Hiraiwa Yuna

(Redirected from Yuna Hiraiwa)

Hiraiwa Yuna (平岩 優奈, Hiraiwa Yūna, born 21 November 1998) is a Japanese artistic gymnast. She is the 2014 and 2021 Japanese national all-around bronze medalist and the 2014 Japanese balance beam champion. She was a member of the Japanese teams for the 2014 World Championships and the 2020 Summer Olympics.

Hiraiwa Yuna
平岩 優奈
Full nameHiraiwa Yuna
Country represented Japan
Born (1998-11-21) 21 November 1998 (age 25)
Nerima, Tokyo, Japan
HometownTokyo
DisciplineWomen's artistic gymnastics
LevelSenior international elite
Years on national team2014, 2020–present (JPN)
ClubToda Sports Club
Mukogawa Women's University
Mitsubishi Yowa Gymnastics
Head coach(es)Risa Toyoshima
Former coach(es)Kazukuni Ohno

Career edit

Junior edit

Hiraiwa made her international debut at the 2013 International Gymnix in Montreal, Canada. She finished twenty-first in the all-around, sixth on the balance beam, and fifth on the floor.[1]

Senior edit

2014 edit

Hiraiwa made her senior debut at the All-Japan Championships in May. She improved from her eighth-place finish in qualifications to earn the bronze medal behind Natsumi Sasada and Asuka Teramoto.[2] Hiraiwa then finished eleventh at the NHK Cup in June.[3] She captured the balance beam title at the All-Japan Event Championships in July.[4] As a result, Hiraiwa was named to the Japanese team for the World Championships alongside Sasada, Teramoto, Yu Minobe, Mai Murakami, and Wakana Inoue, where she was the youngest member. At the World Championships, Hiraiwa broke her right middle finger and metacarpal bone while training on the uneven bars and returned home to Japan for further examination and treatment; she was replaced by Azumi Ishikura.[5] Although she recovered from the hand injury, the overall experience of her sudden withdrawal caused her to suffer mental setbacks. Hiraiwa also suffered a series of injuries during the following years and described entering a "slump" in her career.[6]

2015 edit

Hiraiwa finished thirteenth in all-around qualifications at the All-Japan Championships, before going on to finish last in the final.[7] At the NHK Trophy a month later, which combined scores from All-Japan, she improved slightly to finish twenty-first.[8]

2016 edit

Hiraiwa began her season by competing on three events (excluding uneven bars) at the WOGA Classic in Frisco, Texas, winning the silver medal on the floor behind Canadian gymnast Shallon Olsen.[9] She then competed alongside Nagi Kajita and Sae Miyakawa at the International Gymnix in March, finishing sixth as a team. Individually, Hiraiwa was fifteenth in the all-around, seventh on the balance beam, and eighth on the floor exercise.[10] She missed the All-Japan Championships due to injury but recovered to compete on uneven bars and balance beam at the All-Japan Event Championships the following month.[6] She missed qualifying for the uneven bars final but reached the balance beam final in fifth place; she finished fourth in the final.[11]

2017 edit

Hiraiwa finished thirty-third in qualifications at the All-Japan Championships and did not advance to the final.[12] She competed only on the balance beam at the All-Japan Event Championships but did not advance to the final.[13] Competing for Mukogawa Women's University at the All-Japan Student Championships, Hiraiwa finished fifth in the all-around and won silvers on vault, balance beam, and floor exercise.[14] She competed on three events (excluding uneven bars) for Mukogawa Women's University at the All-Japan Team Championships to help the team finish fourteenth overall.[15]

2018 edit

Hiraiwa struggled at the All-Japan Championships, finishing fifty-fifth in qualification and failing to advance to the final for a second year in a row.[16] She competed on the balance beam and floor at the All-Japan Event Championships, qualifying in third for the balance beam and narrowly missing the floor final due to an out-of-bounds penalty. Hiraiwa captured the bronze medal behind Mai Murakami and Asuka Teramoto in the balance beam final, her first national medal since 2014.[17] She then competed on three events for Mukogawa Women's University at the All-Japan Team Championships, including the highest score on beam and second-highest score on floor, to help the team finish seventh overall.[18]

2019 edit

Following a career-worst finish at the 2018 All-Japan Championships, Hiraiwa transferred from her college team, where she was coached by Japanese national team head coach Kazukuni Ohno, to train with 1996 Olympian Risa Toyoshima (née Sugawara) at the Toda Sports Club.[19] She did not compete at the 2019 All-Japan Championships but returned to compete on the balance beam and floor at the All-Japan Event Championships in June. She placed twenty-first on the beam, but qualified in first place on the floor. However, Hiraiwa finished fifth in the floor final.[20]

Hiraiwa credits the transfer to Toyoshima for gradually helping her overcome her mental struggles and fear stemming from her 2014 injury. She stated that Toyoshima taught her "doing [her] own gymnastics is more important than the result" and that Toyoshima's guidance allowed her to replace her fear with the "joy of gymnastics" again.[19]

2020 edit

After the COVID-19 pandemic limited international competitive opportunities, Hiraiwa began the season at the All-Japan Senior Championships where she surprised to win silver behind Mai Murakami and ahead of Hitomi Hatakeda.[21] Hiraiwa finished only sixth at the All-Japan Championships in December due to issues on uneven bars resulting in a nineteenth-place finish during qualifications. However, she rebounded during the all-around final to tie Hatakeda for the second-highest score of the day behind Murakami.[22]

2021 edit

During the lead-up to the competition season, Hiraiwa experienced interruptions in her training due to the medical state of emergency induced by the COVID-19 pandemic in Japan.[19] She opened her season at the All-Japan Championships, where she finished third in both qualifications and the all-around final to win the bronze medal behind Mai Murakami and Hitomi Hatakeda. It was her first time on the all-around podium since capturing bronze in her senior debut seven years ago.[6] Hiraiwa then repeated her bronze medal performance at the NHK Trophy, again behind Murakami and Hatakeda, to secure one of the automatic berths on the Japanese Olympic team for the postponed 2020 Summer Olympics.[23] After being named to the team, she noted that she "liked gymnastics more [now]" and thanked her coach, Risa Toyoshima, for rekindling her motivation to pursue the Olympic team.[24] The Olympic Games were her first international competition since 2016, and she helped the Japanese team finish fifth by competing on the vault and balance beam in the team final.[25] After the Olympics, she competed at the World Championships and competed on the floor exercise. She qualified for the event final where she finished eighth.[26]

2022 edit

Hiraiwa finished seventh on the balance beam at the All-Japan Event Championships.[27]

Competitive history edit

Year Event Team AA VT UB BB FX
Junior
2013 International Gymnix   21 5
Senior
2014 All-Japan Championships  
NHK Cup 11
All-Japan Event Championships  
2015 All-Japan Championships 24
NHK Cup 21
2016 WOGA Classic  
International Gymnix 6 15 7 8
All-Japan Event Championships 4
2017 All-Japan Championships 33
All-Japan Student Championships 5      
All-Japan Team Championships 14
2018 All-Japan Championships 55
All-Japan Event Championships  
All-Japan Team Championships 7
2019 All-Japan Event Championships 5
2020 All-Japan Senior Championships  
All-Japan Championships 6
2021 All-Japan Championships  
NHK Cup  
Olympic Games 5
World Championships 8
2022 All-Japan Event Championships 7

References edit

  1. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (10 March 2013). "2013 International Gymnix Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  2. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (9 May 2014). "2014 All-Japan Championships Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  3. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (8 June 2014). "2014 NHK Trophy Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  4. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (6 July 2014). "2014 All-Japan Event Championships Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  5. ^ "世界選手権大会代表、平岩優奈選手の交代" [World Championship representative, Yuna Hiraiwa's replacement] (in Japanese). Japan Gymnastics Association. 27 September 2014. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  6. ^ a b c Matsubara, Takaomi (9 May 2021). "【体操代表最終選考】最年少代表から55位予選落ちまで低迷…平岩優奈の恐怖心を打ち消した「結果よりも大切なこと」とは" [[Gymnastics representatives final selection] Stagnation from the youngest representative to the 55th place qualifying failure...What is "more important than results" that counteracted the fear of Yuna Hiraiwa?]. Number (in Japanese). Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  7. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (7 May 2015). "2015 Japanese Championships Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  8. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (18 May 2015). "2015 NHK Trophy Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  9. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (17 February 2016). "2016 WOGA Classic Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  10. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (5 March 2016). "2016 International Gymnix Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  11. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (7 June 2016). "2016 All-Japan Event Championships Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  12. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (7 April 2017). "2017 All-Japan Championships Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  13. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (25 June 2017). "2017 All-Japan Event Championships Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  14. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (29 August 2017). "2017 All-Japan Student Championships Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  15. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (29 November 2017). "2017 All-Japan Team Championships Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  16. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (1 May 2018). "2018 All-Japan Championships Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  17. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (13 July 2018). "Japanese Teams Set for Worlds". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  18. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (27 November 2018). "2018 All-Japan Team Championships Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  19. ^ a b c "平岩優奈3位 苦難乗り越え7年ぶり全日本表彰台 初の五輪出場圏内" [Yuna Hiraiwa 3rd place, overcoming hardships to reach All-Japan podium for the first time in 7 years]. Daily Sports (in Japanese). 18 April 2021. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  20. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (26 June 2019). "2019 All-Japan Event Championships Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  21. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (8 December 2020). "Hiraiwa Looking to Prove Herself at All-Japan Championships". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  22. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (12 December 2020). "Murakami Breaks 57 to Win All-Japan Gold". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  23. ^ "Murakmai Mai lifts NHK Trophy to punch ticket to second Games". Olympic Channel. 15 May 2021. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  24. ^ Tsuburaya, Miki (15 May 2021). "「もっと体操が好きに」平岩優奈、7年ぶりに返り咲いた夢の舞台" ["I like gymnastics more" Yuna Hiraiwa, the stage of dreams that bloomed for the first time in 7 years]. Mainichi Shimbun (in Japanese). Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  25. ^ "Artistic Gymnastics: Women's Team Final – Results" (PDF). International Olympic Committee. Archived (PDF) from the original on 27 July 2021. Retrieved 27 July 2021.
  26. ^ "Gymnastics: Japan's Ashikawa, Murakami win world championships gold". Kyodo News. 24 October 2021. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  27. ^ Hopkins, Lauren (20 June 2022). "2022 All-Japan Event Championships Results". The Gymternet. Retrieved 16 May 2023.

External links edit