sport.wikisort.org - AthleteChūhei Nambu (南部 忠平, Nanbu Chūhei, May 27, 1904 – July 23, 1997) was a Japanese track and field athlete.[3] As of 2020[update], he is the only person to have held world records in both the long jump and the triple jump.
Chūhei Nambu
Chūhei Nambu at the 1932 Olympics |
|
Born | May 27, 1904 Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan |
---|
Died | July 23, 1997 (aged 93) Suita, Osaka, Japan |
---|
Height | 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in) |
---|
Weight | 67 kg (148 lb) |
---|
|
Country | Japan |
---|
Sport | Athletics |
---|
Event(s) | 100 m, long jump, triple jump |
---|
|
Personal best(s) | 100 m – 10.5 (1933); LJ – 7.98 (1931); TJ – 15.72 (1932)[1][2] |
---|
|
Biography
The first results known for Nambu are from the mid-1920s.[2] He was a member of the Japanese Olympic team at the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam, where he competed in three events. His best performance came in the triple jump, where he placed fourth, while his countryman Mikio Oda won the gold. In the long jump, he finished ninth, and his 4 × 100 m relay team was eliminated in the heats.[1]
Nambu's real breakthrough came in 1931. After improving his Japanese record a few times, he landed a long jump just two cm short of 8 m, a new world record. Jesse Owens broke the world record less than four years later but it stood as an Asian record till beaten by Hiroomi Yamada in 1970.
The next year, at the Los Angeles Games, he was one of the favourites for the Olympic titles in both horizontal jumps. Nambu was disappointed with his third place in the long jump, but took revenge in the triple jump final, held a few days after the long jump. His winning mark of 15.72 m set a new world record. Thereby, Nambu became the first athlete to hold the world record in both horizontal jumps. He retained both records until 1935, when he lost them to Jesse Owens (long jump) and Jack Metcalfe (triple jump).
Nambu was also a strong sprinter. He won the 100 m race at the 1930 and 1933 Japanese Championships and set a Japanese record at 10.6 seconds in 1931.[1]
After retiring from competitions Nambu became a sports journalist for Mainichi Shimbun. He also remained active in sports, being head coach for the Japanese Athletics Association, and acting as manager of the national team at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. In 1992, he was awarded the Olympic Order in silver by the International Olympic Committee (IOC). He died of pneumonia aged 93.[1]
References
Records |
Preceded by |
Men's Triple Jump World Record Holder 1932-08-14 – 1935-12-14 |
Succeeded by |
Olympic champions in men's triple jump |
---|
|
Japan Championships in Athletics men's 100 metres champions |
---|
- 1913–14 Kazue Akashi
- 1915 Yuzo Saito
- 1916 Shinpei Higashiguchi
- 1197 Sasago Tani
- 1918 Tsunemasa Matsuda
- 1919 Munetoshi Date
- 1920 Kunio Hiraoka
- 1921 Masayuki Takagi
- 1922–23 Sasago Tani
- 1924: Not held
- 1925 Sasago Tani
- 1926 Sadao Tajima
- 1927 Takeuchi Heizo
- 1928 Iwao Aizawa
- 1929 Sakae Yano
- 1930 Chūhei Nambu
- 1931–32 Takayoshi Yoshioka
- 1933 Chūhei Nambu
- 1934 Mutsuo Taniguchi
- 1935 Takayoshi Yoshioka
- 1936 Kanayuzawa
- 1937 Masao Yazawa
- 1938–40 Takayoshi Yoshioka
- 1941: Not held
- 1942 Toshihiro Osada
- 1943–45: Not held
- 1946 Nitawaki Isao
- 1947 Ichita Ikoma
- 1948 Nitawaki Isao
- 1949 Ichita Ikoma
- 1950 Tomio Hosoda
- 1951 Toshihiro Ohashi
- 1952 Herb McKenley (JAM)
- 1953 Ken Nakajima
- 1954–55 Kiyofuji Akira
- 1956–58 Kyohei Ushio
- 1959 Takeo Tamura
- 1960 Yojiro Muro
- 1961 Takeo Tamura
- 1962 Sergio Ottolina (ITA)
- 1963 Enrique Figuerola (CUB)
- 1964 Masaru Kamata
- 1965 Naoki Abe
- 1966 Toru Honda
- 1967 Junji Ishikawa
- 1968–71 Masahide Jinno
- 1972 Takao Ishizawa
- 1973–75 Masahide Jinno
- 1976 Tasaki Hiromichi
- 1977 Toshio Toyota
- 1978 Akira Harada
- 1979 Toshio Toyota
- 1980 Yasuhiro Harada
- 1981–82 Yoshihiro Shimizu
- 1983 Hirofumi Miyazaki
- 1984 Kaoru Matsubara
- 1985–86 Hirofumi Miyazaki
- 1987 Kaoru Matsubara
- 1988 Takahiko Kasahara
- 1989 Shinji Aoto
- 1990 Robson da Silva (BRA)
- 1991 Bruny Surin (CAN)
- 1992 Hisatsugu Suzuki
- 1993–94 Satoru Inoue
- 1995 Yoshitaka Ito
- 1996–97 Nobuharu Asahara
- 1998 Koji Ito
- 1999 Hiroyasu Tsuchie
- 2000–02 Nobuharu Asahara
- 2003–04 Shingo Suetsugu
- 2005 Shinya Saburi
- 2006–08 Naoki Tsukahara
- 2009–12 Masashi Eriguchi
- 2013 Ryota Yamagata
- 2014 Yoshihide Kiryū
- 2015 Kei Takase
- 2016 Asuka Cambridge
- 2017 Abdul Hakim Sani Brown
- 2018 Ryota Yamagata
- 2019 Abdul Hakim Sani Brown
- 2020 Yoshihide Kiryū
- 2021 [[]]
- 2022 Abdul Hakim Sani Brown
|
Japan Championships in Athletics men's long jump champions |
---|
- 1913: Yosuke Ariike
- 1914: Fumio Suzuki
- 1915–16: Yoshitomo Kai
- 1917: Joji Hattori
- 1918: Kenjiro Matsumoto
- 1919–21: Goro Kozawa
- 1922: Sadaharu Shimoda
- 1923: Omote Sogo
- 1924: Not held
- 1925: Gen Tajima
- 1926: Mikio Oda
- 1927: Kunihei Murakami
- 1928–33: Chūhei Nambu
- 1934: Minatogawa Ranzo
- 1935–36: Masao Harada
- 1937: Kazutaka Harada
- 1938–39: Masao Harada
- 1940: Teppei Yuasa
- 1941: Not held
- 1942: Kanayama Gengo
- 1943–45: Not held
- 1946: Mineo Aoda
- 1947: Ei Kawamata
- 1948–49: Noriaki Sagawa
- 1950–53: Masajitsu Tajima
- 1954: Toshiyuki Kubo
- 1955: Teruya Asahi
- 1956–57: Yoshiro Sonoda
- 1958: Kaihei Oda
- 1959: Toru Azuma
- 1960: Hachiro Kono
- 1961: Katsumi Hanada
- 1962: Mitsuro Kawazu
- 1963: Igor Ter-Ovanesyan (URS)
- 1964: Hiroomi Yamada
- 1965: Takayuki Okazaki
- 1966–68: Hiroomi Yamada
- 1969–71: Shinji Ogura
- 1972: Takayoshi Kawagoe
- 1973: Shinji Ogura
- 1974: Takayoshi Kawagoe
- 1975: Mr. Fujiwara
- 1976: Shinpei Osawa
- 1977: Machida King
- 1978: Junichi Usui
- 1979: Haruhiko Matsuyama
- 1980: Junichi Usui
- 1981: Kazumitsu Omura
- 1982–87: Junichi Usui
- 1988–89: Hiroyuki Shibata
- 1990: Masaki Morinaga
- 1991: Hitoshi Shimo
- 1992: Masaki Morinaga
- 1993: Tetsuya Shida
- 1994–95: Nobuharu Asahara
- 1996: Shigeru Tagawa
- 1997: Nobuharu Asahara
- 1998: Takeshi Ichikawa
- 1999: Kazunari Inatomi
- 2000: Masaki Morinaga
- 2001: Daisuke Watanabe
- 2002–05: Shinichi Terano
- 2006: Kenji Fujikawa
- 2007: Daisuke Arakawa
- 2008: Yohei Sugai
- 2009: Daisuke Arakawa
- 2010–11: Yohei Sugai
- 2012: Daisuke Arakawa
- 2013: Yuhi Oiwa
- 2014: Minemura Koto
- 2015: Yohei Sugai
- 2016: Minemura Koto
- 2017–19: Yuki Hashioka
- 2020: Hibiki Tsuha
|
Authority control |
---|
General | |
---|
National libraries | |
---|
Scientific databases | |
---|
Other | |
---|
На других языках
- [en] Chūhei Nambu
[fr] Chūhei Nanbu
Chūhei Nanbu (南部 忠平, Nanbu Chuhei?), né le 27 mai 1904 à Sapporo et décédé le 23 juillet 1997 à Osaka, est un athlète japonais qui a été sacré champion olympique. Il est encore le seul athlète à avoir détenu en même temps le record du monde du saut en longueur et du triple saut.
[it] Chuhei Nambu
Chuhei Nambu (Sapporo, 24 maggio 1904 – Suita, 23 luglio 1997) è stato un triplista e lunghista giapponese.
[ru] Намбу, Тюхэй
Тюхэй Намбу (яп. 南部 忠平 Тю:хэй Намбу, 27 мая 1904 (1904-05-27), Саппоро, Япония - 23 июля 1997) — японский легкоатлет, олимпийский чемпион.
Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2024
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии