News
2020-10-02

Bronze medalist Mikako Kotani appointed as Tokyo 2020 sports director


•(Photo: Olympic bronze medalist Mikako Kotani, seen presenting Tokyo's bid for the 2016 Summer Games in Copenhagen on Oct. 2, 2009, will become the sports director for the Tokyo Olympics this week. )

• Sep 30, 2020
Mikako Kotani, an Olympic bronze medalist in synchronized swimming at the 1988 Summer Olympics, has been appointed sports director of the 2020 Tokyo Games, the organizing committee announced on Tuesday.
The 54-year-old will succeed Koji Murofushi on Thursday after the 2004 Olympic and 2011 world hammer champion was named this month by the government as commissioner of the Japan Sports Agency.
Kotani will act as the organizing committee's liaison with the International Olympic Committee and international sports federations.
"As Sports Director, I am very honored and humbled to be able to support the Olympic and Paralympic Games from a sporting perspective and the perspective of an Olympian," Kotani said in a statement.
She won bronze in both the solo and duet events at the games in Seoul, where she became the first female flagbearer for the Japanese delegation at the Summer Games.
A fluent English speaker, Kotani was part of the bidding team to host the 2020 games in Tokyo and is expected to become the face of the organizers as they look to overcome a one-year postponement of the games caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
"We will work hard to overcome the unprecedented challenge the world is facing, and help athletes perform to their best in a new kind of Games," Kotani said. "By furthering deepening communications with athletes as well as the understanding and friendship with international federations that Sports Director Murofushi has built, I will do my best to contribute to the success of these historic Games."
Kotani, who currently serves as an executive board member on the Japanese Olympic Committee, has been also named as vice mayor of the athletes' village for the postponed games.
Murofushi, 45, will succeed retired swimmer Daichi Suzuki when the inaugural commissioner of the sports agency completes his tenure at the end of the month.