Yukio Akakariyama

Yukio Akakariyama
Born (1975-03-13) 13 March 1975
Osaka Prefecture, Japan
Sport country  Japan
Pool games 9-Ball
Tournament wins
World Champion 9-Ball (2011)
www.blog.livedoor.jp/yukio0313/

Yukio Akakariyama (Japanese 赤狩山 幸男, Akakariyama Yukio, born March 13, 1975 , Osaka, Japan ) is a Japanese pool player. In 2011, Yukio won the WPA World Nine-ball Championship.

Career

In November 2008, Akakariyama finished ninth at the Japan Open. In June 2009, he reached the semi-finals of the China Open. A month later, he made it to the final round of the WPA World Ten-ball Championship , in which he defeated the Taiwanese Chao Fong-Pang in the round of the last 64.

In February 2010, he reached with the round of 16 at the French Open his best result on the WPA Euro Tour. In April 2010 he reached the round of 16 of the 8-Ball World Championships, where he lost to Ruslan Tschinachow. At the 2010 WPA World Nine-ball Championship, he would lose in the last 64 once again.

In the 2011 WPA World Eight-ball Championship, Akakariyama retired in the round of 56. In May 2011, he reached the semifinals of the 10-Ball World Championship, and would defeat eventual champion Huidji Lake. At the 2011 WPA World Nine-ball Championship after wins against Karlo Dalmatin, Carlo Biado and Mark Gray he would proceed to the final. There he defeated the Philippians Ronato Alcano with 1311 and became 9-ball world champion.[1]

In February 2012 Akakariyama reached the knockout round of the 8-Ball World Cup and lost there against Roberto Gomez . At the 2012 WPA World Nine-ball Championship he lost defending the championship in the semifinals against Thorsten Hohmann.[2] At the World Games 2013 , he made it to the quarter-finals, where he defeated the Chinese Liu Haitao 711. After being eliminated in the preliminary round at the 9-Ball World Championships in 2013 and 2014, he reached the main knockout again in 2015 and where he lost in the last 32 against Ko Ping-chung.[3]

References

  1. Ted Lerner (2011-07-02). "It's Yukio". wpa-pool.com (in Japanese). World Pool-Billiard Association. Archived from the original on 2011-07-03. Retrieved 2015-09-25.
  2. "The Gang of Four Goes for Glory at World 9-Ball Championship". azbilliards.com. Retrieved 2018-08-15.
  3. "A Four Way Showdown For Pool History". azbilliards.com. Retrieved 2018-08-15.
Preceded by
Francisco Bustamante
WPA World Nine-ball Champion
2011
Succeeded by
Darren Appleton
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