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Shuhei Nishida

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Native name
  
西田 修平

Name
  
Shuhei Nishida

Education
  
Waseda University

Sport
  
Athletics

Weight
  
61 kg


Alma mater
  
Waseda University

Height
  
1.76 m

Nationality
  
Japan

Role
  
Olympic athlete

Events
  
Pole vault

Shuhei Nishida httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
May 21, 1910 (
1910-05-21
)
Nachikatsuura, Wakayama, Japan

Died
  
April 13, 1997, Tokyo, Japan

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Shuhei Nishida (西田 修平, Nishida Shūhei, May 21, 1910 – April 13, 1997) was a Japanese Olympic athlete who competed mainly in the pole vault.

Nishida was born in what is now part of Nachikatsuura, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan. He was a student of the Engineering Department at Waseda University, when selected as a member of the Japanese Olympic team for the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, where he won the silver medal in the pole vault event.

After graduation from Waseda University, he obtained a job at Hitachi. He subsequently participated in the 1936 Summer Olympics held in Berlin, Germany where he repeated his performance winning a second silver medal in the same event tying with his friend and teammate Sueo Oe. When the two declined to compete against each other to decide a winner, Nishida was arbitrarily awarded the silver and Oe the bronze. The competition was featured in a scene in the documentary Olympia, filmed by Leni Riefenstahl. On their return to Japan, Nishida and Oe famously had their Olympic medals cut in half, and had a jeweler splice together two new “friendship medals”, half in bronze and half in silver.

At the age of 41, Nishida won a bronze medal at the 1951 Asian Games. He remained active in sports all of his life, serving as a referee at events, and from 1959 as an honorary vice chairman of the Japan Association of Athletics Federations, and as a member of the Japanese Olympic Committee. In 1989, he was awarded the silver medal of the Olympic Order. Nishida died of heart failure in 1997 at the age of 87.

References

Shuhei Nishida Wikipedia