Skip to main content

The One and Only Yoko Shibui

http://www.business-i.jp/news/sou-page/news/200808020012a.nwc

translated by Brett Larner and Mika Tokairin

Beijing Olympics Women's 10000 m Team Member Yoko Shibui

"I Genuinely Want to Win"

She's had many great records and many failures, but it's all in the past for Yoko Shibui. It's not that she won a spot on the Beijing Olympics women's 10000 m team but rather that she finally found the true athlete's state of mind. "I am hungry to win these days. This year especially I've found myself always thinking, 'I want to win, I want to win, I want to win!' People probably think I've always been a passionate person, but it's not true. I think that I probably didn't use to really have the drive to win, but now I do. This means that in Beijing I will be shooting to take down some big names."

Here in front of me is the newborn Shibui. What gets her going is not the existence of rivals or the reputations of others. It's beating herself, a new state of mind in which she has just arrived. "So...I'm really looking forward to the Beijing Olympics. If I have a 100% performance I'm sure something will come out of it."

What changed Shibui? "Well, that, yeah. The marathon I, you know, did. After that I started to think about my career and how much longer I can be a competitive athlete, and I began to understand some things about what's left for me. If I hadn't experienced that race I wouldn't be here. Everything started after Tokyo last November."

Shibui is no longer the wild and naive girl of old. Now she's got the heart of a mature woman athlete. In the past, she always failed in important competitions. In the Athens Olympics selection race, the 2004 Osaka International Women's Marathon, she was 9th, and in 2007 at the selection race for the Osaka World Track and Field Championships, also held at the Osaka International Women's Marathon, she was 10th. The bottom came at the 2007 Tokyo International Women's Marathon Shibui was supposed to run a much-anticipated duel against Mizuki Noguchi, but just before the 30 km she fell away from the lead pack and finished in 7th with a personal worst time, ending her hopes to run in the Beijing Olympics as a marathoner. "That loss changed everything."

In June she won the Japanese National Track and Field Championships 10000 m, sealing her ticket to Beijing. In Kunming, China, Shibui is now in the last phase of her training for the 10000 m. She will go to Beijing on the 13th. "For me, 10000 m is just a point along the way in training for the marathon, but I always feel like I want to become a runner who can be competitive at both."

Shibui's training has included running all-out on a 100 m downhill cross-country course to learn how to improve her leg turnover. I asked her to show me her secret weapon, her legs. "No, no, no, no! I don't have much confidence about my body. I have a huge body self-image complex," she laughed as she pulled her legs up against her body and hid them with her arms.

Over a hundred of Shibui`s relatives, friends and colleagues will be in Beijing to support her. Mitsui Sumitomo Kaijo president Yoshiaki Hata commented, "I want to see Shibui finish shouting with enthusiasm." Shibui herself offered her vision of the Beijing 10000 m. "In the race I want the god of track and field to come to me." Under the Beijing sky, the newly grown-up Shibui is sure to get her medal.

Comments

Most-Read This Week

Takeshi Soh Reflects on 54 Years in the Sport on His Retirement as Asahi Kasei Head Coach

After 54 years at the Asahi Kasei corporate team, first as athlete and then as coach, Takeshi Soh will retire at the end of this month. Together with his twin brother Shigeru Soh they formed a duo who were icons of the Japanese marathoning world and went all the way to the Olympics. After retiring from competition Takeshi devoted himself to coaching young athletes and came to play a primary role in the leadership of Japanese long distance. His list of achievements is long, and so is the list of those he influenced and inspired. His twin Shigeru was chosen for three Olympic teams in the marathon, Montreal in 1976, Moscow in 1980 and Los Angeles in 1984. Takeshi was named to the Moscow and Los Angeles teams, placing 4th in L.A. to confirm his position as one of the greatest names in the sport in that era. After becoming a coach the twins helped lead Hiromi Taniguchi to gold at the 1991 Tokyo World Championships, Koichi Morishita to silver a year later at the Barcelona Olympics, and o...

Evaluating the Japan Marathon Championship Series IV Awards

  The JAAF held the award ceremony for its Japan Marathon Championship Series IV last night in Tokyo, the whole thing streamed live on Youtube. The two-year series, in this case running from April, 2023 to March, 2025, scores marathoners on time and place in domestic races and high-level international races, with athletes' two best performances combining to give them their series rankings. Series winners score guaranteed places on the 2025 Tokyo World Championships team , with the top 8 women and men earning prize money: 1st: Â¥6,000,000 (~$40,000 USD) 2nd: Â¥3,000,000 (~$20,000) 3rd: Â¥1,000,000 (~$6,700) 4th: Â¥800,000 (~$5,300) 5th: Â¥700,000 (~$4,700) 6th: Â¥500,000 (~$3,300) 7th: Â¥300,000 (~$2,000) 8th: Â¥200,000 (~$1,300) Points for time are scored according to World Athletics scoring tables, with placing points based on races' designated level. Given the JAAF's financial interests in the big domestic races and the income stream from their TV broadcasts, the scoring system ...

Weekend Road and Track Roundup

A roundup of the main road and track action on the last weekend of Japan's 2024-25 academic and fiscal year: Doubling off a 2:07:06 PB at the Tokyo Marathon 4 weeks ago, Tatsuya Maruyama took bronze at the Asian Marathon Championships in Jiaxing, China in 2:11:56. Gold went to North Korea's Il Ryong Han in a breakaway 2:11:18, with silver medalist Tianyu Chen of China just ahead of Maruyama in 2:11:50. Japan's Shungo Yokota was a distant 4th in 2:14:00, with Japan-based Mongolian NR holder Ser-Od Bat-Ochir 6th in 2:15:14. Japanese women Kaede Kawamura and Natsumi Matsushita were 5th and 6th in 2:31:26 and 2:34:40, with medals going to China's Bing Wu , gold in 2:26:01, North Korea's Kwang-Ok Ri , silver right behind her in 2:26:07, and defending gold medalist Khishigsaikhan Galbadrakh landing in bronze this time in 2:28:56, her third sub-2:29 performance so far in 2025. Back home, four men broke 2:20 at the Fukui Sakura Marathon . Ko Kobayashi from the Shi...