Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's swimming | ||
Representing Japan | ||
Paralympic Games | ||
2020 Tokyo | 100 m freestyle S4 | |
2004 Athens | 4×50 m medley relay 20 pts | |
2020 Tokyo | 200 m freestyle S4 | |
2020 Tokyo | 50 m freestyle S4 | |
2008 Beijing | 1500 m SM4 | |
2020 Tokyo | 50 m breaststroke SB3 | |
2020 Tokyo | 150 m ind. medley SM4 | |
World Championships | ||
2022 Madeira | 50 m breaststroke SB3 | |
2022 Madeira | 50 m freestyle S4 | |
2023 Manchester | 50 m breaststroke SB3 | |
2023 Manchester | 50 m freestyle S4 | |
2023 Manchester | 100 m freestyle S4 | |
Asian Para Games | ||
2018 Jakarta | 200 m freestyle S4 (1–4) | |
2018 Jakarta | 100 m freestyle (1–4) | |
2018 Jakarta | 50 m freestyle (1–4) | |
2018 Jakarta | 50 m breaststroke SB3 (1–3) | |
2018 Jakarta | Mixed 4×50 m freestyle relay 20 pts | |
2022 Hangzhou | 100 m freestyle S4 |
Takayuki Suzuki (鈴木 孝幸, Suzuki Takayuki) is a Paralympic swimmer from Japan competing mainly in category events.
Career
Takayuki was part of the Japanese contingent as two Paralympics, 2004 Summer Paralympics and the 2008 Summer Paralympics. In 2004 he was part of the Japanese squad that won a silver in the 4x50m medley behind a new Paralympic record set by the Brazilian team, he was also part of the squad that finished fourth in the 4x50m freestyle. Individually he finished eighth in the individual medley and seventh in the 100m freestyle. At the 2008 games Takayuki set a new world record in the heats of the 50m breaststroke going on to win the gold medal in the final, he also won a bronze in the 150m individual medley, he finished eighth in the 200m freestyle, seventh in the 100m freestyle but failed to make the final of the 50m freestyle.[1]
References
- ↑ "Takayuki Suzuki". Paralympic.org. International Paralympic Committee.
External links