Kenzō Shirai

Kenzo Shirai
 Gymnast 
Nickname(s)

Mr. Twist

Twist Prince (Japanese)
Country represented  Japan
Born (1996-08-24) August 24, 1996
Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan
Height 1.61 m (5 ft 3 in)
Discipline Men's artistic gymnastics
Eponymous skills

Shirai (floor) quadruple twist backwards
Shirai II (floor) triple twist forwards

Shirai (vault) round-off, back-handspring, triple twist

Kenzo Shirai (白井 健三 Shirai Kenzō, born 24 August 1996 in Yokohama, Japan) is a Japanese artistic gymnast.

Personal Life

Unlike many athletes of his level, Kenzo attends school regularly. He has one six-hour practice varying from 5-7 days per week. [1]

Kenzo graduated high school in March 2015, and was accepted to study at a university soon after.

Career

Shirai got started in artistic gymnastics at a very young age, after being influenced by his parents and two older brothers. [2] He said, "For as long as I can remember, I was a gym rat." His parents were gym owners of the Tsurumi Junior Gymnastics Club. Instead of paying for day care, they brought him to the gym. [3] He particularly loved to use the trampoline, which developed his extreme mastery of twisting skills.

Shirai has four skills named after him, as he was the first to perform them in major international competitions. Those skills are: the quad-twisting back layout on floor, the triple-twisting front layout on floor, the triple-twisting double back layout on floor, and the triple-twisting Yurchenko layout on vault.[4] Shirai was only fourteen years old when he was first able to perform the quad-twisting layout on floor with a hard landing.[5] Shirai is also well known for his ability to perform a triple twisting Yurchenko (TTY) vault, something accomplished by only a handful of gymnasts, including his teammate and role model, Kōhei Uchimura. Among other distinguishing facts, Shirai was the youngest ever member of the national men's artistic gymnastics team for Japan.[6]

2013

In October 2013, he competed in the 2013 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships[7] at just seventeen years old. He qualified for both floor and vault apparatus finals. In the event finals, he finished in first place on the floor apparatus with a difficulty score of 7.4, the highest D score of the competition. His victory margin of .4 over the 2nd place competitor was the largest between any athletes in the competition. He also finished fourth place on the vault apparatus with a score of 15.133.

2014

Shirai again competed at the 2014 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Nanning, China. After qualifying in first place with the same difficulty score of 7.4, Shirai finished in second place on the floor exercise finals with a total score of 15.733. Shirai is said to be working on his execution score after a technical mistake on the floor exercise cost him the gold medal. Similarly, British commentary reported that Shirai is working on his ability to perform a quintuple twisting back somersault.[8]

2015

On 31 October 2015, Shirai won his second world floor title at the 2015 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Glasgow, UK. Shirai successfully delivered his extremely difficult routine, and scored 16.233 points, ahead UK's Max Whitlock and Spain's Rayderley Zapata. The victory margin was the largest among all male event finals, and his 7.6 difficulty score was also the highest among all other competitors.

References

External links

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