Olympics-Swimming-For leukaemia survivor Ikee, just swimming at the
Games is a win
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[July 15, 2021]
By Elaine Lies
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese swimmer Rikako Ikee does not really
expect to win gold in the two events she will race in at the Tokyo
Games but that does not matter. After surviving leukaemia, just
being on Japan's Olympic team at a home Games is a victory in
itself.
Ikee, 21, was diagnosed with leukaemia in February 2019 and while
her treatment in hospital was far tougher than she ever imagined she
was determined not to let it defeat her.
"This is dozens of times, hundreds of times, thousands of times
harder than I thought," she wrote on Twitter a month after her
diagnosis. "I've had many times where I haven't been able to eat for
three days or more. But I won't give up."
The road to recovery was difficult but her persistence paid off and
after battling back to fitness she returned to competition in August
last year.
That was just the beginning.
Ikee then won four titles at Japan's national championships in April
and while she failed to make the cut to compete at the Olympics in
an individual event she claimed berths in the 400m freestyle relay
and 4x100 medley relay.
"I didn't have words to describe how I felt and I'm extremely
happy," said Ikee, who lost as much as 18kg during treatment.
"I recalled all the tough times I went through, but I was thrilled
to be able to come back here."
A Tokyo native, reportedly born at home in a water birth, Ikee was
encouraged into physical activity from an early age by her mother
and she began swimming just before turning 4, begging to follow her
older sister and brother, who were both swimmers.
By the age of eight she was taking part in national swim meets and
at 15 she broke records at the World Junior Championships. A year
later, she swam in seven events at the 2016 Rio Olympics but did not
medal.
In 2018 she really hit her stride, winning six gold medals at the
Asian Games and taking two more silvers in relays, becoming the
first woman to be named Most Valuable Player at the event.
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Rikako Ikee of Japan reacts after
winning the women's 100 metres butterfly final at the national
swimming championships at Tokyo Aquatics Centre in Tokyo, Japan
April 4, 2021, in this photo taken by Kyodo. Kyodo/via REUTERS
But everything came crashing down
early in 2019 when Ikee fell ill at a training camp in Australia and
was diagnosed with leukaemia after returning home for tests.
After leaving hospital in December that year, Ikee switched her
Olympic hopes to Paris 2024, but the novel coronavirus pandemic
changed things.
With Tokyo 2020 postponed, Ikee's hopes of representing Japan at a
home Olympics were rekindled and in April she clinched her spot at
the Games.
Ikee then marked her 21st birthday on July 4 by being part of the
200m freestyle relay team that set a Japanese record.
"I don't know if it's a Japanese record or a world record, I just
felt from my heart that I'm a really happy swimmer," she said after
being handed a birthday present following the meet.
"I tend to cry easily so of course I was in tears. And I felt 'oh,
it's so nice that I lived.'"
(Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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