HASHIOKA Yuki
Events and Medals
| Discipline | Event | Rank | Medal |
|---|---|---|---|
Athletics |
Men's Long Jump | 6 |
Schedule
Change
| Start Time | Location | Event | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Olympic Stadium - Long Jump A |
Finished |
||
| Olympic Stadium - Long Jump A |
Finished |
Biographical Information
Highlights
:
World Athletics Championships
Asian Games
Asian Championships
World Athletics Continental Tour - Ten best performances since 2020
World Challenge - Ten best performances since 2020
World Junior Championships
Legend
SF - Semifinal, QF - Quarterfinal, 1R - 1st Round, Qual. - Qualification, QR - Qualification Round, DNF - Did Not Finish, DNS - Did Not Start, DQ - Disqualified, NM - No Mark, [Relay athlete without time] - Did not run in final
| Year | Location | Long Jump |
|---|---|---|
| 2019 | Doha, QAT | 8th (7.97) |
Asian Games
| Year | Location | Long Jump |
|---|---|---|
| 2018 | Indonesia | 4th (8.05) |
Asian Championships
| Year | Location | Long Jump |
|---|---|---|
| 2019 | Doha, QAT | 1st (8.22) |
World Athletics Continental Tour - Ten best performances since 2020
| Rank | Year | Event | Competition | Location | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2021 | Long Jump | World Athletics Continental Tour | Tokyo, JPN | 8.07 |
| 1 | 2020 | Long Jump | World Athletics Continental Tour | Tokyo, JPN | 7.96 |
World Challenge - Ten best performances since 2020
| Rank | Year | Event | Competition | Location | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | 2019 | Long Jump | World Challenge | Osaka, JPN | 7.80 |
| 3 | 2018 | Long Jump | World Challenge | Osaka, JPN | 7.83 |
| 6 | 2017 | Long Jump | World Challenge | Kawasaki, JPN | 7.90 |
World Junior Championships
| Year | Location | Long Jump |
|---|---|---|
| 2018 | Tampere, FIN | 1st (8.03) |
Legend
SF - Semifinal, QF - Quarterfinal, 1R - 1st Round, Qual. - Qualification, QR - Qualification Round, DNF - Did Not Finish, DNS - Did Not Start, DQ - Disqualified, NM - No Mark, [Relay athlete without time] - Did not run in final
:
Fishing, gaming. (sports.jp.fujitsu.com, 06 Apr 2021)
:
Athlete, Office Worker, Student
:
Sports Science - Nihon University, Tokyo, JPN
:
Japanese
:
Fujitsu [Japan]
:
Daichi Sawana [club], JPN; Masaki Morinaga [personal], JPN
:
His father Toshiyuki has represented Japan in athletics, and placed 38th at the 1993 World Championships in Stuttgart, Germany, while his mother Naomi has competed in hurdles and triple jump at national level in Japan. His uncle Daisuke Watanabe represented Japan in long jump at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, and has served as Hashioka's coach. His aunt Miyuki Sasakawa has competed in athletics at junior national level in Japan. His cousins Daiki Hashioka and Kazuki Hashioka have played football in Japan, with Daiki playing for the Urawa Red Diamonds in the J1 League. (news.yahoo.co.jp, 02 Jan 2020; jaaf.or.jp, 26 Mar 2018; nikkansports.com, 23 Jun 2018; sports-tokyo.info, 16 Mar 2017; joc.or.jp, 13 Sep 2000; olympicchannel.com, 23 Feb 2019; rikujyokyogi.co.jp, 10 Aug 2018; SportsDeskOnline, 10 Aug 2020)
:
He suffered an injury to his left heel in May 2019. (sponichi.co.jp, 24 May 2019)
In 2017 he tore a muscle in his hamstring and was sidelined for about six weeks, which included missing the 2017 World University Games in Taipei City, Chinese Taipei. (jaaf.or.jp, 26 Mar 2018)
In 2017 he tore a muscle in his hamstring and was sidelined for about six weeks, which included missing the 2017 World University Games in Taipei City, Chinese Taipei. (jaaf.or.jp, 26 Mar 2018)
:
He began athletics during middle school in Saitama, Japan, and took up long jump in grade 10 of high school. (jaaf.or.jp, 23 Mar 2018; nikkansports.com, 23 Jun 2018; number.bunshun.jp, 23 Jan 2020)
:
He had to join a sports team at middle school, so he chose athletics after being encouraged by his family. He focused on long jump after entering high school where his uncle, Japanese long jumper Daisuke Watanabe, served as a coach. (jaaf.or.jp, 23 Mar 2018)
:
To win a medal at the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, to set a national record in long jump, and to win a gold medal at the 2024 Games in Paris. (sports.jp.fujitsu.com, 06 Apr 2021; number.bunshun.jp, 23 Jan 2020)
:
He includes basketball as part of his training in order to improve his judgement in different situations. He also includes shot put training to increase his explosive muscle strength. (fujitv.co.jp, 01 Dec 2019)
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His parents. (jaaf.or.jp, 26 Mar 2018)
:
He received a Rookie Award at the 2018 Japan Association of Athletics Federations [JAAF] Athletics Awards in Japan. (jita-trackfield.jp, 17 Dec 2018)
Legend
- :
- Gold Medal Event
- :
- Silver Medal Event
- :
- Bronze Medal Event
Timing and scoring provided by OMEGA. Results powered by Atos
Japan
Athletics
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