well.
The dynamic of Yagli Gures is far removed from most styles 
of wrestling because of the wrestlers' oiled bodies and the lengthy 
periods bouts can run on for (up to forty minutes before extra periods).
  Consequently much time is spent with the wrestlers leaning on each 
other in collar ties, slipping free any time the other man attempts 
something clever. The most important tournament, Kırkpınar, dates back 
to 1346 and takes place on turf in Edirne, the former Ottoman capital.  
Often the grass is as slick as the wrestlers. This results in tie ups in
 which the feet of both men start sliding around like they've stood on 
vomit in front of the urinal at a wedding. 
 But Yagli Gures has other stipulations which remove it from 
most other traditional forms of wrestling. Firstly the objective is not 
to pin the opponent's shoulders to the mat, it is to 'show his navel to 
the heavens'. If you go belly up, you lose. 
This means that sit outs are
 not a feature you will see—further explaining the enormous reliance on 
collar ties and snap downs. Check out this match which is called as one 
man scrambles and allows his belly to turn upwards in what would be a 
fairly normal turn to attempt a switch in the wrestling most are 
familiar with.
So in Yagli Gures combatants wear traditional leather trousers known as a kispet.
 These too are covered in oil and can reportedly weigh up to ten 
kilograms when saturated. However, the wrestlers can grab a hold of the 
material and make use of the waistband to turn their man. 
But that's not
 all, wrestlers may insert their arm into the kispet and use this as a handle to turn their opponent.It seems strange, but consider how often the Miyao brothers 'pants' 
opponents in competition. Getting a grip inside of the waistband often 
provides the best control and it is exceptionally hard to strip grips 
from inside your own trousers. Plus there's always the chance that if 
you threaten to pull the guy's pants to his knees, he'll turn to his 
back just to retain some dignity.
And before we get outraged over the inserting of hands into the kaspit, let's remember that sportsmanship is a huge deal in Yagli Gures.
 Junk grabbing is illegal and doesn't occur as often as you would think.
 Meanwhile the butt drag remains an accepted part of many forms of 
amateur wrestling, complete with optional Andre the Giant style, Finger of Fudge!
 Yagli Gures might not be an internationally popular sport 
but it is an important part of Turkey's combat sports history and the 
yearly championship is the longest running competition in the world. 
Fifth on the medal table in wrestling at the summer Olympics, Turkey's 
wrestling pedigree cannot be disputed.
 In fact the turk—the catching of 
one of the opponent's legs between your own from the top position in 
order to prevent them from returning to their knees—was so named because
 when Turkey rocked up to the 1948 London Olympics they picked up twelve
 medals in just their second Olympics and the team made extensive use of
 the turk throughout. 
You will also notice, if you Youtube some oil 
wrestling, that leg entanglements take on great importance there due to 
the slipperiness of the upper body. As Billy Robinson pointed out, the 
Turk wasn't a new technique by any means in the forties but the Turks 
drew attention to it in a big way.
 
 In one of his many books, The Way to Live, the great George 
Hackenschmidt included an exercise which he learned from the Turkish 
wrestlers he had met. This consisted of placing one hand against the 
wall, leaning heavily onto it, before removing the hand, falling towards
 the wall, whirling the body 180 degrees and slamming the other hand 
into the wall, repeated rapidly for an extended period. 
Strangely enough
 this wall slapping sounds eerily similar to the infamous Ottoman Slap 
which I receive emails about once in a blue moon. Another one which 
started with Ottoman soldiers, the Ottoman Slap is a wide, near straight
 armed swing which connects with the meat of the hand.
 It was trained by
 the slapping of wet marble and its reason for existing was apparently 
for the battlefield rather than for a fist fight with a trained boxer. 
The idea was that you can't punch armour, but a full swing to a helmet 
with a palm which had been smashed against marble for years might do 
enough to jar the opponent. That being said there is so little material 
on the Ottoman Slap it might well not have existed.
At any rate, Turkey's contribution to combat sports over the years 
has been enormous and its history in the fields of combative sport and 
military methods—both mythical and documented—make for fascinating 
reading. 
If you find yourself at a loss while cooking the dinner this 
Friday evening, throw some olive oil on the worktop and start training 
your Ottoman slap. If your partner comes in inquiring about the racket, 
up-end the bottle over yourself and settle it over some Yagli Gures. Hakan would be proud.
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
good
ReplyDelete