翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Sho Aoyagi
・ Sho Aranami
・ Sho Asuke
・ Sho Baraka
・ Sho Dozono
・ Sho Dun Festival
・ Sho Endo
・ Sho Gokyu
・ Sho Hanai
・ Sho Hatsuyama
・ Sho Is Funky Down Here
・ Sho Ito
・ Sho Iwasaki
・ Sho Kamimura
・ Sho Kamogawa
Sho Kashima
・ Sho Kitano
・ Sho Kosugi
・ Sho Lee
・ Sho Matsumoto
・ Sho Miyagawa
・ Sho Murata
・ Sho Nakata
・ Sho Naruoka
・ Sho Nuff (song)
・ Sho Online
・ Sho Sakai
・ Sho Sakurai
・ Sho Sasaki
・ Sho Sasaki (footballer)


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Sho Kashima : ウィキペディア英語版
Sho Kashima

Sho William Kashima〔http://www.familytreelegends.com/records/txbirths?c=search&first=Sho&last=Kashima&spelling=Exact&11_year=&11_month=0&11_day=0&4=&14=&SubmitSearch.x=55&SubmitSearch.y=5&SubmitSearch=Submit〕 (born November 1, 1986) is an American freestyle skier from El Paso, Texas. Sho currently resides in Park City, Utah. Sho was considered a threat to qualify for the U.S. Olympic team in Vancouver, but missed the 2010 Games after suffering a knee injury in January of that year, ending his season.
==Early career==
Sho began skiing when he was 4yrs old, after his father was hired at Heavenly Mountain Resort in Lake Tahoe, Calif. Growing up, Kashima idolized 1998 Olympic moguls champion Jonny Moseley, and it was Moseley's gold in Nagano that inspired him to compete in the Olympics. He also looked up to U.S. moguls skiers Travis Cabral (ninth in at the 2006 Torino Games), Travis Ramos and Chris Hernandez, all of whom have roots in Lake Tahoe. Sho was 12 years old when he first started skiing moguls with the Heavenly Team, and continued skiing with them till the age of 19 when he qualified for, and joined, the US Ski Team. Sho won his first major title, a Junior Olympics title, in Moguls when he was 17 at a competition in Silver Mountain, Idaho.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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