From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mizuki Noguchi (Japanese:
野口みずき, born July 3, 1978) is a long-distance athlete
(track and field) from Japan. She was born
in Kanagawa, but grew up in Ise in Ise city in Mie. She started competing in track and field
during her first year of middle school. While attending Ujiyamada
Commercial High School, she entered the national high school track
meet and competed in the 3000m and the long-distance relay.
Noguchi was the leader of Japan's women's marathon team in the
2008 summer Olympics in Beijing.
In 1997 she was hired by Wacoal, a maker of women's clothing, as part of
their "Spark Angels" program of sponsored women athletes. However,
in October of the following year the director, Nobuyuki Fujita
(藤田信之), left over differences with the company. He took with him a
coach and a few athletes, including Noguchi. While she was
receiving unemployment benefits for a short time, she remained
active athletically. In February 1999, Fujita and all his followers
were hired by Globaly, a commodity futures firm.
After winning the Inuyama half-marathon in
1999, she was inspired to concentrate her efforts on that event.
She was ranked second in the world that year, and in 2001 she won
in the all-Japan corporate league. With a string of victories, she
became known as "Queen of the Half Marathon". Continuing through
the Miyazaki Women's Road
Race competition in January 2004, she competed in 24 half
marathons, and won 14 of them. Only twice was she beaten by another
Japanese athlete.
In March 2002 she entered her first full marathon, the Nagoya International Women's
Marathon, and won. In January 2003 she won the Osaka International Women's Marathon with a time
of 2 hours 21 minutes 18 seconds, the second-fastest on record for
Japan.
In 2005, as Globaly closed futures trade department and athletic
team, Fujita and all his followers moved to Sysmex, an analysis
instruments manufacturer, in December.
2004 Olympic Marathon
Champion
On 22 August 2004 in Athens, Greece, Mizuki Noguchi became an
Olympic Marathon Champion when she won the gold medal in an epic
race of Homeric proportions, full of drama. To secure the gold
medal Noguchi overcame a top-class field which included world
record holder Paula Radcliffe of Great Britain, and
the 2003 world champion Catherine Ndereba of Kenya. The race
over the Classic course had begun with temperatures exceeding
95-degree (35°C) and a leading pack of 12 stayed together through
halfway in 1 hour 14 minutes. Noguchi made her move on the tough
uphill section between the 25-kilometer (15.5 miles) and
30-kilometer (18.6 miles) marks. When she reached the 30-kilometer
sign, after running the previous 5 kilometers in just under 17
minutes, she had a 26-second lead on Elfenesh Alemu of Ethiopia and
a 32-second lead on Radcliffe, Heading into the streets of downtown
Athens, Noguchi used her bouncing stride to hold off Catherine
Ndereba, who closed the gap over the final 5 kilometers but could
not make up the difference. Noguchi won in 2 hours 26 minutes 20
seconds. Ndereba finished 12 seconds behind Noguchi. Deena Kastor of the
United States took the bronze at 2:27:20.
Prize
history
In the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, she won the gold medal in the Women's
Marathon event at 2:26:20.
She also won a silver medal in the World
Championships 2003 in Paris.
Current
events
On September 25, 2005 Noguchi won the Berlin Marathon, which was her first
big competition since winning the gold medal in Athens over a year
ago. Four years ago, the Berlin Marathon was won by Naoko
Takahashi, the Japanese runner who took the Olympic gold medal
in Sydney in 2000. Takahashi's remarkable win in 2001 in Berlin
marked the first time in history that a woman ran sub-2:20,
clocking in at 2 hours, 19 minutes and 46 seconds. Noguchi improved
on Takahashi's time by more than half-a minute, winning the 2005
Marathon in 2:19:12. Noguchi's time set three new records: the
Berlin Marathon course record, the Japanese record, and the Asian
record.
After the victory, she declared:
|
“ |
I am happy about my
victory and the three records – the Japanese record, the Asian
record and the course record. The course is really flat and nice to
run. The slight ups and downs helped me to find my rhythm. My coach
told me not to worry about split times. I have to thank the
fabulous spectators, who cheered me all the way to the finish. I am
so happy to have run here. [...] I saw a lot of churches and quite
old buildings. But I also saw very nice shops and everywhere
people. The race was good, only at 35 km my feet started to
get heavy. But I thought of my training and I grit my teeth. |
” |
External
links