Eiichiro Matsuno
Japanese hammer thrower (born 1914)
Eiichiro Matsuno
|
Nationality | Japanese |
---|
Born | (1914-09-05)5 September 1914 |
---|
|
Sport | Athletics |
---|
Event | Hammer throw |
---|
Eiichiro Matsuno (松野 栄一郎, Matsuno Eiichirō, born 5 September 1914, date of death unknown) was a Japanese track and field athlete. He competed in the men's hammer throw at the 1936 Summer Olympics.[1]
References
External links
|
---|
- 1915: Shosuke Nakamura
- 1916: Giichi Ishii
- 1917: Kenkichi Saito
- 1918: Yoshio Mihashi
- 1919–20: Tadaomi Nimura
- 1921: Goro Osawa
- 1922: Kizo Ito
- 1923: Yoshio Okita
- 1924: Not held
- 1925–26: Yoshio Okita
- 1927–28: Ichiro Furuyama
- 1929–30: Yoshio Okita
- 1931: Itabashi Masajiro
- 1932: Tomoo Kamijo
- 1933: Kiyoji Fujita
- 1934: Eiichiro Matsuno
- 1935: Kikumoto Kosaku
- 1936: Honji Sei
- 1937–40: Eihito Miyagi
- 1941: Not held
- 1942: Park Chankyu
- 1943–45: Not held
- 1946: Masaichi Tomitsuka
- 1947: Fumio Kamamoto
- 1948–49: Sekime Kenji
- 1950: Norimi Sato
- 1951: Teruo Tanaka
- 1952: Nishida Chika
- 1953: Motoyasu Nagano
- 1954: R. Overhouse (USA)
- 1955: Hitoshi Goto
- 1956: Tabata Gaiji
- 1957–61: Shohei Kaneko
- 1962: Shozo Yanagawa
- 1963: Jens Reimers (FRG)
- 1964: Shozo Yanagawa
- 1965: Kazuo Watanabe
- 1966: Yoshihisa Ishida
- 1967: Toji Hayashi
- 1968: Masahiko Kaji
- 1969–70: Toji Hayashi
- 1971: Glenn Passey (USA)
- 1972: Toji Hayashi
- 1973–74: Kiyotaka Kawasaki
- 1975: Kato Masatoshi
- 1976–79: Kiyotaka Kawasaki
- 1980–81: North Michio
- 1982–83: Masahiko Kataoka
- 1984: Yuji Yamazaki
- 1985–86: Hirotaka Maeda
- 1987: Yuji Yamazaki
- 1988: Hiroshi Ikeda
- 1989–90: Yuji Yamazaki
- 1991: Adewale Olukoju (NGR)
- 1992: Takataka Nozawa
- 1993: Adewale Olukoju (NGR)
- 1994: Yuji Yamazaki
- 1995: Yoshinori Nogawa
- 1996: Yoshihito Hosoda
- 1997: Shigeo Hatakeyama
- 1998: Shuichi Kato
- 1999–2005: Shigeo Hatakeyama
- 2006: Shiro Kobayashi
- 2007: Shigeo Hatakeyama
- 2008–09: Shiro Kobayashi
- 2010: Shigeo Hatakeyama
- 2011: Shiro Kobayashi
- 2012: Yuji Tsutsumi
- 2013: Satoshi Hatase
- 2014–17: Yuji Tsutsumi
- 2018: Materu Yugami
- 2019: Yuji Tsutsumi
- 2020-23: Yuji Tsutsumi
|