ATHLETE

Ikuma Horishima

1997 - Today

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Ikuma Horishima (堀島 行真, Horishima Ikuma; born 11 December 1997) is a Japanese freestyle skier who competes internationally. He competed for Japan at the FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2017 in Sierra Nevada, Spain, where he won a gold medal in Moguls, and another gold medal in Dual moguls. Horishima won the bronze medal in the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics men's moguls with a score of 81.48. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Ikuma Horishima is the 6,497th most popular athlete (up from 7,373rd in 2019), the 5,124th most popular biography from Japan (down from 5,116th in 2019) and the 115th most popular Japanese Athlete.

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Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Ikuma Horishima ranks 6,497 out of 6,025Before him are Jakara Anthony, Julia Figueroa, Andrew Hunter, Agnes Knochenhauer, Takuya Haneda, and Óscar Pino. After him are Alec Potts, Zhang Mo, Lü Yang, Viktoriya Tkachuk, Ed McKeever, and Wassim Ben Tara.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1997, Ikuma Horishima ranks 757Before him are Cameron Carter-Vickers, Alejandra Orozco, Saken Bibossinov, David Brooks, Óscar Melendo, and Natalia Vikhlyantseva. After him are Fabio Depaoli, Bat-Ochiryn Bolortuyaa, Chiara Hölzl, Sean Longstaff, Yukako Kawai, and Nils Stump.

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In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Ikuma Horishima ranks 5,137 out of 6,245Before him are Yusuke Sudo (1986), Toshihiro Horikawa (1989), Yuya Nakamura (1986), Takuya Haneda (1987), Ryoya Ueda (1989), and Yusuke Segawa (1994). After him are Ryota Nagata (1985), Akishige Kaneda (1990), Rikako Ikee (2000), Taku Ishihara (1988), Sunao Hozaki (1987), and Ryusei Morikawa (1988).

Among ATHLETES In Japan

Among athletes born in Japan, Ikuma Horishima ranks 115Before him are Sakura Motoki (2002), Hirooki Arai (1988), Reruhi Shimizu (1993), Yumi Suzuki (1991), Mikiko Ando (1992), and Takuya Haneda (1987). After him are Sakura Yosozumi (2002), Ryutaro Araga (1990), Eri Yamada (1984), Yoshihide Kiryū (1995), Ayana Onozuka (1988), and Tatsuru Saito (2002).