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・ Yukio (comics)
・ Yukio Aoshima
・ Yukio Edano
・ Yukio Endo
・ Yukio Futatsugi
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・ Yukio Hatoyama
・ Yukio Hattori
・ Yukio Hayashida
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・ Yukio Inokuma
・ Yukio Ishizuka
・ Yukio Jitsukawa
Yukio Kagayama
・ Yukio Kasahara
・ Yukio Kasaya
・ Yukio Kawabe
・ Yukio Koshimori
・ Yukio Makino
・ Yukio Mishima
・ Yukio Mishima bibliography
・ Yukio Motoki
・ Yukio Ninagawa
・ Yukio Nishimoto
・ Yukio Okutsu
・ Yukio Ozaki
・ Yukio Peter
・ Yukio Sakaguchi


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Yukio Kagayama : ウィキペディア英語版
Yukio Kagayama

Yukio Kagayama (born 4 May 1974 in Yokohama Japan) is a professional motorcycle road racer. He began motorcycle racing in 1990, spending many years in the All Japan Road Race Championship, finishing fourth in 2001. He contested four 250 cc World Championship races in 1997 and 1998, finishing top-8 in all four. In 2003 he raced in the British Superbike Championship for Rizla Suzuki, alongside double British champion John Reynolds, and had won three races when he crashed heavily at Cadwell Park.
He returned for the start of 2004, finishing 3rd in the championship despite not being at full fitness early in the season (a further crash caused a broken collarbone). He has also made various starts for Suzuki in Grand Prix racing, scoring several top 10 finishes in wildcard rides.
==Superbike World Championship==
For he joined Superbike World Champion Troy Corser in the Alstare Suzuki team in the Superbike World Championship, and won races on the GSX-R1000, riding on largely unfamiliar circuits against some of the world's top riders. He finished 5th overall, and did enough to retain his ride for . In the first race, he collided with Noriyuki Haga while battling for the lead on the final lap. He then had a run of poor results, before taking a third and a fourth at Misano, and then an impressive double win from the second row at Brno, nearly doubling his points total in one weekend. He came 7th overall in the series.
In 2006 he raced in the final round of the All Japan Road Race Championship at Suzuka as a wild card and won the race.
In he remained at Suzuki, but missed four rounds through injury. He finished the season ranked 13th. For 2008 he switches his racing number to #34, as used by former 500 cc World Champion Kevin Schwantz. Again he had an injury-hit season, and was easily the lowest-placed of the three works Suzuki riders in the standings.
In 2010 Kagayama returned to the British Superbike Championship riding for the Worx Suzuki team. His teammate was Tommy Hill. He finished 15th overall with one podium finish.
In 2011 Kagayama launched his own team "Team Kagayama" for a full season in the JSB (Japanese Superbike) class of the All Japan Road Race Championship. He is the owner and sole rider for the team, and the team's bike is the Suzuki GSX-R1000. Kagayama could not record a win this season and ended up 4th in the championship.
Kagayama and the team are in the 2012 championship as well and recorded a win in the 6th round at Sugo. It was the first win for Kagayama since his full-season comeback to Japan in 2011 as well as for Team Kagayama since its launch the same year.

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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