Skip to main content

Japanese Athletes Finish Behind World Record Performances in Beijing Paralympics Marathon

by Brett Larner

World records fell in three of the five divisions of the Sept. 17 Beijing Paralympics Marathon on the final day of competition. The 95 athletes from the combined five classes began together in Tiananmen Square at 7:30 a.m. local time.

First to reach the Bird's Nest were the men's wheelchair competitors, with ten athletes entering the tunnel in a dense pack. Defending gold medalist Kurt Fearnley of Australia, Japan's Hiroki Sasahara and South Africa's Ernst Van Dyk battled for the medal positions, with Fearnley and Sasahara clocking identical times of 1:23:17, a PB for the Australian and SB for the Japanese. Fearnley was awarded the gold in the photo finish, Sasahara receiving the silver and Van Dyk the bronze after finishing just one second back. Japanese athletes in the lead pack also finished 5th, 6th and 7th. Veteran world record holder Heinz Frei of Switzerland, now in his 50's, was 14th in a creditable 1:25:43.

Next to finish were the women's wheelchair racers. Absent from the field was Athens Paralympics silver medalist Wakako Tsuchida, who suffered a crash in the 5000 m and withdrew from the marathon. As with the men's division, a tight pack entered the stadium together. Only five seconds separated the top five finishers, with Edith Hunkeler of Switzerland taking the gold in a PB time of 1:39:59, American Amanda McGrory the silver in 1:40:00 and Hunkeler's compatriot Sandra Graf the bronze in 1:40:01. Italian world record holder Francesca Porcellato was 9th, far behind the lead pack in 1:54:27.

Just behind the women were the impaired limb mobility division wheelchair men. The top four competitors were far ahead of the rest of the field and on world record pace as they approached the finish. World record holder Thomas Geierspichler of Austria edged Japanese rivals Hirokazu Ueyonabara and Toshihiro Takada, taking almost four minutes off his own world record to win gold in 1:40:07. Ueyonabara was just behind in 1:40:10, with Takada, the defending gold medalist, getting the bronze in 1:40:20. 4th place finisher Santiago Jose Sanz of Spain also broke Geierspichler's former world record of 1:43:45, clocking a time of 1:42:05.

The records continued over 45 minutes later when Mexican Mario Santillan, the leader in the upper limb amputee division, broke the world record of 2:31:15 by over four minutes, taking the gold in 2:27:04. Silver medalist Tito Sena of Brazil was almost a kilometer behind Santillan but still broke the previous world record, finishing in 2:30:49. Bronze medalist Walter Endrizzi of Italy took bronze in 2:32:51. Former world record holder Jose Javier Conde of Spain was 11th in 2:45:48.

Just before Sena took his silver, spectators in the Bird's Nest were treated to the race's most resonant performance as Chinese runner Shun Qi set a new world record of 2:30:32 to win the gold medal in the visually imparied class. Colombian Elkin Serna also broke the previous world record of 2:31:31, running 2:31:16 to win the silver medal. Russian Ildar Pomykalov rounded out the medals with a 2:33:27 performance. Defending Paralympic gold medalist Yuichi Takahashi of Japan was a disappointing 16th in 2:43:38, while Kenyan Henry Wanyoike, the world record holder going into the race, was one of two athletes not to finish the race.

Top Finishers - click division for complete results
Men`s Wheelchair Division - T54
gold: Kurt Fearnley, Australia: 1:23:17 - PB
silver: Hiroki Sasahara, Japan: 1:23:17 - SB
bronze: Ernst Van Dyk, South Africa: 1:23:18
4th: Aaron Gordian, Mexico: 1:23:20
5th: Kota Hokinoue, Japan: 1:23:22
......
6th: Hiroyuki Yamamoto, Japan: 1:23:22
7th: Jun Hiromichi, Japan: 1:23:23
12th: Masazumi Soejima, Japan: 1:23:55
13th: Choke Yasuoka, Japan: 1:24:04
14th: Heinz Frei, Switzerland: 1:25:43

Women's Wheelchair Division - T54
gold: Edith Hunkeler, Switzerland: 1:39:59 - PB
silver: Amanda McGrory, U.S.A.: 1:40:00
bronze: Sandra Graf, Switzerland: 1:40:01
4th: Shelly Woods, U.K.: 1:40:03
5th: Cheri Blauwet, U.S.A.: 1:40:04
......
9th: Francesca Porcellato, Italy: 1:54:27

Men's Impaired Limb Mobility Wheelchair Division - T52
gold: Thomas Geierspichler, Austria: 1:40:07 - WR
silver: Hirokazu Ueyonabaru, Japan: 1:40:10 - (WR)
bronze: Toshihiro Takada, Japan: 1:40:20 - (WR)
4th: Santiago Jose Sanz, Spain: 1:42:05 - (WR)
5th: Steven Toyoji, U.S.A.: 1:58:37

Men's Upper Limb Amputee Runner Division - T46
gold: Mario Santillan, Mexico: 2:27:04 - WR
silver: Tito Sena, Brazil: 2:30:49 - (WR)
bronze: Walter Endrizzi, Italy: 2:32:51
4th: Guiming Han, China: 2:33:57
5th: Ozivan Bonfim, Brazil: 2:35:31
......
11th: Jose Javier Conde, Spain: 2:45:48

Men's Visually Impaired Runner Division - T12
gold: Shun Qi, China: 2:30:32 - WR
silver: Elkin Serna, Colombia: 2:31:16 - (WR)
bronze: Ildar Pomykalov, Russia: 2:33:27
4th: Abderrahim Zhiou, Tunisia: 2:35:26
5th Fabrizio Cocchi, Italy: 2:35:27
......
16th: Yuichi Takahashi, Japan: 2:43:38
19th: Masahito Niino, Japan: 2:51:14
21st: Hiroaki Kajisa, Japan: 2:56:31
......
DNF: Henry Wanyoike, Kenya

An article from the Beijing Paralympics website about the marathon.

(c) 2008 Brett Larner
all rights reserved

Comments

Roberto said…
"The records continued over 45 minutes later when Mexican Mario Santillan, the leader in the upper limb amputee division, broke the world record of 2:31:15 by over four minutes, taking the gold in 2:27:04."

Saw a photo of this guy. His right arm ends between the elbow and wrist. I'm not really sure what his handicap would be vis-a-vis running marathons, except that water stations are usually on the right side of the course (and presumably in the Paralympics they are on both sides) and of course, an untied shoelace would present problems.

Most-Read This Week

Rui Aoki and Shunsuke Kuwata Making U.S. Debut at United Airlines NYC Half

When the National University Half Marathon was canceled in 2011 after the massive earthquake and tsunami struck northeastern Japan 2 days before the race, JRN talked to the New York Road Runners about bringing 2 collegiate runners to the United Airlines NYC Half Marathon the next weekend as a show of support. It wasn't possible to pull it together in the immediate aftermath of the disasters, but a year later we brought 2 young 2nd-years from Hakone Ekiden CR breaker Toyo University , Kento Otsu and Yuta Shitara , who had been the top 2 Japanese collegiate finishers at the Ageo City Half Marathon in November before Hakone. Shitara ran 1:01:48, at the time the fastest-ever by a Japanese man on U.S. soil, with Otsu running a solid 1:03:15. Thanks to that great start the Ageo-NYC partnership became a regular thing, and except for the pandemic it's continued every year since, expanding this year to June's New York Mini 10 km when 2 runners from Mt. Fuji Women's Ekiden runne...

Chepkirui Over Sato Again to Win 2nd-Straight Nagoya Women's Marathon, Chen Breaks Malaysian NR (updated)

This year's Nagoya Women's Marathon felt like a changing of the guard, with some the bigger domestic names over the last few years fading early and a lot of newer faces stepping up with quality debuts or second marathons. The front group was set to be paced for 2:20 flat with the 2nd group at 2:23:30 to hit the auto-qualifying time for the 2027 MGC Race, Japan's L.A. Olympics marathon trials race in Nagoya. Up front things went out OK, but after a 33:10 split at 10 km Ayuko Suzuki , 2:21:22 here 2 years ago, lost touch, ultimately finishing 23rd in 2:33:28. Windy conditions started to play with pacers' ability to keep things steady and the pace slowed majorly over the next 10 km, but even with a 34:05 second 10 km there were big-name casualties. 2024 Nagoya winner Yuka Ando was next to drop, ending up 17th in 2:30:32. NR holder Honami Maeda was next, followed quickly by Bahraini Kenyan Eunice Chumba and debuting Wakana Kabasawa . Maeda faded to 21st in 2:31:21, whil...

16 Women and 26 Men on the Current Olympic Trials Qualifier List

Last weekend's Nagoya Women's Marathon and the Tokyo Marathon the weekend before brought the main part of the first year of qualification for the Marathon Grand Championship Race, Japan's L.A. Olympics marathon trials to be held in Nagoya in October, 2027, to an end. There are still a few races like the Nagano Marathon and overseas World Athletics platinum label races this season where people might qualify, but for the most part we're not likely to see many new additions until August's Hokkaido Marathon, where the qualifying period opened last year. As of right now 16 women and 26 men have qualified, although the first woman to make the cut, Ai Hosoda , announced that she was retiring after Tokyo earlier this month. Out of the 16 women to have qualified so far, Mikuni Yada is the fastest with her 2:19:57 debut at Osaka Women's in January. Including Hosoda that makes 2 qualifiers for the Edion corporate team, but Daihatsu has the biggest share of the field so ...