Skip to main content

Nagoya: The Last Piece of the Puzzle

by Brett Larner

Of all the Japanese men's and women's selection races for the Beijing Olympics marathon teams, none has been as eagerly anticipated as the final event, this Sunday's Nagoya International Women's Marathon. Of the three slots on the women's team, one was taken by Reiko Tosa via her bronze medal performance at last summer's World Championships in Osaka. Another was all but settled in November with defending Olympic gold medalist Mizuki Noguchi's course record win at the Tokyo International Women's Marathon. Barring at least two more truly spectacular performances, the final slot would be determined between the top Japanese finishers in January's Osaka International Women's Marathon and Nagoya. Tomo Morimoto was the top Japanese in Osaka, finishing 2nd overall. A good result, but her time of 2:25:34, unremarkable among Japanese women, leaves a very strong chance for one of the Nagoya runners to take the spot on the Olympic team away. Among all the contenders for this spot, including four past Nagoya winners and six runners with PBs faster than Morimoto's time, none faces as much domestic or international attention as Naoko Takahashi.

Naoko Takahashi
age: 35; PB: 2:19:46, Berlin '01 (WR); gold medal, Sydney Olympics '00
Takahashi, or Q-chan as she is known in the Japanese media, is the single most loved and respected figure in Japanese marathoning. Her win in the Sydney Olympics was Japan's first Olympic marathon gold medal, she was the first woman in the world to break 2:20, and she remains the Olympic record holder and a symbol of perseverence. After her string of successes in the early 2000's she broke off her working relationship with coach Yoshio Koide, then failed to make the 2004 Athens Olympics. A win at the 2005 Tokyo International Women's Marathon created significant buzz about a comeback, but Takahashi's dismal run in cold, rainy conditions at Tokyo the next year caused many to write her off. She has not raced a marathon since then, but her training for Nagoya, which she has won twice, has been epic. The Japanese public would dearly love to see Q-chan make the team and if she is anywhere close to the shape she should be in after several months of altititude training then 2:25 is certainly within her capability. The only question, again assuming her fitness, is whether one of her competitors will outrun her. While she will benefit from the withdrawal of defending champion Yasuko Hashimoto due to a knee injury, Takahashi's chances took a body blow with the switch from Osaka to Nagoya of Yumiko Hara and Yuri Kano.

Yumiko Hara
age: 26; PB: 2:23:48, Osaka '07 (winner); 2005 and 2007 World Championships entrant
Hara was the defending champion in Osaka but withdrew at the last moment with stomach troubles. She won Nagoya in 2005 in her debut marathon, qualifying for the 2005 World Championships in Helsinki. Her bizarre, robotic personality gives her a somewhat frightening focus and determination, but at the same time seems to force her into a singleminded race strategy in all situations: going hard from the start. In Helsinki, Hara's second marathon, she tried to run down world record holder and eventual winner Paula Radcliffe in the early stages of the race. She came back from injury to win Osaka last year by pushing the pace, and at last summer's World Championships she again tried to frontrun the race right from the start, eventually falling apart in the heat. Her coach has said that he expects the veteran runners to be strong in the later stages of the race and as a result Hara's strategy will be once again to go out hard and make the race.

Yuri Kano
age: 29; PB: 2:24:43, Osaka '07; winner, Hokkaido '07
Kano debuted at last year's Osaka, running an impressive performance to finish 3rd, just a few seconds from making the 2007 World Championships team. She went on to run the Hokkaido Marathon instead, winning in heat and humidity similar to that at the World Champs. She was aiming for a significant PB at Osaka in January but was forced to withdraw after only 17 km with severe foot pain. It is questionable whether she has recovered fully from this injury but if so must be considered one of the major contenders.

Other Domestic Contenders
The four remaining big names among the domestic field are past Nagoya winners Harumi Hiroyama and Takami Ominami, along with one of Japan's all-time fastest women, Naoko Sakamoto and proven heat running specialist Kiyoko Shimahara. Hiroyama, a true veteran at age 39, ran her best time of 2:22:56 in 2000, but her winning time of 2:23:26 at the 2006 Nagoya was still highly competitive. She suffered from remaining with Team Shiseido when coach Manabu Kawagoe left to form Second Wind AC and was not at peak fitness through the winter, but says she is ready and will concentrate on running her own race. Ominami set her PB of 2:23:43 in winning Rotterdam '02 and says that the balance of her mind and body is now at its best point in her long career. Sakamoto's best time, 2:21:51, also came some years ago, in her case at Osaka '03. She has been injured almost continuously since then but reports being glad to be in one piece again in time for the Olympic selection races. Shimahara does not have the fast times of the other contenders, her PB being only 2:26:14, but that time was run at the late-summer Hokkaido Marathon and she has great experience in hot international events. She won a silver medal at the 2006 Asian Games, a performance which led to her being selected for the 2007 World Championships where she beat many faster competitors to finish 6th. She will be hard-pressed to beat some of the other runners in the cooler March temperatures at Nagoya, but her stated goal is to win with a PB.

Debutantes
One of the most impressive aspects of Japanese distance running is its depth, a trait which often leads to runners making spectacular debuts when they step up from the half marathon to the full. Arata Fujiwara did just this in the Tokyo Marathon men's selection race last month, and several runners in the Nagoya field have the potential to do likewise. Akane Taira is the most likely candidate thanks to her sub-70 half marathon PB, but other contenders include Yurika Nakamura and Yoshimi Ozaki along with a half-dozen more.

Foreign Competitors
Five invited elites from abroad will also be running Nagoya. Of these, only Kenya's Joice Kirui is likely to have a chance of being up front. Kirui holds a PB of 2:26:52, set last year in winning the Kitale marathon. Lioudmila Kortchaguina, a former Russian now running for Canada, will also be trying to make her first Olympic team with her new home country.

The Race
Hara is likely to be the one setting the pace. Look for her to go out hard, followed closely by Takahashi, Sakamoto and possibly Ominami and Kirui. If Kano is fit she should also be in the lead pack, but Hiroyama is likely to hold back and in the later stages try to pick up the victims of a fast early pace. The race will probably come down to whether Hara can keep her herself together and whether Takahashi can conjure up the Q-chan of old this one more time. Make that two more times if she is successful. Already the most respected runner in all of Japanese marathoning, qualifying for Beijing would make Takahashi a living legend.

A complete listing of the Nagoya field, including JRN's Mika Tokairin, is available here.

(c) 2008 Brett Larner
all rights reserved

Comments

Most-Read This Week

Khishigsaikhan and Kuira Break Ageo City Half Marathon CRs (updated)

Stellar conditions and a solid fields meant times were going to be fast at the Ageo City Half Marathon , and in both the women's and men's races the front end took full advantage of the day. In the midst of the super-deep men's field Khishigsaikhan Galbadrakh , the top Mongolian in this summer's Budapest World Championships marathon and in last month's Hangzhou Asian Games marathon, ran steady and strong, splitting 33:29 at 10 km, 1:10:38 pace, before pushing the 2nd half. Khishigsaikhan crossed the finish line 1:10:32, 1:22 under the old course record, 3:35 ahead of 2nd-place Kana Kobayashi , and a massive 4:16 off the Mongolian women's national record. Khishigsaikhan is currently training in Japan and ran Ageo in prep for next month's Taipei City Marathon, where she was 3rd last year. The men's race went out hard, with Kenyan Brian Kipyegon (Yamanashi Gakuin Univ.), NR holder Yusuke Ogura (Yakult) and the ambitious Rei Matsunaga (Hosei) leading the ...

A Few Words on Chicago

by Brett Larner photos by Dr. Helmut Winter Chicago comes at a tough time for Japan's corporate leagues, just before the start of the fall ekiden season's regional qualifiers.  Although just about every team has more than enough people to fill their lineups for these relatively minor events, head coaches will usually not let their better athletes do an October marathon, whether because of the limited recovery time in the event that they decide a big gun has to run in a qualifier, or because it would give them the hassle of explaining to the parent corporation why a star is off doing his or her own thing instead of being there for the team.  As a result you typically only see Japanese runners at Chicago when they are looking to drop something big, as with Yukiko Akaba  (Team Hokuren) and Yoshinori Oda  (Team Toyota) this year, or, like the block of  Japanese men at 2:12~2:13 , as part of a corporate federation junket for promising third-tier men to get the exp...

Tanaka and Hashioka Win Gold - World U20 Championships Day Two Japanese Results

Working together to execute an aggressive frontrunning team strategy born from failure two years ago in Bydgoszcz , 2018 Asian U20 3000 m gold medalist Nozomi Tanaka and 2018 Asian Junior Cross Country gold medalist Yuna Wada opened a massive lead over the African Junior Cross Country medalist Ethiopian duo of Meselu Berhe and Tsige Gebreselama in the early going of the Tampere World U20 Championships women's 3000 m. Tanaka took the lead from the gun before Wada went out front at 200 m to set a fast pace. Through splits of 3:00 and 3:03 for the first 2000 m, Tanaka kicked hard from 300 m out to close with a 2:51 for Japan's first-ever gold medal in the event, winning in a PB of 8:54.01. Berhe and Gebreselama caught Wada on the back corner but weren't even close to matching Tanaka, taking 2nd and 3rd in PBs just under the 9-minute mark. Wada just held off Kenyan Jenali Jemutai Yego for 4th in 9:00.50, seeming happy in post-race interviews to have helped a teammate ...