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・ Masaki Yokotani
・ Masaki Yoshida
・ Masaki, Ehime
・ Masakichi Inoue
・ Masakiyo Maezono
・ Masako
・ Masako Bandō
・ Masako Chiba
・ Masako Hayashi
・ Masako Hozumi
・ Masako Ikeda
・ Masako Ishida
・ Masako Jō
・ Masako Kato
・ Masako Katsuki
Masako Katsura
・ Masako Kondo
・ Masako Miura
・ Masako Mori
・ Masako Mori (politician)
・ Masako Mori (singer)
・ Masako Natsume
・ Masako Nozawa
・ Masako Ogawa
・ Masako Okawara
・ Masako Okōchi
・ Masako Ono
・ Masako Sato
・ Masako Sato (field hockey)
・ Masako Seki


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Masako Katsura : ウィキペディア英語版
Masako Katsura

, nicknamed "Katsy" and sometimes called the "First Lady of Billiards", was a Japanese carom billiards player who was most active in the 1950s. Katsura blazed a trail for women in the sport by competing and placing among the best in the male-dominated world of professional billiards. First learning the game from her brother-in-law and then under the tutelage of Japanese champion Kinrey Matsuyama, Katsura became Japan's only female professional player. In competition in Japan she took second place in the country's national three-cushion billiards championship three times. In exhibition she was noted for 10,000 points at the game of straight rail.
After marrying a U.S. Army non-commissioned officer in 1950, Katsura emigrated with him to the United States in 1951. There she was invited to play in the 1952 U.S.-sponsored World Three-Cushion Championship, ultimately taking seventh place at that competition. Katsura was the first woman ever to be included in any world billiards tournament. Her fame cemented, Katsura went on an exhibition tour of the United States with 8-time world champion Welker Cochran, and later with 51-time world champion Willie Hoppe. In 1953 and 1954 she again competed for the world three-cushion crown, taking fifth and fourth places respectively.
Little was seen of Katsura for the next few years. She made 30 exhibition appearances in 1958, and went on a one-week exhibition engagement the following year with Harold Worst, but did not compete in any professional tournaments. In 1959, she made two television appearances on ABC's ''You Asked for It'', and one on the CBS primetime television hit ''What's My Line?''. Katsura returned to competition in 1961, playing a challenge match for the World Three-Cushion title against Worst, then reigning world champion, and was defeated by him. Katsura disappeared from the sport thereafter, only making a brief impromptu appearance in 1976. She moved back to Japan in about 1990 and died in 1995.
==Life and career==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Masako Katsura」の詳細全文を読む



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