Yūji Nashiro

Yuji Nashiro
Born September 13, 1983
Nara City, Japan
Nationality Japan Japanese
Height 5 ft 6 in (1.68 m)
Weight 154 lb (70 kg; 11.0 st)
Division Welterweight
Style Kyokushin Karate, Kickboxing
Team Kokushi Kaikan
Sport Academy
Years active 2006-present
Kickboxing record
Total 16
Wins 10
By knockout 6
Losses 6
By knockout 1
Draws 0
Other information
Notable relatives Nobuo Nashiro (brother)
last updated on: July 28, 2013

Yuji Nashiro (名城裕司) (born September 13, 1983) is a Japanese kickboxer who competes in the welterweight division.

Biography and career

Nashiro was born in Nara City and is the brother of world champion boxer Nobuo Nashiro. He began his martial arts career in Kyokushin karate, in which he was the Japanese and Asian champion in the middleweight division. He was also the amateur Muay Thai champion of Japan.

He made his professional kickboxing debut in 2006 and won his first three fights by knockout before taking a break from the sport for almost three years. He returned at the K-1 World MAX 2010 -70kg Japan Tournament where he was knocked out by Yuichiro Nagashima in the quarter-finals.[1] Following this, he went on to compete in the Krush promotion where he won his first two fights before losing to Yoshihiro Sato.

He returned to the Japan MAX Tournament at K-1 World MAX 2011 -70kg Japan Tournament Final where he caused an upset by winning the tournament. He defeated 2002 World MAX champion Albert Kraus in the quarter-finals and Takafumi Morita in the semis, both by decision, before going on to knock out Yuya Yamamoto in the first round of the final.[2][3]

On February 25, 2012, he defeated Yukihiko Komiya via majority decision at Big Bang 8 in Tokyo.[4]

Nashiro moved down in weight to compete in the Krush Grand Prix 2013 ~67kg First Class Tournament~ on January 14, 2012, facing Abdallah Ezbiri at the quarter-finals.[5][6] He came in overweight on his first two attempts and lost by unanimous decision.[7]

He challenged Danilo Zanolini for his HEAT Middleweight (-70 kg/154 lb) Championship at HEAT 27 in Kobe, Japan on July 28, 2013, losing by unanimous decision.[8]

Titles


Kickboxing record

Kickboxing record

Legend:       Win       Loss       Draw/No contest

References

External links