At the Milano Cortina 2026 Japan’s pair skating team known as “RikuRyu” — Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara — overcame a short program setback to capture the gold medal. What stood out most was not simply the comeback, but the quiet strength of two athletes who trusted their own work until the very end.
I had heard their free skate would begin around six in the morning, so I woke up a little early and waited while getting ready for the day.
Just as I started brewing coffee, their program began.
Even through the television screen, the beauty and completeness of their skating were unmistakable.
It was refined, composed, and deeply controlled.
Before long, I was no longer thinking about rankings. I was simply absorbed.
The pairs who followed were also excellent.
Yet none reached the level “RikuRyu” had just shown.
The Olympic stage is often described as a place inhabited by demons — where even overwhelming strength can be undone by the smallest mistake.
And yet they delivered an almost flawless free skate and achieved a dramatic comeback.
With five pairs ahead of them, it would have been natural to feel the gold medal slipping away.
Perhaps they stopped thinking about standings altogether and focused only on skating the program they had worked toward for years.
“Results will follow.”
Maybe that was their mindset.
But it was not resignation.
It was simply belief — belief in the strength they had built through steady effort.
In recent years, I have found myself less easily moved by sports.
But today was different.
My wife and I both found ourselves quietly in tears.
After the short program, I remember how Miura gently comforted Kihara.
Yet what stayed with me even more was the moment after their victory was confirmed — Kihara in tears, and Miura looking at him with a small, slightly exasperated smile, as if to say, “What am I going to do with you?”
Knowing the long struggles Kihara has endured, that scene made me especially happy.
Congratulations, RikuRyu.
And thank you for the inspiration.





