Mayuko Hagiwara
Mayuko Hagiwara (2015) | |
To person | |
---|---|
Nickname | Hagi |
Date of birth | October 16, 1986 |
nation | Japan |
discipline | Road / rail (endurance) |
To the team | |
Current team | Eneicat-RBH Global |
function | driver |
Most important successes | |
Last updated: February 2, 2020 |
Mayuko Hagiwara ( Japanese 萩 原 麻由 子 , Hagiwara Mayuko ; born October 16, 1986 in Maebashi , Gunma Prefecture ) is a Japanese cyclist who primarily competes in road races .
Athletic career
Mayuko Hagiwara graduated from the Kanoya Sports University ( National Institute of Fitness and Sports in Kanoya ). Then she was signed by the Cycle Base Asahi Racing Team . In 2005 she became Asian runner-up in scratch on the track . In the following time she started mainly on the road.
In 2006 Hagiwara won the road race at the Asian Games . In 2012 she started in the street race of the Olympic Games in London , which she could not finish. By 2016 she had won a total of eleven national titles, in road racing and in the individual time trial , which she won five times in a row.
Hagiwara has been driving for the British team Wiggle High5 since 2013 ( Wiggle Honda until 2015 ). In 2015 she finished on the podium at the UCI races Gooik-Geraardsbergen-Gooik and GP Plumelec . At the Giro d'Italia Femminile , she became the first Japanese woman to win a stage in the history of the race. At the Madrid Challenge by La Vuelta she fell and broke her collarbone, which is why she was unable to compete in the World Road Championships in Richmond . In the spring, she had broken several ribs in a fall during the Tour of Chongming Island .
In 2016 Hagiwara became Asian champion in her specialty, the individual time trial. Although she also won the individual time trial at the Asian Championships , she was, to her great disappointment, not nominated by the Japan Cycling Federation for the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro . The only starting place in Japan was awarded to road champion Eri Yonamine .
successes
- 2005
- 2006
- Asian game winner - street race
- Tour de Okinawa
- 2008
- 2009
- 2010
- Asian Championship - Individual Time Trial
- Japanese champion - road race, individual time trial
- 2011
- 2012
- 2014
- 2015
- Asian Championship - Individual Time Trial
- a stage Tour de Bretagne Féminin
- a stage of the Giro d'Italia Femminile
- Japanese champion - road race
- 2016
- Asian Champion - Individual Time Trial
- Asian Championship - Road Race
Teams
- 2013 Wiggle Honda
- 2014 Wiggle Honda
- 2015 Wiggle Honda
- 2016 Wiggle High5
- 2017 Wiggle High5
- 2018 Alé Cipollini
- 2019 Eneicat
- 2020 Eneicat-RBH Global
Web links
- Mayuko Hagiwara in the database of Radsportseiten.net
- Mayuko Hagiwara in the ProCyclingStats.com database
- Mayuko Hagiwara in the Sports-Reference database (English; archived from the original )
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Mayuko Hagiwara. In: Wiggle High5 Pro Cycling. October 16, 1986, accessed November 1, 2016 .
- ^ First Japanese stage win at the Giro Donne by Mayuko Hagiwara. In: radsportseiten.net. Retrieved November 1, 2016 .
- ↑ Mayuko Hagiwara Makes History with First Ever Japanese Giro Win. In: Total Women's Cycling. July 10, 2015, accessed November 1, 2016 .
- ↑ Laura Weislo: Yonamine wins fight to represent Japan at Olympic Games. In: Cyclingnews. June 29, 2016, accessed November 1, 2016 .
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Hagiwara, Mayuko |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | 萩 原 麻由 子 (Japanese) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Japanese cyclist |
DATE OF BIRTH | October 16, 1986 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Maebashi , Gunma Prefecture |