Miya Tachibana - Hall Of Fame Synchronized (Artistic) Swimmer

Miya Tachibana (JPN)
2011 SYNCHRONIZED (ARTISTIC) SWIMMER
BirthplaceOtsu, Shiga Current City
CountryJapan FlagJapan
Birthplace:Otsu, Shiga
Current City:
Country:Japan
Flag:Japan
Birth Date:
// CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
  • Competed in three Olympic Games (1996, 2000, 2004), earning a total of four medals.
  • Competed in four World Championships (1994, 1998, 2001, 2003), winning gold in duet in 2001.
  • Collected five medals across two FINA World Cup events.
  • Won five gold medals in three Asian Games.
  • Won a total of 22 Japanese National Championship titles, including 10 solo.
// RECORDS
  • Japan's most decorated Olympic and World Championship synchronized swimmer of all time.
  • Miya and her teammate, Miho Takeda, became only the second duo ever to medal in successive Olympic Games in duet.
// MEDALS & AWARDS
  • 1996 Olympic Games: Bronze (team)
  • 2000 Olympic Games: Silver (team)
  • 2004 Olympic Games: Silver (duet), Silver (team)
  • 1994 World Championships: Silver (duet), Bronze (team)
  • 1998 World Championships: Silver (duet), Silver (team), Bronze (solo)
  • 2001 World Championships: Gold (duet), Bronze (solo)
  • 2003 World Championships: Silver (duet), Silver (team)
  • 1999 FINA World Cup: Silver (duet), Silver (team), Bronze (solo)
  • 2002 FINA World Cup: Silver (solo), Silver (duet)
  • 1994 Asian Games: Gold (duet)
  • 1998 Asian Games: Gold (solo), Gold (duet)
  • 2002 Asian Games: Gold (solo), Gold (duet)
  • 22 Japan National Championships: Gold (22 solo, 12 duet)
  • Re­ceived the FINA Prize for her outstanding performances in 1998
// BIO

Miya Tachibana grew up in Otsu, Shiga, Japan loving the water so much that by the fourth grade, she was competing in synchronized swimming. By high school, she was winning the Junior World Cham­pionships.

Following in the footsteps of her Hall of Fame predeces­sor, Mikako Kotani, she became one of the world's most successful synchronized swimmers, and Japan's most decorated Olympic and World Championship synchronized swimmer of all time.

At three Asian Games, she won all gold medals in solo and duet. At three World Championships, from 1994 to 2003, she placed second in duet. Following the 1998 Perth World Championships, Miya re­ceived the FINA Prize for her outstanding performances that year.

Competing in three Olympic Games, she won four medals. Her Olympic performances began in 1996 in Atlanta, with Japan winning the bronze med­al in the team event, the only synchronized swimming event of the Atlanta Games. Four years later in Sydney, she and teammate Miho Takeda won the silver medal in duet, less than one point behind the Russian duo of Hall of Famer's Olga Brusnikina and Maria Kisseleva.

Miya and Miho repeated the silver-medal wins four years later in Athens, the only duo to medal in suc­cessive Olympic Games after the Josephson twins in 1988 and 1992. Japan continued in the silver medal count for the Team Event in both 2000 and 2004. At Japan's National Championships, Miya won 22 national titles, ten of them solo.