WRESTLER

Yoshie Ueno

1983 - Today

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Yoshie Ueno (上野 順恵, Ueno Yoshie; born 1 July 1983, in Asahikawa Hokkaidō) is a Japanese judoka. Ueno won the gold medal in the Half-middleweight (63 kg) division at the 2009 World Judo Championships and in 2010. In 2011 she lost the final to local hero Gévrise Émane. Ueno's elder sister is Masae Ueno, who retired in 2009 after winning gold at the 2004 and 2008 Summer Olympics. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 21 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 20 in 2024). Yoshie Ueno is the 1,020th most popular wrestler (down from 829th in 2024), the 4,354th most popular biography from Japan (down from 3,158th in 2019) and the 75th most popular Japanese Wrestler.

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Among WRESTLERS

Among wrestlers, Yoshie Ueno ranks 1,020 out of 1,027Before her are Davlat Bobonov, Soslan Ramonov, Albert Saritov, Madeleine Malonga, Tsend-Ochiryn Tsogtbaatar, and Viachaslau Makaranka. After her are Morad Mohammadi, Jacob Fatu, Aksana, Henna Johansson, Balls Mahoney, and Jaime Espinal.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1983, Yoshie Ueno ranks 1,280Before her are Shaun Marsh, Ghasem Haddadifar, Blake Schilb, Jiří Novotný, Kalle Kriit, and Daishi Hiramatsu. After her are Marvin Chávez, Jennifer Heil, Vitolo, Lukáš Krajíček, Georgina Bardach, and Njazi Kuqi.

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In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Yoshie Ueno ranks 4,367 out of 6,245Before her are Mutsumi Tamabayashi (1984), Kayoko Fukushi (1982), Shu Abe (1984), Daishi Hiramatsu (1983), Taishi Taguchi (1991), and Daiju Matsumoto (1977). After her are Yushi Soda (1978), Ryu Okada (1984), Yōsuke Nozawa (1979), Kensuke Fukuda (1984), Shun Morishita (1986), and Yusuke Mori (1980).

Among WRESTLERS In Japan

Among wrestlers born in Japan, Yoshie Ueno ranks 75Before her are Ayumi Tanimoto (1981), Ryuju Nagayama (1996), Chikara Tanabe (1975), Kenichi Yumoto (1984), Misato Nakamura (1989), and Maki Tsukada (1982). After her are Chizuru Arai (1993), Shori Hamada (1990), Mika Sugimoto (1984), Yui Susaki (1999), Shinobu Ota (1993), and Ryunosuke Haga (1991).