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Mizuki Noguchi : ウィキペディア英語版
Mizuki Noguchi


is a Japanese professional long-distance runner who specialises in the marathon event. She is an Olympic champion over the distance.
Initially starting out as a track and cross country athlete, her first major success was becoming the Asian cross country champion at age 21. She soon switched to road running, however, focusing on the half marathon. She won the individual and team silver medals at the 1999 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships, and won a second team silver with a fourth-place finish at the same competition in 2000.
A switch to the marathon event demonstrated her talents further: She won the Nagoya and Osaka Women's Marathons,〔Nakamura, Ken (2003-01-26). (Noguchi sets 2:21:18 course record and leads home sweep in Osaka ). IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-02-23.〕 and took the silver medal in the marathon at the 2003 World Championships in Athletics. Her good form continued and she became the Olympic champion in the marathon at the 2004 Athens Olympics. She won the Berlin Marathon the following year, setting world records at 25 km and 30 km along the way, and finishing with a personal best of 2:19:12 – a new Asian record for the distance.〔Wenig, Jörg (2005-09-25). (Noguchi breaks Asian record in Berlin Marathon ). IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-02-23.〕 The 25K world record was beaten by Mary Keitany of Kenya in 2010, who ran the distance in 1:19:53 hours.〔IAAF, May 9, 2010: (Kosgei, Keitany shatter 25Km World records in Berlin - Updated )〕
Before the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, Noguchi had set the second fastest time in the world for the previous year.〔(iaaf.org - 2007 Toplists marathon women ). IAAF. Retrieved on 2011-02-02.〕 However, she was ruled out of all competitions after tests revealed that she had fatigue and a muscular back problem.〔Broadbent, Rick (2008-08-10). (Olympic champion, Mizuki Noguchi, rushed to hospital ). ''The Times''. Retrieved on 2010-02-23.〕 She missed the Olympics and the entire 2009 and 2010 seasons as a result. She returned in November 2011 with a fifth-place finish at the Zevenheuvelenloop.〔van Hemert, Wim (2011-11-20). (Gebrselassie heads Ethiopian double in Nijmegen ). IAAF. Retrieved on 2011-11-21.〕 She tried to gain a spot on the 2012 Olympic team, but her run of 2:25:33 hours left her in sixth at the Nagoya Marathon.〔Nakamura, Ken (2012-03-11). (Mayorova steals the show in Nagoya, third time a charm for Ozaki - Report ). IAAF. Retrieved on 2012-03-20.〕 A return to Nagoya in 2013 brought her third place with a run of 2:24:05 hours.〔(Kizaki clinches World Championships berth with Nagoya victory as Noguchi returns ). IAAF (2013-03-10). Retrieved on 2013-03-17.〕
==Early career==
Noguchi was born in Kanagawa and 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 3000 m and the long-distance relay.
In 1997 she was hired by Wacoal, a maker of women's clothing, as part of their "Spark Angels" program of sponsored women athletes. 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.
Noguchi began 1999 by winning individual and team gold at the Asian Cross Country Championships, but after winning the Inuyama half marathon, 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. She also won a silver medal in the World Championships in Paris that year.
In 2005, as Globaly closed futures trade department and athletic team, Fujita and all his followers moved to Sysmex, a medical instruments manufacturer, in December.

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