Miho Takagi (speed skater)
Miho Takagi (高木 美帆, Takagi Miho, born 22 May 1994) is a Japanese speed skater. She has won a total of seven medals at the Olympics, two of them gold.
Career
[edit]At the age of 15, Takagi represented Japan at the 2010 Winter Olympics, finishing 35th in the women's 1000 metres and 23rd in the 1500 metres. In 2012 and 2013, she won the World Junior Speed Skating Championships.
After participating in several world cup and world championship events, she became a world champion when in the 2015 World Single Distance Championships she won the gold medal in the team pursuit where she participated together with her sister Nana Takagi and compatriot Ayaka Kikuchi.
In competition in Salt Lake City of 2017–18 ISU Speed Skating World Cup, she with Nana & Ayano Sato won women's team pursuit with the world record of 2 minutes & 50.87 seconds.
In the 2018 Olympics, Takagi won the silver medal in the women's 1500-metre speed skating event and the bronze medal in the women's 1000-metre speed skating event. Takagi was also part of the Nippon team that won the 2018 Olympics women's team pursuit with a time of 2 minutes & 53.89 seconds, the Olympic record & the sea-level world best.[1]
She won the women's competition at the 2018 World Allround Speed Skating Championships.
In the 2017–18 world cup, the Nippon team she was part of won all women's team pursuit competitions of the world cup & became a 3-continuous-season overall world cup winner in the pursuit & she became overall winner in women's 1500 metres & allround.
She finished second in the 2019 World Allround Speed Skating Championships.
Takagi set a world record in the women's 1500 meters in 2019 with a time of 1:49.83 in Salt Lake City, Utah.[2]
At 2022 Winter Olympics, Takagi earned three silver medals in 1500m, 500m, and team pursuit. At the point when she earned her third medal in the 2022 games, which was her sixth overall, she became the Japanese female athlete with the biggest number of Olympic medals earned, surpassing three other athletes, Miya Tachibana and Miho Takeda in synchronized swimming, and Ryoko Tani in Judo, all of those who have earned 5 Olympic medals each in summer games. Takagi also won her second Olympic gold, and the first one in an individual event, in 1000m with a new Olympic record time of 1:13:19.
Personal records
[edit]Distance | Result | Date | Location |
---|---|---|---|
500 m | 37.12 | 13 February 2022 | Beijing National Speed Skating Oval, Beijing |
1000 m | 1:11.71 | 9 March 2019 | Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake City |
1500 m | 1:49.83 | 10 March 2019 | Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake City |
3000 m | 3:55.45 | 10 December 2021 | Olympic Oval, Calgary |
5000 m | 7:01.97 | 6 March 2022 | Hamar Olympic Hall, Hamar |
She is currently in 2nd position in the adelskalender.[3]
Olympic Games
[edit]7 medals – (2 gold, 4 silver, 1 bronze)
Event | 500 m | 1000 m | 1500 m | 3000 m | 5000 m | Team pursuit |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010 Vancouver | — | 35th | 23rd | — | — | — |
2018 Pyeongchang | — | Bronze | Silver | 5th | — | Gold |
2022 Beijing | Silver | Gold | Silver | 6th | — | Silver |
See also
[edit]- List of world records in speed skating
- World record progression 1500 m speed skating women
- World record progression team pursuit speed skating women
- List of Olympic records in speed skating
- List of multiple Olympic medalists at a single Games
References
[edit]- ^ Fielding, Gus (22 February 2018), "Miho Takagi overjoyed after claiming coveted gold medal in team pursuit", The Japan Times, archived from the original on 26 April 2019, retrieved 22 February 2018
- ^ "Miho Takagi achieves world record in 1500 meters", The Japan Times, 11 March 2019
- ^ "Adelskalender Small Combination Women". severtstenlund.se. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
External links
[edit]- Miho Takagi at the International Skating Union
- Miho Takagi in SpeedSkatingBase.eu (archived)
- Miho Takagi at SpeedSkatingNews.info
- Miho Takagi at SpeedSkatingStats.com
- Miho Takagi at Olympics.com
- Miho Takagi at Olympedia
- Articles with short description
- 1994 births
- Japanese female speed skaters
- Speed skaters at the 2010 Winter Olympics
- Speed skaters at the 2018 Winter Olympics
- Speed skaters at the 2022 Winter Olympics
- Olympic speed skaters for Japan
- Speed skaters at the 2011 Asian Winter Games
- Speed skaters at the 2017 Asian Winter Games
- Medalists at the 2011 Asian Winter Games
- Medalists at the 2017 Asian Winter Games
- Asian Games medalists in speed skating
- Asian Games gold medalists for Japan
- Asian Games bronze medalists for Japan
- Speed skaters from Hokkaido
- Winter World University Games medalists in speed skating
- Living people
- Medalists at the 2018 Winter Olympics
- Medalists at the 2022 Winter Olympics
- Olympic medalists in speed skating
- Olympic gold medalists for Japan
- Olympic silver medalists for Japan
- Olympic bronze medalists for Japan
- World Allround Speed Skating Championships medalists
- World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships medalists
- World Sprint Speed Skating Championships medalists
- FISU World University Games gold medalists for Japan
- Competitors at the 2013 Winter Universiade
- 21st-century Japanese sportswomen