RACING DRIVER

Hiroshi Fushida

1946 - Today

Photo of Hiroshi Fushida

Icon of person Hiroshi Fushida

Hiroshi Fushida (鮒子田 寛; , born 10 March 1946) is a Japanese former racing driver. He is the first Japanese driver to enter a Formula One World Championship Grand Prix, and the first to compete in the 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance race. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Hiroshi Fushida is the 444th most popular racing driver (down from 380th in 2019), the 1,465th most popular biography from Japan (down from 1,261st in 2019) and the 10th most popular Japanese Racing Driver.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Hiroshi Fushida by language

Loading...

Among RACING DRIVERS

Among racing drivers, Hiroshi Fushida ranks 444 out of 1,080Before him are Hans Binder, Hermann Paul Müller, Ken Kavanagh, Jan Flinterman, Emanuele Pirro, and Graziano Rossi. After him are Pedro Lamy, Héctor Rebaque, Guanyu Zhou, Toni Branca, Carlo Maria Abate, and Richard Burns.

Most Popular Racing Drivers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1946, Hiroshi Fushida ranks 579Before him are John Getz, Vladimir Tukmakov, Kjell Johansson, George Lusztig, Vinod Khanna, and Henri Françillon. After him are Juan Amat, Ramsey Campbell, Brian Henton, Mark Snow, Okko Kamu, and Comunardo Niccolai.

Others Born in 1946

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Hiroshi Fushida ranks 1,465 out of 6,245Before him are Jiichiro Date (1952), Tomoyuki Kajino (1960), Yohei Takayama (1979), Yuko Oita (1969), Takahiro Sasaki (1974), and Takashi Tezuka (1960). After him are Toru Ojima (1976), Kiyonori Kikutake (1928), Satoshi Tezuka (1958), Kenyu Horiuchi (1957), Kōkichi Tsuburaya (1940), and Yoshiyuki Tsuruta (1903).

Among RACING DRIVERS In Japan

Among racing drivers born in Japan, Hiroshi Fushida ranks 10Before him are Aguri Suzuki (1960), Takuma Sato (1977), Masahiro Hasemi (1945), Ukyo Katayama (1963), Toshio Suzuki (1955), and Kazuyoshi Hoshino (1947). After him are Kamui Kobayashi (1986), Noritake Takahara (1951), Yuji Ide (1975), Daijiro Kato (1976), Yuki Tsunoda (2000), and Kazuki Nakajima (1985).