Happy Harada
Japanese ski-jumping legend
by Mike Morrison
Ski jumping may be popular in
Japan and Norway, but it's pretty rare
when the sport grabs headlines in the United
States. That's just what happened in 1998, when the hearts of even the
most casual Olympics watchers were captured by Japanese jumper Masahiko "Happy"
Harada.
Four years earlier at the 1994
Games in Lillehammer, the Japanese team held a seemingly insurmountable
lead in the large hill (120-meter) ski jumping event with just one jump remaining.
That jump belonged to Harada, the diminutive but wind-resistant anchor
of the squad. In his first jump, Harada had sailed 122 meters. The second
time around, he needed only about 110 meters to clinch the gold for
Japan.
Maybe the wind hit at the wrong time, maybe the pressure
got to him, or maybe he simply had a bad jump. But when Harada landed, he
was just 97.5 meters from the ramp. It was the worst jump of anyone on the
top eight teams, and it gave Germany the
gold medal and left Japan with the silver.
Harada said afterwards,
"In the past, a well-raised Japanese would have to commit
hari-kari after such a mistake. Today nobody expects that of us."
It was Harada's affable demeanor and ubiquitous smile that earned him his
nickname and made him a fan favorite inside and outside of his native Japan.
And it was those qualities that helped keep him a fan favorite even after
costing his country the gold.
After winning numerous world cup events
and a world championship, Harada returned to the Olympics four years later—this
time in front of his home country at Nagano
. The Games began on a sour note, however.
In the normal hill
competition, he was in first place after his first jump. Needing merely a
mediocre jump on his second attempt, Harada faltered once again, pushing him
back to fifth. He responded days later with a bronze in the large hill event,
but it was the team competition that had everyone's attention.
Before
the event, Yushiro Yagi, the head delegate for the Japanese Olympic team,
proclaimed, "We will win. We must win."
Well, at least there was no
pressure.
As luck would have it, on Harada's first jump the wind and
snow picked up just as he made his way down the ramp. His woeful 79.5-meter
jump took his team from first place down to fourth, and Japanese fans were
crying, "Not again!"
As he readied himself for his second attempt,
he knew what was on the line. He sped down the ramp. He took off. And he landed
137 meters away, tying the world mark and all but insuring the gold for Japan.
Final jumper Kazuyoshi Funaki closed out the event with a leap of 125 meters, clinching the gold for Japan.
Redemption
was sweet for Harada. "I did it! I did it!" he shouted, with his
trademark grin from ear to ear.
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