Michiaki Kamochi

Michiaki Kamochi (賀持 道明, Kamochi Michiaki, born 1970) is a retired Japanese judoka.

Michiaki Kamochi
Medal record
Representing  Japan
Men's Judo
Asian Championships
1991 Osaka -95 kg
East Asian Games
1993 Shanghai -95 kg

Kamochi is from Warabi, Saitama. He began Sumo at the age of 3rd grader and won the championship consecutively for six years.[1] He also began judo at his junior high school days and when he was a student of Nihon University, he was trained by former world champion, Chonosuke Takagi.[1]

In 1991, he participated in the World Championships held in Barcelona. He also participated Asian Championships in Osaka and won a gold medal at the half-heavyweight category.

Kamochi belonged to JRA after graduation from university in 1992. He retired in 1999 after All-Japan Teams Championships.[1]

Achievements

  • 1989 - All-Japan Junior Championships (-95 kg) 1st
- All-Japan Selected Championships (-95 kg) 3rd
- Kodokan Cup (-95 kg) 3rd
  • 1990 : World University Championships (-95 kg) 1st
- Jigoro Kano Cup (-95 kg) 2nd
- All-Japan Selected Championships (-95 kg) 3rd
- All-Japan University Championships (-95 kg) 3rd
- Asian Championships (-95 kg) 1st
- Kodokan Cup (-95 kg) 1st
- All-Japan Selected Championships (-95 kg) 2nd
- All-Japan University Championships (-95 kg) 1st
  • 1992 - Jigoro Kano Cup (-95 kg) 2nd
- All-Japan Selected Championships (-95 kg) 3rd
- Kodokan Cup (-95 kg) 3rd
- All-Japan Selected Championships (-95 kg) 2nd
  • 1994 - Jigoro Kano Cup (-95 kg) 3rd
- All-Japan Selected Championships (-95 kg) 1st
- Kodokan Cup (-95 kg) 3rd
- Kodokan Cup[2] (-95 kg) 1st
  • 1995 - All-Japan Selected Championships (-95 kg) 3rd
- Kodokan Cup (-95 kg) 3rd
  • 1996 - Jigoro Kano Cup (-95 kg) 2nd
- All-Japan Championships (Openweight only) 3rd
- All-Japan Selected Championships (-95 kg) 2nd
- Kodokan Cup (-95 kg) 3rd
  • 1997 - All-Japan Selected Championships (-95 kg) 3rd
gollark: WHY, four thing per trade limit.
gollark: I'll probably just ask for two coppers/xenos or one silver and see how far that goes.
gollark: Wait, no, 1d8.
gollark: Well, I guess I have five days eight hours to decide what to do with my siyat pile.
gollark: What do you mean dropped?

References

  1. "柔道実戦必勝テクニック -賀持道明6段の「大腰」-". Baseball Magazine Sha Co., Ltd. 2008-08-10.ISBN 978-4583615509
  2. In 1994, Kodokan Cup was held 2 times, April and December.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.