“Toy” is a documentary starring Anthony Rojas. We teamed up together in another great short, this time to tell the perspective of what yo-yoing is, and how is is seen through the eyes of a champion. The film goes to show the artistic side of a common toy, which is often overlooked or not understood by the normal spectator.
– Grant Johnson
Interview: Anthony Rojas
Today we interview RecRev’s pride, 44CLASH 1A champion Anthony Rojas!
YoYoNews: Thanks for joining us, Anthony!
Anthony Rojas: Glad to get a chance to be interviewed. Don’t think I’ve actually done one like this before.
YN: Congratulations on your victory! How was the competition in Tokyo?
AR: Thank you! The contest was fantastic yet again. Top level players and freestyles, well organized, nice venue (it was crowded, but the vibe is fun), etc.
YN: How did Japan treat you? Did you tour much, or did you mostly kick it with the local players?
AR: Japan is great, I love visiting. This was my second time and I’m sure I’ll be back again one day. I stayed for ten days total, so I got a lot of touring done after the contest. Big city shopping and stuff, smaller areas with temples, new foods, all sorts of things.
The local players were a blast to hang out with and helped a ton. The first couple nights I was at Masanobu Iwata’s place. Yusuke Moriki actually stayed with the crew I was with and helped guide us around. I also got to hang with Kentaro, Shinji, Kohta, Dee, Tsubasa, and others.

Photo by Kohta Watanabe
YN: 44CLASH has quickly become one of the hottest contests on the scene, what makes it such a respected event?
AR: I think the way it’s put together and organized makes it top tier. Basically, they take the normal aspects of a contest, execute those things sublimely, and then add on top of that. All while pushing for a really fun atmosphere and overall enjoyable experience for everyone. Being open to all players helps bring in great talent. And having a contest that has a 50/50 tech. and perf. scores can give us interesting freestyles like Shu Takada’s wardrobe changing 2A routine, or the debut of Oni Gaga! If that sounds interesting at all, that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Oh, and B-Grade Man visited. That’s extremely significant.
YN: You are able to stay competitive and keep your own unique style. Are you influenced by other players or do you focus on developing your own moves?
AR: I get inspired from various players all the time. The roots of inspiration for many of my main freestyle tricks probably come from Yuuki/ Jesse Garcia-like tech, and John Ando arm tricks. Those are probably most apparent. When I do want to do a trick with the same vibe as someone, or based off of one of there tricks, I always try to make it my own. Many ask how I come up with some of my crazier and weird looking moves. I do what feels right…and what doesn’t sometimes. Meaning, I often don’t mind pursuing ideas that seem awkward, uncomfortable, or silly at first, I’ll just find a way to make it look cool or flow or whatever in the end. I never force it though.

Photo by Ben McPhee
YN: You’ve competed a lot this year, from the smaller BLC and SoCal all the way to Nationals, Worlds and 44CLASH. What are your plans for next year?
AR: I’ll probably do the same I always go to. 44Clash is usually a “maybe” for a long time so I’m not sure about that one. I would like to visit some other US contests sometime, but it can be hard because of school and money, ya know.
YN: Awesome, good luck on future competitions! Thanks for your time and congratulations once again, Anthony! Any shout-outs to wrap this up?
AR: Shout out to all my yoyo friends, Japan, RecRev, and, um, B-Grade Man. 😀
44CLASH Finals: Anthony Rojas, Shu Takada, and Rei Iwakura win!
Fresh information from YoyoFactory’s Facebook page!
Update: Full results from the official site!
RecRev seed Anthony Rojas takes 44CLASH! Rojas has been a major 1A force for the past few years and is now wins one of the most prestigious and hard contests! Well done, Anthony!
In 2A, Team YoyoFactory’s Shu Takada took the title home, and Yoyojam’s Rei Iwakura won the X division ahead of a strong 4A competition, and 3A World Champion Hank Freeman.
1A
- Anthony Rojas
- Hiroyuki Suzuki
- Hidemasa Semba
- Chris Makita
- Takahiro Iizuka
- Kengo Kido
- Reiki Sekiya
- Akitoshi Tokubuchi
- Tatsuya Fujisaka
- Grant Johnson
- Ahmad Kharisma
- Takayasu Tanaka
- Shinya Azuma
- Ryota Ogi
- Izuru Hasumi
- Matsumisu Yanase
- Toya Kobayashi
- Futoshi Maruyama
- Hung Tsieh Tseng
- Yusuke Moriki
2A
- Shu Takada
- Grant Johnson
- Shunsuke Kawakami
- Tomoyuki Kaneko
- Satoshi Yamauchi
- Ryusei Saito
- Shuhei Kanai
X
- Rei Iwakura
- Hank Freeman
- Tsubasa Onishi
- Ken Takabayashi
- Ben Conde
- Takayuki Kuriyama
- Kuo Po Hang
- Sojun Miyamura
- Yasuki Tachibana
- Kazuaki Sugimura
- Teruo Kameya
- David Molnar
- Sora Ishikawa
- Takumi Yasumoto
- Taiichiro Higashi
KIKSTYO 44CLASH Battle Tournament
- Sora Ishikawa
- Ricardo Marechal