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Meet Japan's New National Hero Naoko Takahashi took up marathon running because it looked like fun. On Sunday, she won gold in Olympic-record time By KATE NOBLE in Sydney September 25, 2000 Web posted at 5:00 p.m. Hong Kong time, 5:00 a.m. EDT In the home of sumo wrestling, marathon running is big. So big that tiny Naoko Takahashi -- 163-cms and 47-kg -- has already become a national hero. She staked a claim for a place in the pantheon of Japanese sport with her gold medal-winning performance in Sunday's Olympic marathon. Not only did she win, but she recorded a new Olympic record time of two hours, 23 minutes, 14 seconds and scored Japan's first ever women's athletic gold. The 28-year-old, who took up the sport because "it looked like fun to me," had defeated the most competitive field to have sought Olympic gold since the women's event was introduced at the 1984 Los Angeles Games. Takahashi's main competition was to have come from two Kenyans, Tegla Loroupe and Joyce Chepchumba. As it turned out, it was Romania's Lidia Simon, who had taken bronze in last year's World Championships, who stayed with Takahashi when she broke from the field shortly before the 35-kilometer mark, and held on for the silver medal. Chepchumba, who spent most of the race looking round for Loroupe, her flatmate and training partner who trailed in 13th place, took the bronze.
Takahashi, who won the Asian Games marathon in 1998 and was hotly tipped for the Seville World Championships last year until injury ruled her out, told them: "I have been aiming for this victory for a very long time and I feel a little sad that I have reached my objective. Tomorrow," she added, "I will have to set my eyes on another goal." Today the tiny runner is the biggest thing in Japanese sport. More TIME Olympics 2000 coverage Chasing a Dream After 40 years, China wins its first Olympic men's gymnastic team title Photo Essay: From start to finish Pulling Their Weight: The first-ever Olympic women's weight lifting events put to rest the notion that some sports are unfeminine TIME at the Olympics TIME.com, TIMEasia.com, TIMEeurope.com and TIMEpacific.com bring you all the action and analysis at the Sydney 2000 Olympic games with our special site
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