8-1414: (Redirected from Japan Championships ) Japanese Championships or Japanese Championship may refer to: All-Japan Artistic Gymnastics Championships All Japan Bobsleigh Championships All Japan Championship (9-Ball) (9-ball and 10-ball pool event) All-Japan Formula Three Championship (racing) All-Japan Judo Championships All Japan Road Race Championship (motorcycle racing) All-Japan Rugby Football Championship (rugby union football) All Japan Sports Prototype Championship (racing) AWA Japan Women's Championship (professional wrestling) F4 Japanese Championship (racing) Japan Championships in Athletics Japan Figure Skating Championships Japan LPGA Championship (golf) Japan Open Championship (disambiguation) Japan Open Golf Championship Japan Open Tennis Championships Japan PGA Championship (golf) Japan Series or Japan Championship Series (baseball) Japanese Chess Championship Japanese Heavyweight Championship (professional wrestling) Japanese National Badminton Championships Japanese National Road Race Championships See also [ edit ] All-Japan (disambiguation) Topics referred to by
16-488: A bronze medal in the horizontal bar. At the 1960 Summer Olympics Takemoto won a team gold medal and placed second in the horizontal bar. Takemoto had a degree in physical education from Nippon Sport Science University and later coached the national gymnastics team. In 1997 he was inducted into the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame. He died from cholangiocarcinoma on 2 February 2007 at
24-482: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages All-Japan Artistic Gymnastics Championships The All-Japan Artistic Gymnastics Championships ( Japanese : 全日本体操競技選手権大会 ) are an artistic gymnastics competition, hosted by the Japan Gymnastic Association. The first edition took place in 1947, and
32-4293: The championships has been held annually since then. Winners [ edit ] Individual All-Around [ edit ] No. Year Location Men Women 1 1947 Kanazawa Masao Takemoto Tomiko Suzuki 2 1948 Tokyo 3 1949 Yokohama Fusako Wakabayashi 4 1950 Kanagawa Tomiko Suzuki 5 1951 Mito Hiroko Ikeda 6 1952 Osaka Takashi Ono 7 1953 Tokyo Keiko Tanaka 8 1954 Masao Takemoto Kyoko Sawamura 9 1955 Akita Keiko Tanaka 10 1956 Tokyo Takashi Ono Hiroko Ikeda 11 1957 Kanagawa Keiko Tanaka 12 1958 Kumamoto 13 1959 Okayama Keiko Ikeda 14 1960 Tokyo 15 1961 Nagasaki Nobuyuki Aihara 16 1962 Niigata Yukio Endo Ginko Abukawa 17 1963 Tokyo 18 1964 Akita Keiko Ikeda 19 1965 Kyoto 20 1966 Chiba Takeshi Katō Taki Shibuya 21 1967 Aichi Akinori Nakayama Keiko Ikeda 22 1968 Morioka Mitsuko Kandori 23 1969 Yamaguchi Sawao Kato Chieko Oda 24 1970 Kobe Akinori Nakayama Miyuki Matsuhisa 25 1971 Kofu 26 1972 Yonago Eizo Kenmotsu Takako Hasegawa 27 1973 Sapporo Mitsuo Tsukahara Miyuki Matsuhisa 28 1974 Okayama Eizo Kenmotsu 29 1975 Nagano Mitsuo Tsukahara Hiroshi Kajiyama 30 1976 Mito Eizo Kenmotsu Satoko Okazaki 31 1977 Shizuoka Shigeru Kasamatsu Ayako Akabane 32 1978 Kitakyushu Hajime Mikami Yayoi Kano 33 1979 Hachioji Toshiomi Nishikii Ayako Akabane 34 1980 Isesaki Kōji Gushiken Yayoi Kano 35 1981 Karatsu 36 1982 Maebashi Maiko Morio 37 1983 Kashihara Kyoji Yamawaki 38 1984 Kobe Kōji Gushiken Noriko Mochizuki 39 1985 Kofu Kyoji Yamawaki 40 1986 Sasebo Koichi Mizushima Miho Shinoda 41 1987 Hyūga 42 1988 Sendai Toshiharu Sato Mari Kosuge 43 1989 Kitakyushu 44 1990 Komatsu Daisuke Nishikawa 45 1991 Yamagata 46 1992 Takamatsu Yutaka Aihara 47 1993 Nagoya Yoshiaki Hatakeda Hanako Miura 48 1994 Koriyama Hikaru Tanaka Risa Sugawara 49 1995 Hiroshima Yoshiaki Hatakeda Miho Hashiguchi 50 1996 Osaka Naoya Tsukahara Risa Sugawara Yuki Ohata 51 1997 Kanagawa Risa Sugawara 52 1998 Kumamoto 53 1999 Toyama 54 2000 Sendai Miho Takenaka 55 2001 Kochi Hiroyuki Tomita Erika Mizoguchi 56 2002 Shizuoka Minami Ishizaka 57 2003 Kumagai Isao Yoneda 58 2004 Tokyo Hiroyuki Tomita Chihiro Ichikawa 59 2005 Amagasaki Miki Uemura 60 2006 Tokyo Koko Tsurumi Miki Uemura 61 2007 Koko Tsurumi 62 2008 Joetsu Kōhei Uchimura 63 2009 Tokyo 64 2010 65 2011 66 2012 Rie Tanaka 67 2013 Natsumi Sasada 68 2014 69 2015 Kōhei Uchimura Asuka Teramoto 70 2016 Kōhei Uchimura Mai Murakami 71 2017 72 2018 Kakeru Tanigawa 73 2019 Chōfu Asuka Teramoto 74 2020 Takasaki Kazuma Kaya Mai Murakami 75 2021 Daiki Hashimoto 76 2022 Shibuya Arisa Kasahara 77 2023 78 2024 References [ edit ] ^ "第69回全日本体操競技種目別選手権大会へ観戦招待|東京都" (in Japanese). Tokyo Metropolitan Government. 2015-04-27 . Retrieved 2015-05-05 . ^ "全日本体操競技種目別選手権大会 観戦招待!|スポーツTOKYOインフォメーション" (in Japanese). Sports Tokyo Information. Archived from
40-1233: The original on 2016-03-04 . Retrieved 2015-05-05 . ^ "第69回全日本体操競技選手権大会 – 日本体操協会" (in Japanese). Japan Gymnastics Association. 2015-04-26 . Retrieved 2015-05-05 . External links [ edit ] Japan Gymnastics Association official website v t e National Artistic Gymnastics Championships Brazil Canada China senior junior France Germany Italy Japan Netherlands Romania Russia senior junior United States [REDACTED] Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=All-Japan_Artistic_Gymnastics_Championships&oldid=1253849124 " Categories : National championships in Japan National artistic gymnastics competitions Gymnastics competitions in Japan Hidden categories: CS1 Japanese-language sources (ja) Articles containing Japanese-language text Masao Takemoto Masao Takemoto ( 竹本正男 , Takemoto Masao , September 29, 1919 – February 2, 2007)
48-484: The parallel bars. At the 1956 Summer Olympics Takemoto won three bronze medals: in the horizontal bar, parallel bars and rings; he also received a silver medal as part of the Japanese team. His main skills were on the floor exercise and he proved it once again at the 1958 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships , where he successfully defended his title; he also won silver medals in the vault and team event, as well as
56-439: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Japanese Championship . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Japanese_Championship&oldid=1073368448 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
64-455: Was a Japanese artistic gymnast who won two world titles and seven Olympic medals. At the 1952 Summer Olympics he won the silver medal in the vault with a score of 19.150, which was 0.050 short of the gold medal. Two years later he became world champion in the floor exercise, sharing the first placed with Valentin Muratov ; he also won a silver medal with the Japanese team and a bronze at
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