Japanese speedskater Miho Takagi announces retirement at season's end

Miho Takagi, Japan's most decorated Winter Olympian with 10 medals, announced on Wednesday that she will retire from competition at the end of the season. The 31-year-old speedskater described the World Championships in Heerenveen, Netherlands, starting Thursday, as "a turning point of my skating life" on Instagram.

Takagi debuted at the Olympics at age 15 in Vancouver 2010, missed Sochi 2014, then won three medals including team pursuit gold at Pyeongchang 2018. At Beijing 2022, she earned four medals highlighted by 1,000m gold and 1,500m silver, motivating her to chase 1,500m gold.

Last month at the Milano Cortina Olympics, she took bronze in the 1,000m, 500m, and team pursuit but finished sixth in the 1,500m.

An exceptional all-rounder from sprints to distances, she boasts 38 individual World Cup wins—the most by any Japanese skater—and holds the 1,500m world record of 1:49.83.

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Kaori Sakamoto dominating the short program at the NHK Trophy, performing a graceful spin on the ice in a sparkling costume.
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Kaori Sakamoto dominates short program at final NHK Trophy

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Three-time world champion Kaori Sakamoto dominated the short program on Friday, putting herself in prime position to defend her title at what she says will be her final NHK Trophy. Sakamoto said in June she will retire from competition after next year’s Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics. Skating to a season-best 77.05, she led by almost 10 points over Kazakhstan’s Sofia Samodelkina.

At the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics, Japan's Miho Takagi secured a bronze medal in the women's 1,000-meter speed skating event. She clocked a time of 1 minute 13.95 seconds, marking her third consecutive medal in the discipline following a gold in Beijing and her eighth Olympic medal overall.

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At the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics, Miho Takagi of Japan secured bronze in the women's 500-meter speed skating event. This marks her ninth career Olympic medal across four Games. Gold went to Femke Kok of the Netherlands.

American Alysa Liu claimed gold in the women's singles figure skating at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics, upstaging Japanese rivals Kaori Sakamoto for silver and Ami Nakai for bronze, with Mone Chiba in fourth. Liu, returning after retiring post-Beijing 2022, scored a career-best 226.79 points in a near-flawless free skate.

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Japan's team held a disbanding ceremony in Tokyo after securing a record 24 medals at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics. Japanese Olympic Committee President Seiko Hashimoto praised the athletes' historic achievements, while delegation head Hidehito Ito detailed the results.

Japan's Mari Fukada won gold in the women's snowboard slopestyle event at the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics on Wednesday. This marks Japan's fifth gold medal of the Games, matching the country's best Winter Olympics result from the 1998 Nagano Games. New Zealand's Zoi Sadowski-Synnott, the 2022 champion, took silver, while Fukada's compatriot Kokomo Murase earned bronze.

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Japan fell just short in its comeback bid for gold in the figure skating team event at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics, settling for silver behind the United States. Ilia Malinin's performance in the men's free skate secured the win for the U.S., with Italy taking bronze. Japanese skaters delivered standout efforts throughout the competition.

 

 

 

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