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The founder of Teiken Boxing Gym, Sadayuki Ogino (1901–1970), [3] during his career as an active junior featherweight boxer. Teiken Boxing Gym (帝拳ボクシングジム) is a Japanese traditional boxing club based in the Kagurazaka neighborhood of Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan.
Honda has served as the president of the Teiken Promotions and Teiken Boxing Gym in Tokyo, Japan since 1964. [2] Honda's motto "Pro Deo et Patria" implying "for God and Country" in Latin phrase is also that of Rikkyo University (also known as St. Paul's University) which Teiken Boxing Gym's founder Sadayuki Ogino and Honda graduated from. [3]
Teiken Boxing Gym This page was last edited on 28 September 2023, at 17:51 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
Shimoda is the Teiken Boxing Gym's second boxer following Masao Ohba who became a world champion from a walk-in boxer with no experience. [15] [16] From 2012 through 2013, Toshiyuki Igarashi and Takashi Miura also secured the world titles under Kasai. [17] [18] [19]
After completing middle school, he took a job in a candy shop to help support his family and trained as a boxer in the evening. He joined the Teiken Boxing Gym in 1965. [3] [4] Because Ohba weighed only about 105 pounds and barely stood five feet when he entered the gym, the trainers doubted that he would be successful as a professional boxer ...
Muguruma became interested in boxing at the age of a junior high school student. In high school, he belonged to the rugby club. As Muguruma was a slow runner, he was a substitute player there. He began boxing at Osaka Teiken Boxing Gym after entering the University. [1]
Yoshihiro Kamegai (亀海喜寛 Kamegai Yoshihiro, born November 12, 1982) is a Japanese former professional boxer who competed from 2005 to 2018. affiliated with the Teiken Boxing Gym [1] and Golden Boy Promotions. [2] He secured the Japanese super lightweight title in 2010 as the 33rd champion and defended it once before vacating it.
He joined Sendai Gym (current Shin-Nihon Sendai Boxing Gym) in the first year of Miyagi Prefectural Fisheries High School. Having finished his five-year amateur career [ 2 ] with a record of 18–5, [ 1 ] Tanaka won his professional debut in April 1991, and compiled a 2–3–1 record in the featherweight [ 10 ] and lightweight divisions by ...