Isao Abe
Japanese hammer thrower
Isao Abe at the 1936 Olympics | |
Personal information | |
---|---|
Born | (1912-02-18)February 18, 1912 |
Died | February 15, 1980(1980-02-15) (aged 67) |
Alma mater | Chuo University[1] |
Height | 1.77 m (5 ft 10 in) |
Weight | 75 kg (165 lb) |
Sport | |
Sport | Hammer throw |
Isao Ko Abe (阿部 功, February 18, 1912 – February 15, 1980) was a Japanese hammer thrower. He competed at the 1936 Summer Olympics and finished in 13th place.[2]
After his athletic retirement, he joined the Ministry of Railways.[1]
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Isao Abe.
- ^ a b "Isao Abe". Olympedia. OLYMadMen. Retrieved October 5, 2022.
- ^ Isao Abe Archived October 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine. sports-reference.com
- v
- t
- e
Japan Championships in Athletics men's hammer throw champions
- 1913: Taijiro Ogawara
- 1914: Tamotsu Tatsuno
- 1915: Kotaro Hara
- 1916: Not held
- 1917: Toshio Shirano
- 1918: Yoshie Sato
- 1919: Kinoshita Yonematsu
- 1920–22: Nobuo Asaoka
- 1923: Sueyoshi Mizokawa
- 1924: Not held
- 1925–26: Yoshio Okita
- 1927: Yuji Nagao
- 1928–29: Yoshio Okita
- 1930–31: Yuji Nagao
- 1932: Masayoshi Ochiai
- 1933–34: Isao Abe
- 1935: Eiichiro Matsuno
- 1936: Tsukamoto Xiaonosuke
- 1937: Takamichi Nagasha
- 1938–39: Tatsuya Shiraishi
- 1940: Fumio Kamamoto
- 1941: Not held
- 1942: Yasutaka Takagi
- 1943–45: Not held
- 1946: Noboru Nihei
- 1947: Isao Abe
- 1948–51: Fumio Kamamoto
- 1952: Katsuyuki Yoshitake
- 1953–56: Yoshio Kojima
- 1957: Noboru Okamoto
- 1958: Einoshin Hanamura
- 1959–61: Noboru Okamoto
- 1962: Jura Zsivottky (HUN)
- 1963: Gennadiy Kondrashov (URS)
- 1964: Takeo Sugawara
- 1965: Yoshihisa Ishida
- 1966–68: Takeo Sugawara
- 1969: Yoshihisa Ishida
- 1970: Shigenobu Murofushi
- 1971: Takeo Sugawara
- 1972–73: Yoshihisa Ishida
- 1974–83: Shigenobu Murofushi
- 1984: Nobuyuki Ifuku
- 1985: Toshikazu Shiono
- 1986: Shigenobu Murofushi
- 1987: Akiyoshi Ikeda
- 1988: Toshikazu Shiono
- 1989: Kazuyoshi Okura
- 1990–91: Tibor Gécsek (HUN)
- 1992–93: Akiyoshi Ikeda
- 1994: Todoroki Nobuhiro
- 1995–2014: Koji Murofushi
- 2015: Hiroshi Noguchi
- 2016–17: Ryota Kashiwamura
- 2018: Hiroshi Satoshi
- 2019: Hiroki Ako
- 2020: Ryota Kashimura
- 2021: Shota Fukuda
- 2022: Ryota Kashimura
- 2023: Shota Fukuda
This biographical article relating to Japanese athletics is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e