RACING DRIVER

Kazuyoshi Hoshino

1947 - Today

Photo of Kazuyoshi Hoshino

Icon of person Kazuyoshi Hoshino

Kazuyoshi Hoshino (Shinjitai: 星野 一義, Hoshino Kazuyoshi; born 1 July 1947) is a Japanese former racing driver and businessman. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Kazuyoshi Hoshino is the 436th most popular racing driver (down from 376th in 2019), the 1,448th most popular biography from Japan (down from 1,257th in 2019) and the 9th most popular Japanese Racing Driver.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Kazuyoshi Hoshino by language

Loading...

Among RACING DRIVERS

Among racing drivers, Kazuyoshi Hoshino ranks 436 out of 1,080Before him are Chet Miller, Loris Kessel, María de Villota, David Piper, Gimax, and Jan Magnussen. After him are Bernd Schneider, Hans Binder, Hermann Paul Müller, Ken Kavanagh, Jan Flinterman, and Emanuele Pirro.

Most Popular Racing Drivers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1947, Kazuyoshi Hoshino ranks 600Before him are Konstantin Lopushansky, Kazadi Mwamba, Bob Houghton, Tillman Thomas, Stefan Angelov, and Sandy Denny. After him are Erik Spiekermann, Theodore Long, Wolfgang Schwarz, Cyrille Guimard, Luigi Padovese, and Menachem Bello.

Others Born in 1947

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Kazuyoshi Hoshino ranks 1,448 out of 6,245Before him are Shuji Tsurumi (1938), Nujabes (1974), Eiichi Uemura (1975), Kitamura Tokoku (1868), Toshiyuki Morikawa (1967), and Shunpei Uto (1918). After him are Wataru Endo (1993), Yuji Hyakutake (1950), Chikage Awashima (1924), Maki Haneta (1972), Toshiaki Imai (1954), and Hiroshi Soejima (1959).

Among RACING DRIVERS In Japan

Among racing drivers born in Japan, Kazuyoshi Hoshino ranks 9Before him are Keiichi Tsuchiya (1956), Aguri Suzuki (1960), Takuma Sato (1977), Masahiro Hasemi (1945), Ukyo Katayama (1963), and Toshio Suzuki (1955). After him are Hiroshi Fushida (1946), Kamui Kobayashi (1986), Noritake Takahara (1951), Yuji Ide (1975), Daijiro Kato (1976), and Yuki Tsunoda (2000).