Writer Profile

Yoichiro Kuriyama
Other : Partner, TMI AssociatesOther : Director, Office of Legal Affairs, The Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic GamesFaculty of Law Graduated2000 Law

Yoichiro Kuriyama
Other : Partner, TMI AssociatesOther : Director, Office of Legal Affairs, The Tokyo Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic GamesFaculty of Law Graduated2000 Law
I attended a combined elementary, junior high, and high school for boys in Tokyo. Since both of my parents had graduated from ÎçÒ¹¾ç³¡, I had been singing "Wakaki-chi" at ÎçÒ¹¾ç³¡-Waseda games since I was in elementary school and vaguely assumed I would go to ÎçÒ¹¾ç³¡. While I spent my days from elementary through high school immersed in soccer, I became interested in how lawyers overseas act as agents for athletes, and I entered the Department of Law in the Faculty of Law with the goal of becoming a lawyer in the future.
After passing the bar exam, I joined my current law firm. After six or seven years as a lawyer, I wanted to systematically study "Sports Law," which was not very well known in Japan, and see how sports lawyers overseas work. In 2013, I majored in sports law at a law school in the UK, studying cases such as European soccer and the 2012 London Olympics.
Subsequently, I spent time at the Royal Spanish Football Federation, The Football Association (England), and the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA), where I was able to experience firsthand the importance of legal affairs in sports and the role of lawyers in sports governing bodies. In European sports organizations, the Office of Legal Affairs is a permanent fixture, and a significant number of lawyers belong to legal and other departments. They are proactively involved from the planning stage in designing systems and rules for competitions and organizations, as well as building the structures for events. Furthermore, there are many cases where lawyers are active as members of management, and compared to the Japanese sports world, many more lawyers are active in various capacities.
In Japanese society, which has become a mature society, sports are expected to provide people with new richness and enjoyment as many people get involved by "playing," "watching," and "supporting" them. Currently, based on my experience in Europe, I provide legal advice on sports business, governance, and compliance to sports organizations (governing bodies, leagues, clubs/teams, and promoters). I hope to continue contributing to the development of sports in Japan by being involved in the design and construction of systems and rules¡ªconsidering not only legal compliance but also the public nature of sports, social demands on sports, and the interests of a wide range of stakeholders¡ªwhile striving for the optimization of each sport as a whole, whether professional or amateur.
*Affiliations and titles are as of the time of publication.