SKATER

Masako Hozumi

1986 - Today

Photo of Masako Hozumi

Icon of person Masako Hozumi

Masako Hozumi (Japanese: 穂積 雅子; born 11 September 1986 in Fukushima) is a Japanese speed skater from Hokkaido. In 2009, she finished fourth overall at the 2009 Allround. She competed for Japan at the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics. She is named after Masako Natsume, a famous Japanese actress. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Masako Hozumi is the 354th most popular skater (up from 406th in 2019), the 3,746th most popular biography from Japan (down from 3,475th in 2019) and the 16th most popular Japanese Skater.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Masako Hozumi by language

Loading...

Among SKATERS

Among skaters, Masako Hozumi ranks 354 out of 483Before her are Davide Ghiotto, Laurine van Riessen, Lee Jung-su, Casey FitzRandolph, Shaoang Liu, and Jin Sun-yu. After her are Gretha Smit, Bryce Davison, Shoma Uno, Elena Radionova, Lim Hyo-jun, and Katrin Mattscherodt.

Most Popular Skaters in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1986, Masako Hozumi ranks 1,006Before her are André Luís Neitzke, Ashraf Nu'man, Edson Puch, Peter Regin, Guo Shuang, and Julia Reda. After her are Yalennis Castillo, Sean Edwards, Kohei Tokita, Jessicah Schipper, Carlão, and Dániel Böde.

Others Born in 1986

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Masako Hozumi ranks 3,753 out of 6,245Before her are Daisuke Sudo (1977), Yukio Tsuchiya (1974), Noriaki Tsutsui (1976), Tatsuya Sakai (1990), Yoshimi Sasahara (1974), and Kosuke Suda (1980). After her are Yoshiya Takemura (1973), Hidekazu Otani (1984), Kohei Tokita (1986), Kosuke Nakamura (1995), Hiroaki Tajima (1974), and Kentaro Suzuki (1980).

Among SKATERS In Japan

Among skaters born in Japan, Masako Hozumi ranks 16Before her are Nobunari Oda (1987), Kaori Sakamoto (2000), Daisuke Takahashi (1986), Fumie Suguri (1980), Tomomi Okazaki (1971), and Nao Kodaira (1986). After her are Shoma Uno (1997), Miho Takagi (1994), Akiko Suzuki (1985), Keiichiro Nagashima (1982), Nana Takagi (1992), and Yuma Kagiyama (2003).