Eri Ogihara

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BornEri Ogihara
(2003-02-12) February 12, 2003 (age 22)
Japan
SkipHonoka Sasaki
FourthEri Ogihara
SecondMiki Hayashi
Eri Ogihara
BornEri Ogihara
(2003-02-12) February 12, 2003 (age 22)
Japan
Team
SkipHonoka Sasaki
FourthEri Ogihara
SecondMiki Hayashi
LeadYako Matsuzawa
Curling career
Member Association Japan
Other appearancesWorld University Games: 1 (2025),
World Junior Championships: 3 (2020, 2022, 2023),
World Junior-B Championships: 1 (2019 (Dec))
Medal record
Women's curling
Representing  Japan
World University Games
Gold medal – first place2025 Turin
World Junior Championships
Gold medal – first place2022 Jönköping
Silver medal – second place2023 Füssen

Eri Ogihara (born February 12, 2003, in Japan) is a Japanese female curler[1] from Karuizawa.[2]

At the age of 10, Ogihara began competitively curling, joining Ikue Kitazawa's junior team where they played in the 2014 Japan Women's Curling Championship. Ogihara then returned to the national women's championship in 2017, as lead for the Misato Yanagisawa rink. Ogihara found success in 2019 and started representing Japan at the world-level, playing third for the Sae Yamamoto rink, where they won the 2019 World Junior-B Curling Championships (Dec), qualifying themselves for the 2020 World Junior Curling Championships, where they finished 4th. After the World Juniors was cancelled in 2021, the Yamamoto rink returned to the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships, where they won the gold medal, beating Sweden's Moa Dryburgh 7–4 in the final, winning Japan's first ever World Junior Championship. Ogihara would return to the World Juniors in 2023, with the newly formed Yuina Miura rink, where they finished in second, losing to Scotland's Fay Henderson 9–7 in the final.

While going their separate ways after graduating to Women's play, Ogihara would join forces with Yuina Miura again in 2025, representing Japan as part of the team from Sapporo International University at the 2025 Winter World University Games. They won Japan's first gold medal in curling at the World University Games, beating South Korea's Kang Bo-bae rink 7–5 in the final.

Personal life

Teams

References

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