Naoki Shigematsu

Naoki Shigematsu (重松 直樹, Shigematsu Naoki, born December 24, 1977) is a Japanese former competitive figure skater. He is the 1994 World Junior silver medalist and placed 23rd at the 1995 World Championships. He retired from competitive skating following the 2000 Four Continents Championships.

Japanese name
Kanji重松直樹
Kanaしげまつ なおき
Naoki Shigematsu
Personal information
Country representedJapan
Born (1977-12-24) December 24, 1977
Kanagawa, Japan
Height1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Former coachTakashi Mura
Former choreographerRobert Daw
Skating clubShinmatsudo D.O.S.C.
Former training locationsChiba, Shinmatsudo Ice Arena
Began skating1982
Retired2000

Shigematsu is a coach and choreographer who has worked with Takahito Mura,[1] Rumi Suizu,[2] Kento Nakamura,[3] Risa Shoji,[4] and Hirofumi Torii.[5]

Results

GP: Champions Series/Grand Prix

International[6]
Event 93–94 94–95 95–96 96–97 97–98 98–99 99–00
Worlds23rd
Four Continents14th
GP Cup of Russia5th
GP Lalique 11th
GP NHK Trophy12th
GP Skate Canada14th
GP Sparkassen 4th
Asian Games7th
Universiade 9th
International: Junior[6]
Junior Worlds2nd8th12th
National[6][7]
Japan Champ.2nd2nd6th2nd2nd3rd
Japan Junior 2nd 1st
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gollark: A square wave is apparently in some confusing way equivalent to the sum of an infinite number of sine waves, so you get horrible interference, and it's low-power so the range is terrible.
gollark: It can generate ~100MHz square waves and you can connect up an antenna, which is *basically* what a radio transmitter would do but stupider and worse.
gollark: Yes, a clock or something.
gollark: A quirk of the raspberry pi means it can transmit FM radio with horrible interference because it can only broadcast square waves or something, because of happening to have a somewhat adjustable ~100MHz clock exposed on external pins or something.

References

  1. "Takahito MURA". International Skating Union.
  2. "Rumi SUIZU". International Skating Union.
  3. "Kento NAKAMURA". International Skating Union.
  4. "Risa SHOJI". International Skating Union.
  5. "Hirofumi TORII". International Skating Union.
  6. "Naoki SHIGEMATSU". International Skating Union. Archived from the original on 20 April 2016.
  7. "全日本フィギュア歴代記録 男子シングル" [Japanese Nationals medalists – men] (in Japanese). Japan Skating Federation. Archived from the original on September 20, 2008.
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