β€œI Thought My Career Was Over”: The Long Road That Led Ryuichi Kihara to Olympic Gold

When the final scores appeared in Milan and confirmed that Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara had won Japan’s first-ever Olympic gold medal in pairs figure skating, the reaction was not a leap, a scream, or a triumphant fist pump.

Ryuichi Kihara collapsed.

Right there on the ice, with the noise of the arena crashing down around him, Ryuichi Kihara fell to his knees and cried. Beside him stood Riku Miura, the partner who had helped turn years of doubt, pain, and near-failure into one of the most unforgettable moments of the Winter Games.

To anyone watching, it looked like pure joy. And it was. But it was also relief. It was exhaustion. It was the release of everything Ryuichi Kihara had been carrying for years.

The Tears Were Bigger Than the Medal

The gold-medal performance itself was already dramatic enough. After a costly mistake in the short program dropped the Japanese pair to fifth place, the pressure was immense. The favorites suddenly looked vulnerable. In an event where tiny errors can destroy an Olympic dream, Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara had very little room left.

Then came the free skate.

Skating with urgency, control, and visible determination, Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara delivered the kind of routine athletes dream about and rarely find at exactly the right moment. It was powerful, clean, and full of emotion. By the time it ended, the entire arena could feel that something extraordinary had just happened.

Still, even then, Ryuichi Kihara did not seem convinced. He knew how strong the field was. He knew what had already been lost the day before. And maybe, deep down, he still carried the old fear that the ending would slip away from him again.

Then the numbers came up. Gold for Japan. History for Japan. And a breakdown that told the real story better than any interview ever could.

Before the Spotlight, There Was Silence

Long before Ryuichi Kihara stood on Olympic ice as a champion, there was a much quieter chapter to his life. After years of setbacks, injuries, and unstable partnerships, there was a period when the dream no longer looked heroic. It looked fragile.

At one point after the PyeongChang era, Ryuichi Kihara was back in Aichi, working at a rink and doing whatever jobs needed to be done. He helped with rental skates. He watched over the ice. He took on ordinary work in a place built around a dream that no longer felt secure.

That image says everything. Not the future champion. Not the man on the podium. Just an athlete trying to stay close to the sport while wondering whether the sport still had room for him.

That is what makes this victory feel so different. Olympic gold did not come after a straight climb. It came after uncertainty. It came after humiliation, stalled momentum, physical pain, and the private kind of doubt that never shows up on television graphics.

β€œI thought my career was over” is not the kind of line people expect from an Olympic champion. But sometimes it is the truest one.

Then Riku Miura Changed Everything

When Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara joined forces in 2019, the partnership gave both skaters a new direction. Over time, they built more than strong technical chemistry. They built trust. That trust was visible again in Milan.

After the short-program mistake, Ryuichi Kihara was crushed. By his own account, the tears started early and would not stop. This time, Riku Miura became the steady one. This time, Riku Miura carried the emotional weight.

That reversal may be the most revealing part of their story. Great pairs teams are not only measured by lifts, throws, and scores. They are measured by what happens when everything feels close to breaking. In that moment, Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara looked less like two skaters chasing a title and more like two people refusing to let the other fall alone.

A Champion on His Knees

The image of Ryuichi Kihara crying on the ice is now one of the defining pictures of these Olympics. Not because it looks dramatic, but because it feels honest.

It reminds people that victory is not always loud. Sometimes it is a man on his knees, stunned that he made it this far at all.

For Japan, the medal was historic. For Ryuichi Kihara, it was something even deeper. It was proof that the years of being overlooked, doubted, and nearly done did not define the ending.

And that is why this moment continues to hit so hard. Olympic gold was the headline. But survival was the real story.

 

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