Yutaka Kanai
Japanese long-distance runner
Personal information | |
---|---|
Nationality | Japanese |
Born | (1959-10-16)16 October 1959 |
Died | 23 August 1990(1990-08-23) (aged 30) |
Sport | |
Sport | Long-distance running |
Event | 10,000 metres |
Yutaka Kanai (金井 豊, Kanai Yutaka, 16 October 1959 – 23 August 1990) was a Japanese long-distance runner. He competed in the men's 10,000 metres at the 1984 Summer Olympics.[1]
References
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Yutaka Kanai Olympic Results". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
- v
- t
- e
New Zealand national champions in men's 10,000 m
Note: 6 miles before 1970
- 1948: Harold Nelson
- 1949: W.J. Wells
- 1950: Noel Taylor
- 1951: Colin Lousich
- 1952: Noel Taylor
- 1953–1954: Lawrence King
- 1955: Barry Magee
- 1956: Bill Rodger
- 1957–1958: Barry Magee
- 1959–1960: Bill Baillie
- 1961–1962: Barry Magee
- 1963–1967: Bill Baillie
- 1968: Evan Maguire
- 1969: Mike Ryan
- 1970: Eddie Gray
- 1971: Mike Ryan
- 1972: Gavin Thorley
- 1973: Kevin Ryan
- 1974: Dick Tayler
- 1975: Steve Denholm
- 1976: Paul Ballinger
- 1977: Bryan Rose
- 1978: Alan Thurlow
- 1979: Euan Robertson
- 1980: Kevin Ryan
- 1981: Rod Dixon
- 1982: Tom Birnie
- 1983: Graeme Holden
- 1984–1985: Yutaka Kanai (JPN)
- 1986: Kerry Rodger
- 1987: Ken Moloney
- 1988: Tom Birnie
- 1989: David Rush
- 1990: Kerry Rodger
- 1991: David Rush
- 1992: Peter Renner
- 1993: Paul Smith
- 1994: Jeff Spillane
- 1995: Paul Smith
- 1996: Allan Carman
- 1997–1998: Robbie Johnston
- 1999–2000: Richard Potts
- 2001: John Henwood
- 2002: Sisay Bezabeh (AUS)
- 2003: Lee Troop (AUS)
- 2004: Michael Aish
- 2005: Russell Dessaix-Chin (AUS)
- 2006: Brett Cartwright (AUS)
- 2007: Scott Winton
- 2008: Phil Costley
- 2009: Rowan Hooper
- 2010: Rees Buck
- 2011–2012: Stephen Lett
- 2013: Caden Shields
- 2014–2017: Aaron Pulford
- 2018: Craig Lautenslager
- 2019: Caden Shields
- 2020: Cameron Graves
- 2021–2022: not held
- 2023: Julian Oakley
- 2024: Michael Voss
This biographical article relating to Japanese athletics is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e