- 【ツマキ】 塚田真希♪【恥じらい乙女】
259 :名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。[]:2011/07/23(土) 14:55:24.19 ID:J/5IPHRb - JAPAN'S OLYMPIC & WORLD CHAMPION MAKI TSUKADA TO COACH AT LONDON'S BUDOKWAI
Maki Tsukada, one of the most renowned Japanese female judo fighters in history, will be coming to Britain in August and will be teaching at The Budokwai, Europe’s oldest club in continuous existence, on Wednesday evenings. Tsukada took the Olympic heavyweight ...title in 2004 and a silver medal four years later, the 2007 world title and three other world championship medals in a career marked by excellent technique combined with fighting spirit. She won an unequalled nine consecutive All-Japan female titles from 2002-2010. Tsukada, 29, will be based with the British squad in Dartford, Kent, on the south-eastern outskirts of London but will be travelling to the Budokwai in west London for coaching. She will remain in England until after the London Olympic Games and then is expected to go to Scotland for further coaching. The most recent Japanese coach at the Budokwai was Kosei Inoue who returned to Japan in January after a years coaching and learning English. Other recent coaches have included Yasuhiro Yamashita, Katsuhiko Kashiwazaki, Nobuyuki Sato, Hirotaka Okada, Hideotoshi Nakanishi and Kenzo Nakamura, all world or Olympic champions in the past. Maki Tsukada will be the first Japanese woman coach at The Budokwai. The Budokwai has an immense reputation in judo, being a founder member of the British Judo Association. One of its former Presidents, Charles Palmer, was also the first non-Japanese President of the International Judo Federation. Among the club’s most famous fighters are Neil Adams, the 1981 world light-middleweight champion and twice Olympic silver medallist, and Ray Stevens, 1992 Olympic light-heavyweight silver medallist and the last British man to have won an Olympic medal.
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