Shohachi Ishii
Shohachi Ishii in 1956 | |||||||||||||||
Personal information | |||||||||||||||
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Born | September 20, 1926 (1926-09-20) Tokyo, Japan | ||||||||||||||
Died | January 4, 1980 (1980-01-05) (aged 53) | ||||||||||||||
Alma mater | Chuo University | ||||||||||||||
Sport | |||||||||||||||
Sport | Freestyle wrestling | ||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Shohachi Ishii (石井 庄八, Ishii Shōhachi, September 20, 1926 – January 4, 1980) was a Japanese freestyle wrestler who won a gold medal at the 1952 Summer Olympics. He was the first Japanese gold medalist after World War II, the only Japanese gold medalist at the 1952 Olympics, and one of two Japanese medalists in wrestling at the 1952 Olympics, the other being flyweight Yushu Kitano, who won silver in freestyle.[1]
Ishii took up wrestling because there was no judo club around. He died of kidney cancer, aged 53.[2]
References
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Shohachi Ishii". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on December 4, 2016. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
- ^ "石井庄八-敗戦から7年…レスリング界の"求道僧"が快挙" (in Japanese). sanspo.com. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007.
External links
- Shohachi Ishii at the International Wrestling Database (alternate link)
- Shohachi Ishii at Olympedia
- Shohachi Ishii at Olympics.com
- Shohachi Ishii at Olympic.org (archived)
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- 1904: Isidor Niflot (USA)
- 1908: George Mehnert (USA)
- 1924: Kustaa Pihlajamäki (FIN)
- 1928: Kaarlo Mäkinen (FIN)
- 1932: Robert Pearce (USA)
- 1936: Ödön Zombori (HUN)
- 1948: Nasuh Akar (TUR)
- 1952: Shohachi Ishii (JPN)
- 1956: Mustafa Dağıstanlı (TUR)
- 1960: Terrence McCann (USA)
- 1964: Yojiro Uetake (JPN)
- 1968: Yojiro Uetake (JPN)
- 1972: Hideaki Yanagida (JPN)
- 1976: Vladimir Yumin (URS)
- 1980: Sergei Beloglazov (URS)
- 1984: Hideaki Tomiyama (JPN)
- 1988: Sergei Beloglazov (URS)
- 1992: Alejandro Puerto (CUB)
- 1996: Kendall Cross (USA)
- 2000: Alireza Dabir (IRI)
- 2004: Mavlet Batirov (RUS)
- 2008: Henry Cejudo (USA)
- 2012: Dzhamal Otarsultanov (RUS)
- 2016: Vladimer Khinchegashvili (GEO)
- 2020: Zaur Uguev (ROC)
- 2024: Rei Higuchi (JPN)
- 1904: 56.70 kg
- 1908: 54 kg
- 1924–1936: 56 kg
- 1948–1996: 57 kg
- 2000: 58 kg
- 2004–2012: 55 kg
- 2016–present: 57 kg
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