Stars

Japan's skeleton master makes no bones of age barrier

(Agencies)
Updated: 2010-01-26 20:37
Large Medium Small

TOKYO - The oldest member of Japan's Olympic squad spends his time hurtling down an icy chute head first at 130 kilometres per hour, but the 45-year-old is showing few signs of wanting to slow down in the twilight of his career.

Japan's skeleton master makes no bones of age barrier
Kazuhiro Koshi of Japan starts on the natural ice track during the Bobsleigh and Skeleton World Cup tournament in the Swiss mountain resort of St. Moritz January 15, 2010.  [Photo/Agencies]

Instead, skeleton slider Kazuhiro Koshi plans to go out in style at next month's Winter Games in Vancouver despite the dangers of a sport in which intense G-forces will be the least of his worries.

"I'm in it to win it," Koshi told Japanese reporters after returning from a World Cup event in Europe. "All I am thinking of is the gold medal."

Koshi will be the oldest Japanese athlete to appear at a Winter Olympics at the Feb. 12-28 Games but shrugged off question marks over his age and said he was still improving.

"I've really worked on improving my start," said the Nagano-born Koshi, who won his first of four straight Japanese national skeleton titles in 1998.

"At the Olympics, I wanted to make sure I don't lose any ground (to younger sliders) at the start. I'm fully focused on that."

Koshi said walking out at next month's opening ceremony alongside 15-year-old speed skater Miho Takagi, Japan's youngest competitor in Vancouver, would feel strange.

"It will be a bit like going out there with my 13-year-old daughter," he said. "But I'll show you all what an old man can do -- you wait!"