Chinatsu Mori
Japanese shot putter
Chinatsu Mori (森 千夏, Mori Chinatsu) (May 20, 1980 in Edogawa, Tokyo – August 9, 2006 in Tokyo) was a Japanese shot putter. Her personal best throw is 18.22 metres, achieved in April 2004 in Hamamatsu. This is the current Japanese record.[1]
She won the silver medal at the 2000 Asian Championships and the bronze medal at the 2003 Asian Championships. In addition she competed at the 2003 World Championships and the 2004 Olympic Games without reaching the final round. Mori died of appendix cancer on August 9, 2006, aged 26.
International competitions
Year | Competition | Venue | Position | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1999 | Asian Junior Championships | Singapore | 3rd | 15.06 m |
2000 | Asian Championships | Jakarta, Indonesia | 2nd | 16.38 m |
2002 | Asian Games | Busan, South Korea | 5th | 16.93 m |
2003 | World Championships | Paris, France | 20th (q) | 16.86 m |
Asian Championships | Manila, Philippines | 3rd | 17.80 m | |
2004 | Olympic Games | Athens, Greece | 31st | 15.86 m |
References
- Chinatsu Mori at World Athletics
- sports-reference
- ^ Japanese athletics records Archived 2007-10-09 at the Wayback Machine
- v
- t
- e
Japan Championships in Athletics women's shot put champions
- 1925: Haruko Tanimura
- 1926: Yoshiko Hiomi
- 1928: Mine Horiguchi
- 1929: Yone Ota
- 1930: Masayo Sakata
- 1931–32: Mitsue Ishizu
- 1933: Sadako Yamamoto
- 1934–40: Fumi Kojima
- 1941: Not held
- 1942: Mieko Yokoyama
- 1943–45: Not held
- 1946: Rie Yamauchi
- 1947–48: Fumi Kojima
- 1949–53: Toyoko Yoshino
- 1954–55: Motoko Yoshida
- 1956: Toshiko Koizumi
- 1957: Motoko Yoshida
- 1958: Toshiko Koizumi
- 1959: Yasuko Matsuda
- 1960–61: Seiko Obonai
- 1962: Yasuko Matsuda
- 1963: Tamara Press (URS)
- 1964: Seiko Obonai
- 1965: Michiko Takamatsu
- 1966: Ryoko Sugiyama
- 1967: Kinko Imamura
- 1968–71: Yoko Saito
- 1972–81: Kayoko Hayashi
- 1982: Tetsuko Watase
- 1983–85: Miyuki Sasaki
- 1986–90: Suzuki Fumi
- 1991: Zhen Wenhua (CHN)
- 1992–94: Suzuki Fumi
- 1995: Eri Hosoyama
- 1996: Hiroko Shinozaki
- 1997: Takako Ichikawa
- 1998: Sumi Ichioka
- 1999–00: Yoko Toyonaga
- 2001: Chinatsu Mori
- 2002: Yoko Toyonaga
- 2003–04: Chinatsu Mori
- 2005–08: Yoko Toyonaga
- 2009: Yukiko Shirai
- 2010: Yoko Toyonaga
- 2011: Yukino Otani
- 2012–13: Yukiko Shirai
- 2014: Chiaki Yokomizo
- 2015–16: Aya Ota
- 2017–19: Nanaka Kori
- 2020: Yuka Takahashi
- 2021-23: Nanaka Kori
![]() | This biographical article relating to Japanese athletics is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e