ATHLETE

Hiroshi Yamamoto

1962 - Today

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Icon of person Hiroshi Yamamoto

Hiroshi Yamamoto (山本 博, Yamamoto Hiroshi; born 31 October 1962) is a Japanese athlete who competes in archery, who is a former world number one. He won a bronze medal in archery at the 1984 Summer Olympics. Yamamoto competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics in men's individual archery. He won his first three elimination matches, advancing to the quarterfinals. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Hiroshi Yamamoto is the 2,562nd most popular athlete (up from 2,912th in 2019), the 2,229th most popular biography from Japan (down from 2,152nd in 2019) and the 39th most popular Japanese Athlete.

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Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Hiroshi Yamamoto ranks 2,562 out of 6,025Before him are Pierre Quinon, Christine Prinsloo, Kim Collins, Simon Fourcade, Judy Amoore, and Jan Frodeno. After him are Seppo Räty, Gabriella Dorio, Ginka Zagorcheva, John Davis, Yordan Mitkov, and Catherine Ndereba.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1962, Hiroshi Yamamoto ranks 598Before him are Roger Kingdom, Rick Yancey, Pierre Quinon, Erik Thorstvedt, Zizinho, and Horst Bulau. After him are Seppo Räty, Philippe Vercruysse, Algirdas Šemeta, Beatie Edney, Justin Cronin, and Ian MacKaye.

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In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Hiroshi Yamamoto ranks 2,229 out of 6,245Before him are Jun Yanagisawa (1987), Fumiko Orikasa (1974), Koichi Kawai (1979), Junya Tanaka (1983), Shinichiro Takahashi (1957), and Moyoco Anno (1971). After him are Kazuaki Tasaka (1971), Masaaki Koido (1978), Koda Kumi (1982), Teppei Isaka (1974), Satoru Hayashi (1988), and Masato Osugi (1983).

Among ATHLETES In Japan

Among athletes born in Japan, Hiroshi Yamamoto ranks 39Before him are Mayumi Aoki (1953), Toru Goto (1934), Shinji Hosokawa (1960), Nobutaka Taguchi (1951), Beatriz (null), and Hideaki Tomiyama (1957). After him are Koji Murofushi (1974), Daniel Martínez (null), Naoko Takahashi (1972), Yuko Arimori (1966), Takanori Nagase (1993), and Tadanori Koshino (1966).