Mai Murakami

Mai Murakami




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Mai Murakami is an actress, known for Knights of Sidonia (2014), Attack on Titan (2013) and Don't Toy with Me, Miss Nagatoro (2021).
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Mai Murakami won an Olympic medal and two world championship medals in under three months — and then retired.
The 25-year-old Japanese gymnast announced she had ended her career after medaling in both women’s event finals held Sunday, the final day of the Artistic Gymnastics World Championships.
With the Olympics held in Tokyo, where she took bronze on floor exercise, and worlds in Kitakyushu, she went out with some of her greatest accomplishments taking place in her home country.
Already the 2017 world champion on floor and 2018 world all-around silver medalist, Murakami added the balance beam bronze and another floor title to her resume before calling it a career.
Eighteen-year-old Olympic teammate Urara Ashikawa won the beam gold with a score of 14.1, followed by Germany’s Pauline Schaefer-Betz , who won it four years prior, with 13.8 and Murakami’s 13.733.
American Leanne Wong , the all-around silver medalist earlier in the meet, was 0.4 off the podium in fourth. All-around bronze medalist Kayla DiCello was eighth.
Murakami later won floor gold with a score of 14.066 and the greatest difficulty, 15.8, in the final. All-around world champion Angelina Melnikova , representing the Russian Gymnastics Federation while Russia is banned from world championship events, took silver (14.0) for her third medal in Kitakyushu while Wong also returned to the podium with a score of 13.833. DiCello was fifth (13.633).
Carlos Yulo won the first men’s final of the night, adding a vault gold medal to his 2019 floor one. The Filipino’s win marked the first for his nation on vault. His 14.916 two-vault average topped Japan’s Hidenobu Yonekura (14.866) and Andrey Medvedev (14.649) of Israel, both winning their first world medals – the latter at 31.
China’s Hu Xuwei then won the final two men’s world titles, the first of his career, becoming the only two-time 2021 world champion.
His parallel bars routine scored 15.466 points, ahead of Yulo’s 15.3 and Shi Cong ‘s 15.066. American Yul Moldauer , who was fourth in the all-around, was fifth with 15.0.
Hu’s high bar score of 15.166 beat out Olympic all-around champion Daiki Hashimoto (15.066) and 21-year-old Brody Malone of the U.S. (14.966), who won a tiebreaker over fourth place Carlo Macchini of Italy.
Hashimoto leaves worlds with all-around silver and high bar silver after taking gold in both events in Tokyo, plus team silver.
Malone, a relative unknown before this year, ends his long 2021 campaign with the NCAA all-around, high bar and team titles, U.S. Championships all-around and vault wins, all-around and high bar victories at Olympic Trials, fourth place on high bar at the Tokyo Olympics and now a world medal on the apparatus.
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Mai Murakami was born on 5 August, 1996 in Sagamihara, Kanagawa, Japan, is a Japanese artistic gymnast. Discover Mai Murakami's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is She in this year and how She spends money? Also learn how She earned most of networth at the age of 24 years old?

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 5 August.
She is a member of famous Artist with the age 25 years old group.

At 25 years old, Mai Murakami height is 1.48 m and Weight 48 kg.

She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2020-2021. So, how much is Mai Murakami worth at the age of 25 years old? Mai Murakami’s income source is mostly from being a successful Artist. She is from Japan. We have estimated Mai Murakami's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
Murakami finished second at the American Cup behind Morgan Hurd . She then won the all-around at the Tokyo World Cup. Then, she won the all-around at both the National Championships and the NHK Cup. She won gold on balance beam and floor exercise at the Event National Championships. At the 2018 Artistic Gymnastics World Championships in Doha, Qatar the Japanese team finished in sixth place. Individually, she finished second in the all-around final, behind Simone Biles. It is the first women’s all-around silver medal in Japan’s history. She then won the bronze medal in the floor exercise final behind Biles and Morgan Hurd .
Murakami won the all-around at the National Championships in addition to winning gold on beam and floor and winning silver on vault. She also won the all-around at the NHK Cup and won gold on beam and floor and bronze on vault and uneven bars. She was then automatically named to the World Championship team along with Aiko Sugihara . She then won silver on floor and placed fifth on vault at the Event National Championships. At the 2017 Artistic Gymnastics World Championships in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, she qualified first into the all-around final, ahead of American gymnast Ragan Smith , but had a fall in the finals, and ended up in 4th place, one-tenth of a point behind the bronze medalist, Russia's Elena Eremina . She redeemed herself in the floor exercise finals, where she placed first ahead of Jade Carey and Claudia Fragapane . She is Japan's first World gold medalist on this event, and Japan's second World gold medalist on any women's gymnastics event, after Keiko Tanaka-Ikeda won the gold on the balance beam in 1954. Afterward, she won gold on floor and bronze on vault at the Toyota International.
Murakami competed at the American Cup where she placed sixth in the all-around. She then won the all-around at the National Championships in addition to winning gold on floor and bronze on vault and beam. At the NHK Cup, she finished second in the all-around behind Asuka Teramoto , and she won gold on floor and silver on vault. At the Event National Championships, she won gold on floor exercise and placed fourth on uneven bars. She was then named to represent Japan at the 2016 Summer Olympics along with Asuka Teramoto , Aiko Sugihara , Yuki Uchiyama , and Sae Miyakawa .
At the 2015 National Championships, Murakami struggled on beam and floor and placed tenth in the all-around. She placed eighth in the all-around at the NHK Cup, but at the Event Championships she won bronze on vault and gold on floor. Murakami was initially named an alternate for the World Championships, but an injury led to her joining the team. The Japanese team placed fifth, and she placed sixth in the all-around, the best finish by a Japanese woman in six years.
Murakami competed at the 2014 Pacific Rim Gymnastics Championships placing fourth with the team, sixth on floor, seventh on bars and beam, and ninth in the all-around. She placed sixth in the all-around at the National Championships and fourth at the NHK Cup. At the All Japan Championships, she won gold on floor and silver on vault. She was then selected to compete at the 2014 World Championships along with Asuka Teramoto , Yu Minobe , Natsumi Sasada , Wakana Inoue, and Azumi Ishikura, and they finished in eighth place. After the World Championships Murakami finished the season by placed fifth in the all-around at the Glasgow World and winning vault and floor at the Toyota International.
Murakami competed at the 2013 City of Jesolo Trophy where she won bronze with the Japanese team and placed 22nd in the all-around. She finished third in the all-around at both the National Championships and the NHK Cup. She finished fourth on the floor exercise at the 2013 World Championships.
Murakami made her senior debut at the 2012 National Championships where she placed eleventh in the all-around. She was not named to the 2012 Olympic team. Murakami competed at the 2012 Stuttgart World Cup where Japan finished second to Russia.
Mai Murakami (村上茉愛 , Murakami Mai, born 5 August 1996) is a Japanese artistic gymnast. She is the 2017 World Champion on floor exercise, the 2018 World all-around silver medalist and floor exercise bronze medalist, and a three-time Japanese national all-around champion (2016–2018). She represented Japan at the 2016 Olympics.
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Tokyo 2020 floor bronze medallist says goodbye in tears with her trademark smile on last day of 2021 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Kitakyushu, Japan.
Murakami Mai , the Tokyo 2020 floor bronze medallist and now two-time world champion, retired on Sunday (24 October), the final day of the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Kitakyushu, Japan.
"Thank you everyone. I am retiring as of today", Murakami said during a surprise speech during the closing ceremony at Kitakyushu Gymnasium.
"I hope I was able to give you one last joy. I cannot describe how grateful I am. I've managed to come this far and I owe it to all of you".
Murakami had said ahead of the final that these championships could be the last meet of her career, and she was true to her word.
The two-time Olympian said she began thinking about when to call it quits after injuring her lower back two years ago.
After winning her first Olympic medal this summer at Tokyo 2020, and adding a gold and bronze (balance beam) at the worlds on Sunday, the 25-year-old Murakami felt it was time.
"Injuries are part and parcel with gymnastics", she said in a press conference after addressing the crowd.
"When I hurt my back, retirement became a reality. Overcoming it definitely made me stronger but equally, the wear and tear started to take its toll.
"I wanted to be the one to decide when to end it, not by anyone or anything else. I wanted to go out when I could still do it. I began feeling that way when the Games were postponed.
"I think I've done well for myself. Right now I just want a break".
Murakami, who debuted at the Games at Rio 2016, bows out as the most decorated female Japanese gymnast of all-time.
At Tokyo 2020, she captained the Japanese women's team who ended up fifth. Murakami finished fifth in the all-around, the best-ever result by a Japanese female athlete.
By netting bronze in the floor - her signature event - she became the first woman from her country to medal in an Olympic event final.
Murakami also won gold in the floor at the 2017 World championships in Montreal and an all-around silver the following year in Doha.
Murakami did not say what the future holds for her. But she did say her career has come to a happy ending.
"Going out with a gold medal is probably the ideal way to go out but being perfectly honest, I wasn't worried about how I would do here.
"I wanted to perform with gratitude - and the gold medal was a bonus. It's the best gift I could have given myself. Just adds to what I achieved at the Olympics.
"I think this is a nice way to end it".

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