Tokyo Olympics: 13-year-old Japanese Olympic skateboarder Momiji Nishiya bags Gold

At just 13 years of age, skateboarder Momiji Nishiya of Japan has become one of the youngest gold medal winners ever at the Olympic Games.

Momiji Nishiya of Japan just became one of the youngest gold medal winners ever, Image credit: Twitter
By Amruth Kalidas | Jul 27, 2021 | 2 Min Read follow icon Follow Us

On a scorching afternoon in Tokyo, a pair of 13-year-old skateboarders turned the world’s biggest sporting event into their own personal playground. They darted around the park, hopped over obstacles and grinded down rails in a show of skill and youthful exuberance. At 13 years old, skateboarder Momiji Nishiya of Japan just became one of the youngest gold medal winners ever at the Olympic Games. The other girl standing by her side on the podium were also teenagers.

Nishiya took home the gold in the women’s street skateboard competition. The sport debuted in Tokyo for the very first time. It sealed her nation’s fate as the current dominating force in skateboarding, following a win by Yuto Horigome in the men’s competition the day prior.

NISHIYA AND LEAL SHOW HOW ITS DONE

Nishiya landed her final three tricks and was awarded big scores to beat out Rayssa Leal of Brazil, also just 13. More than half of the women in the final competition were in their teens — Funa Nakayama of Japan, who clinched the bronze medal, is the eldest medal winner at 16. Both Nishiya and Leal are now the youngest ever medalists in their countries. 

“I welled up in tears because I was beyond happy,” Nishiya said after her win, which took place in an empty sports park. 

“It’s not right to think, well you have to study, you can’t go skating because skating is for boys,” Leal told Reuters. “I think skateboarding is for everyone.” 

The youngest gold medalist ever was Marjorie Gestring, who dominated the women’s diving competition at the 1936 Berlin Games at age 13 years and 268 days. Nishiya is approaching her 14th birthday. 

“I want more rivals, which will make skating more fun,” Nakayama said. 

Many of the skaters shared a similar idealogy, they want girls to see that anyone can skate. 

“For a long time, there were way fewer females doing this,” Team USA’s Alexis Sablone, who placed fourth, told Reuters. “It’s taken until now for enough people to pay attention, to get enough eyes on it, to inspire more girls around the world to start skating.”