Miyuu Yamamoto
Miyuu Yamamoto (山本 美憂, Yamamoto Miyū, born 4 August 1974, Kanagawa Prefecture) is a Japanese female freestyle wrestler and mixed martial artist. Yamamoto is a three-time freestyle wrestling world champion and a Rizin Women's Super Atomweight title contender in MMA. She is represented with Krazy Bee.
Personal information | |
---|---|
Native name | 山本 美憂 |
Nickname(s) | Fighting Queen Bee |
Citizenship |
|
Born | Kawasaki, Kanagawa | 4 August 1974
Agent | Krazy Bee |
Height | 156 cm (5 ft 1 in) |
Weight | 50 kg (110 lb) |
Sport | |
Sport | Wrestling |
Rank | Strawweight |
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Women's wrestling freestyle | ||
Representing Japan | ||
World Wrestling Championships | ||
1991 Tokyo | 47 kg | |
1994 Sofia | 50 kg | |
1995 Moscow | 47 kg | |
1998 Poznan | 46 kg | |
Asian Wrestling Championships | ||
1999 Tashkent | 46 kg |
Personal life
Miyuu Yamamoto is married to her husband, Kyle, who has two coffee shops in Guam. Yamamoto enjoys brewing her own coffee and hopes to open her own coffee shop in Japan. After she's done fighting, she hopes to travel the world trying all types of coffee.[2]
Biography
Her father, 1972 Summer Olympics wrestling representative, and Nippon Sport Science University Professor Ikuei Yamamoto made a wrestling gifted education with his son Norifumi "Kid" Yamamoto and his sister Seiko Yamamoto from her elementary school age. At the age of thirteen she won the 1st Japan Women's Championship. After that, she achieved four consecutive victories in all Japan, but she was not allowed to participate in the World Wrestling Championships due to the age limit. In 1991, she won the world's first championship which she participated for the first time at the age of seventeen as the youngest ever in history.
After that she won the world championships in 1994 and 1995. In 1994 she participated in the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling Tokyo Dome competition with Kyoko Hamaguchi. In 1995 she married Nobuyasu Ikeda at the J.League Urawa Red Diamonds (former) and retired from active service. After that, she gave birth to her first child (Arsen Yamamoto). But in April 1999, they divorced.
In 1999 she temporarily returned to active service, temporarily entered the Queen's Cup Final, won the Asian Championships and won the All Japan Women's Wrestling Championship, but in July 2000 she remarried to Enson Inoue, a fighter and retired from active service.
She later returned to active service on the occasion that women's wrestling becoming the official event for the first time at the 2004 Summer Olympics. Although it aimed for her Athens Olympic appearance, she finished third in the "Japan Queen's Cup" (Athens Olympic national team selection game) in February 2004, and she could not play her Olympic appearances. She later retired from active services in April of the same year.[3] In the same year, she divorced Enson Inoue.
In April 2006, she later married Akira Sasaki, representative of the 2006 Winter Olympics men's alpine skiing[4] (her third marriage). They celebrated the birth of their baby ceremony in the same year, a boy who became her second child in December of the same year. In November 2008, she gave birth to a girl Mia who is her third child.
She belonged to Sports Biz and acts as a sports caster, as well as a leader of Kids' Wrestling at the NPO Japan Sports Network (JSN).
She returned to active duties in June 2011.[5] She aimed to participate in the 2012 Summer Olympics, winning the All Japan Women's Open Championship on 16 October.[6] She divorced Akira Sasaki (her third divorce).[7] Although she participated in the All Japan Selection Championship in December, she lost the judgment in the second round and missed her Olympic appearance.[8]
In 2013 she moved her life base to Toronto, Canada and worked. In December of the same year, she participated in the Nordhagen Classic Games in the 51 kg class and won the championship.[9]
She won the third prize in the Canadian Cup on 5 July 2014.[10] She acquired Canadian citizenship in December 2015, and aimed to participate in the 2016 Summer Olympics as a Canada representative.
On 1 August 2016, as a result of the closing of the Rio Olympic appearance road, she announced participation in mixed martial arts. Also the Rizin Fighting World Grand-Prix 2016 held on 25 September the same year was announced as she participated in the opening round of the indiscriminate class tournament, the opponent of the debut match is the "Queen of Shoot Boxing" Rena Kubota, with one loss. On 31 December, also in the same year, she went to the Rizin Fighting World Grand-Prix 2016 against the KOTC female straw class champion Andy Winn at the Indiscriminate Tournament Final Round, and suffered a second consecutive defeat.
In March 2017, she showed her bold figure entitled "The Strongest Nudity" at the photographic weekly magazine Flash (Kobunsha),[11] and the first nude photo album Queen was released in May.[12]
Mixed martial arts career
While Yamamoto was aiming for the Olympics, she didn't see her dreams realized. Then, Nobuyuki Sakakibara approached her about fighting for Rizin Fighting Federation. Yamamoto decided then to transition from wrestling to MMA.[2]
Yamamoto was scheduled to fight Ayaka Hamasaki for the vacant RIZIN atomweight title.[2] In the lead up to the fight, Yamamoto took time off in the COVID-19 pandemic to improve herself as a mixed martial artist.[2]
Other
- The name "Miyuu" was named after Mr. Munich, whose father participated as the Olympic representative.[5]
- Arsen Yamamoto, her eldest son, also learned wrestling from his grandfather, Ikuei Yamamoto, and has been active in decorating the victory at Greco Roman 69 kg class at the National Boys Competition 66 kg class in 2008 and the FILA Cadet World Championships at 2013. She aimed to win gold medals at the Summer Olympics in 2016.
- In addition to having similar family circumstances, she has work patterns with sports caster Animal Hamaguchi (Heigo Hamaguchi) and his close-parent daughter Kyoko.
Mixed martial arts record
Professional record breakdown | ||
11 matches | 6 wins | 5 losses |
By knockout | 0 | 1 |
By submission | 0 | 4 |
By decision | 6 | 0 |
Res. | Record | Opponent | Method | Event | Date | Round | Time | Location | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Loss | 6–5 | Ayaka Hamasaki | Submission (leg scissor choke) | Rizin 26 | December 31, 2020 | 1 | 1:42 | Saitama, Japan | For the Rizin Super Atomweight Championship |
Win | 6–4 | Suwanan Boonsorn | Decision (unanimous) | Rizin 20 | December 31, 2019 | 3 | 5:00 | Saitama, Japan | |
Loss | 5–4 | Seo Hee Ham | TKO (punches) | Rizin 19 | October 12, 2019 | 2 | 9:42 | Osaka, Japan | |
Win | 5–3 | Kanna Asakura | Decision (unanimous) | Rizin 16 | June 2, 2019 | 3 | 5:00 | Kobe, Japan | |
Win | 4–3 | Mika Nagano | Decision (unanimous) | Rizin 14 | December 31, 2018 | 3 | 5:00 | Saitama, Japan | |
Win | 3–3 | Andy Nguyen | Decision (unanimous) | Rizin 13 | September 30, 2018 | 3 | 5:00 | Saitama, Japan | |
Win | 2–3 | Saori Ishioka | Decision (split) | Rizin 11 | July 29, 2018 | 3 | 5:00 | Saitama, Japan | |
Loss | 1–3 | Irene Cabello Rivera | Submission (armbar) | Rizin World Grand Prix 2017: Opening Round - Part 2 | October 15, 2017 | 2 | 2:25 | Fukuoka, Japan | Super Atomweight GP Quarterfinals |
Win | 1–2 | Cassie Robb | Decision (unanimous) | Rizin World Grand Prix 2017: Opening Round - Part 1 | July 30, 2017 | 3 | 5:00 | Saitama, Japan | |
Loss | 0–2 | Andy Nguyen | Submission (armbar) | Rizin World Grand Prix 2016: Final Round | December 31, 2016 | 1 | 4:42 | Saitama, Japan | |
Loss | 0–1 | Rena Kubota | Submission (guillotine choke) | Rizin World Grand Prix 2016: 1st Round | September 25, 2016 | 1 | 4:50 | Saitama, Japan |
Wrestling accomplishments
- 1987 All-Japan Women's Championship 44 kg class win
- 1988 All-Japan Women's Championship 44 kg class win
- 1989 All Japan Women's Open 44 kg class win
- 1989 All-Japan Women's Championship 47 kg class win
- 1990 All Japan Women's Open 47 kg class win
- 1990 All Japan Women's championship 47 kg class win
- 1990 All Japan Women's Open 47 kg class win
- 1991 All Japan Women's Championship 47 kg class win
- 1991 World Women's Championship 47 kg class win
- 1993 All-Japan Women's Open 50 kg class Second Prize
- 1994 All-Japan Women's Championship 50 kg class win
- 1994 World Women's Championship 50 kg class win
- 1995 All-Japan Women's Championship 47 kg class win
- 1995 World Women's Championship 47 kg class win
- 1998 Japan Women's Championship 46 kg class third place
- 1998 World Women's Championship 46 kg Class Second Prize
- 1999 Japan Queen's Cup 46 kg class Second Prize
- 1999 All-Japan Championship 46 kg class win
- 2002 All-Japan Championship 48 kg class Final T1 race lost
- 2003 Dave Schulz Memorial International Convention 48 kg class Second Prize
- 2003 Japan Queen's Cup 48 kg class Second Prize
- 2003 All Japan women's championship 48 kg class third place
- 2004 Japan Queen's Cup in 48 kg class third place
- 2011 All Japan Women's Open Championship 48 kg class win
- 2011 NYAC Holiday Open International Convention 48 kg class third place
- 2011 All-Japan Championship 48 kg class eliminated second round
- 2011 All-Japan Selection Championship 51 kg class lost second round
- 2012 Canadian Cup 48 kg class third place
- 2013 Nordhagen Classic contest 51 kg class win
- 2014 Canadian Cup 48 kg class third place
- 2015 Canadian Cup 53 kg class 4th place
Bibliography
Magazines
- Flash (No. 1 November 2016, No. 28 March/4 April 2017, No. 25 April 2017, No. 23 May 2017, Kobunsha)
References
- "LOSTONES公式サイトのプロフィール" (in Japanese). Retrieved 30 July 2017.
- Blaine Henry (18 December 2020). "Miyuu Yamamoto: Coffee and RIZIN". Fight-Library.com.
- "山本美憂が現役引退 女子レスリングの先駆者" (in Japanese). 47News. 24 April 2004. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
- "スキーの佐々木が入籍 元女子レスの山本さんと" (in Japanese). 47News. 8 May 2006. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
- "子育てしながらカナダでトレーニング 再びチャンピオン目指すレスリング山本美憂さん". Nikka Times (in Japanese). 24 May 2012. Archived from the original on 16 February 2017. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
- "女子レスリング 山本美憂選手 全日本女子オープン選手権優勝!" (in Japanese). Hakuju Medical College. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
- "現役復帰レスリング山本美憂が3度目離婚". Nikkan Sports (in Japanese). 27 October 2011. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
- Yamamoto, Miyuu (6 July 2012). "レスリング選手 山本美憂 レスリングは私のすべて". bits Japanese magazine (Interview) (in Japanese). 11 (03). bits box. p. 9. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
- "山本美憂が51kg級で優勝…ノードハーゲン・クラシック大会(カナダ)". Official website of the Japan Wrestling Association (in Japanese). Japan Wrestling Association. 10 December 2013. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
- "山本美憂(チーム・インパクト)が3位入賞…カナダカップ女子". Official website of the Japan Wrestling Association (in Japanese). Japan Wrestling Association. 10 July 2014. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
- "FLASH 2017年3月28日号・4月4日号" (in Japanese). Retrieved 30 July 2017.
- "【RIZIN】山本美憂・42歳の最強ヌードを披露" (in Japanese). eFight. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
External links
- Miyuu Yamamoto official blog – Ameba Blog (in Japanese)
- Lostones (in Japanese)
- Professional MMA record for Miyuu Yamamoto from Sherdog
- Rizin Player data (in Japanese)
- Miyuu Yamamoto – International Wrestling Database
- Miyuu Yamamoto - Japan Wrestling Federation Official Website - JWF (in Japanese)