Kazuaki Kurihara
Japanese karateka
Kazuaki Kurihara | |
---|---|
Born | (1979-08-20)20 August 1979 Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan |
Style | Shotokan Karate |
Teacher(s) | Masaaki Ueki |
Rank | 6th Dan karate (JKA) |
Kazuaki Kurihara (Kurihara Kazuaki, 20 August 1979) is a Japanese instructor of Shotokan karate.[1] He has won the JKA's version of the world championships for kata on 2 occasions. He has also won the JKA All-Japan championships for kata on 7 occasions and once for kumite.[1] He is currently an instructor of the Japan Karate Association.[1]
Biography
Kazuaki Kurihara was born in Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan on 20 August 1979. He studied at Komazawa University. His karate training began during his Age 5.
Competition
Kazuaki Kurihara has had considerable success in karate competition.
Major Tournament Success
- 56th JKA All Japan Karate Championship (2013) - 1st Place Kata
- 55th JKA All Japan Karate Championship (2012) - 1st Place Kata
- 12th Funakoshi Gichin Cup World Karate-do Championship Tournament (Pattaya, 2011) - 1st Place Kata
- 54th JKA All Japan Karate Championship (2011) - 1st Place Kumite
- 54th JKA All Japan Karate Championship (2011) - 1st Place Kata
- 53rd JKA All Japan Karate Championship (2010) - 1st Place Kata
- 52nd JKA All Japan Karate Championship (2009) - 1st Place Kata
- 50th JKA All Japan Karate Championship (2007) - 1st Place Kata, 3rd Place Kumite
- 10th Funakoshi Gichin Cup World Karate-do Championship Tournament (Sydney, 2006) - 1st Place Kata
- 49th JKA All Japan Karate Championship (2006) - 1st Place Kata
- 48th JKA All Japan Karate Championship (2005) - 2nd Place Kata
References
- ^ a b c JKA: Instructor profiles – Sensei Kazuaki Kurihara3rd Dan Archived 2008-02-13 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 15 February 2014.
- v
- t
- e
JKA All-Japan Male Champions – Kumite
- 1957: Hirokazu Kanazawa
- 1958: Hirokazu Kanazawa / Takayuki Mikami
- 1959: Takayuki Mikami
- 1960: Masaki Sato
- 1961: Tetsuhiko Asai
- 1962: Hiroshi Shirai
- 1963: Keinosuke Enoeda
- 1965: Katsuya Kisaka
- 1966: Hideo Ochi
- 1967: Hideo Ochi
- 1968: Masaaki Ueki
- 1969: Takeshi Oishi
- 1970: Takeshi Oishi
- 1971: Takeshi Oishi
- 1972: Masayoshi Kagawa
- 1973: Takeshi Oishi
- 1974: Masahiko Tanaka
- 1975: Masahiko Tanaka
- 1976: Yoshiharu Osaka
- 1978: Toshihiro Mori
- 1979: Fujikiyo Omura
- 1980: Toshihiro Mori
- 1981: Takayuki Tsuchii
- 1982: Masashi Sakata
- 1983: Hideo Yamamoto
- 1984: Hideo Yamamoto
- 1985: Masayoshi Kagawa
- 1986: Yasunori Ogura
- 1987: Masaaki Yokomichi
- 1988: Tomio Imamura
- 1989: Masayoshi Kagawa
- 1990**: Tomio Imamura
- 1991: Katsutoshi Shiina
- 1992: Tatsuya Naka
- 1993: Katsutoshi Shiina
- 1994: Katsutoshi Shiina
- 1995: Takuya Taniyama
- 1996: Takuya Taniyama
- 1997: Toshito Kokubun
- 1998: Takuya Taniyama
- 1999: Kunio Kobayashi
- 2000: Toshito Kokubun
- 2001: Takuya Taniyama
- 2002: Kunio Kobayashi
- 2003: Kunio Kobayashi
- 2004: Kunio Kobayashi
- 2005: Koji Ogata
- 2006: Ryosuke Shimizu
- 2007: Takuya Taniyama
- 2008: Ryosuke Shimizu
- 2009: Yusuke Inokoshi
- 2010: Keisuke Nemoto
- 2011: Kazuaki Kurihara
- 2012: Keisuke Nemoto
- 2013: Keisuke Nemoto
This biographical article related to karate in Japan is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e