Skip to main content

Kanemaru and Kashiwabara Lead Team of 30 for World University Games

http://mainichi.jp/enta/sports/general/track/news/20090512k0000e050013000c.html
http://www.sponichi.co.jp/sports/flash/KFullFlash20090511085.html
http://www.kfb.co.jp/news/index.cgi?n=2009051212

translated and edited by Brett Larner

On May 11 the Japanese University Athletics Association announced the 30-member team for July's World University Games in Belgrade, Serbia. Among the young men and women on the team are a number of Beijing Olympians, among them 400 m runner Yuzo Kanemaru (Hosei Univ.), and sprinters Momoko Takahashi (Heisei Gakuin Univ.), Mitsuharu Abiko and Hitoshi Saito (both of Tsukuba Univ.). Racewalker Masumi Fuchise (Team Otsuka Seiyaku) will join the team as preparation for August's World Championships in Berlin, and popular Hakone Ekiden star Ryuji Kashiwabara (Toyo Univ.) will lead the men's long distance track contingent in the 10000 m. Sota Hoshi (Komazawa Univ.) will be the top Japanese man in the half marathon.

National team head coach Mitsugi Ogata commented, "Our goal is 9 medals for the combined men's and women's teams. If we surprise people by achieving such a strong result it will give our World Championships team extra motivation to succeed."

Back home in Japan, most eyes will be upon the 'New God of the Mountain,' Kashiwabara. Kashiwabara became a national celebrity as a first-year with his stage-best run on the uphill 5th leg of this past January's Hakone Ekiden. As someone who never made even a national-level competition as a high school student, his nomination to the World University Games national team represents a great chance for Kashiwabara to make manifest his hidden gifts.

One of the secrets of Kashiwabara's ability is his inner strength, which gives him the confidence and fearlessness to frontrun against older, more experienced competitors. Nowhere has this been more evident in his career than at last month's Hyogo Relay Carnival where he qualified for the World University Games in the 10000 m. Running at the front of the lead pack, Kashiwabara overtook eventual winner Harun Njoroge (Team Komori Corp.) at halfway. "Since high school I've learned, 'Go before the going gets tough,'" said Kashiwabara of the move. Although he lost the lead to Njoroge at 7000 m, Kashiwabara hung on for 2nd overall in 28:20.99, a PB by 24 seconds. He was only 0.86 seconds behind the professional Kenyan. "Yeah, I guess that went about as expected," he said with a slight frown.

As in his other key races in his short career to date, another sign of Kashiwabara's power came in the twisting and rolling of his head and shoulders as he ran. "It's like his engine is too big for his body," commented a Rikuren official in amazement while watching Kashiwabara's breakaway during the second half of the race in Hyogo. A victim of severe anemia in high school, Kashiwabara never gave indication of what he held inside to most observers in those days. Not until the 2008 National Interprefectural Ekiden, where Kashiwabara defeated the nation's top high school stars to take the stage best title for his native Fukushima Prefecture team just before his own graduation from high school, did it become apparent what he might become.

As a first-year at Toyo University, Kashiwabara boldly predicted he would break the stage record on the Hakone Ekiden's most prestigious leg, the nearly 900 m elevation gain 5th stage. The mark, held by Juntendo University's 'God of the Mountain' Masato Imai, was popularly thought to be untouchable. Kashiwabara smashed Imai's record by a wide margin, catapaulting Toyo on to its first-ever Hakone win, earning the event's MVP title, and becoming a national celebrity. In March he went on to win his half marathon debut in the final running of the Kyoto City Half Marathon. Kashiwabara will race the best in the country over 10000 m at June's National Track and Field Championships in a bid to make the team for August's World Championships. If he succeeds it will be another major step up the ladder for this 19 year old.

Comments

Most-Read This Week

Takeshi Soh Reflects on 54 Years in the Sport on His Retirement as Asahi Kasei Head Coach

After 54 years at the Asahi Kasei corporate team, first as athlete and then as coach, Takeshi Soh will retire at the end of this month. Together with his twin brother Shigeru Soh they formed a duo who were icons of the Japanese marathoning world and went all the way to the Olympics. After retiring from competition Takeshi devoted himself to coaching young athletes and came to play a primary role in the leadership of Japanese long distance. His list of achievements is long, and so is the list of those he influenced and inspired. His twin Shigeru was chosen for three Olympic teams in the marathon, Montreal in 1976, Moscow in 1980 and Los Angeles in 1984. Takeshi was named to the Moscow and Los Angeles teams, placing 4th in L.A. to confirm his position as one of the greatest names in the sport in that era. After becoming a coach the twins helped lead Hiromi Taniguchi to gold at the 1991 Tokyo World Championships, Koichi Morishita to silver a year later at the Barcelona Olympics, and o...

Japan Names Marathon Teams for Tokyo World Championships

On Mar. 26 the JAAF named its women's and men's marathon teams for September's Tokyo World Championships. On the women's side the team has veterans Sayaka Sato and Yuka Ando off the strength of a runner-up finish for Sato in Nagoya this year and a win in Nagoya last year by Ando, and newcomer Kana Kobayashi , 23, who has risen quickly from being a fun runner at Waseda University last year to a 2nd-place finish in Osaka Women's this year. Paris Olympics 6th-placer Yuka Suzuki was named alternate after finishing 3rd behind Kobayashi in Osaka Women's. On the men's side the team is led by last year's Fukuoka International Marathon CR breaker Yuya Yoshida and this year's Osaka runner-up Ryota Kondo . The 3rd spot on the team is reserved for JMC Series winner Naoki Koyama , who hasn't cleared the 2:06:30 World Championships qualifying standard and has to wait for the May 4 qualifying deadline for confirmation that the 1184 points he has in the Roa...

Evaluating the Japan Marathon Championship Series IV Awards

  The JAAF held the award ceremony for its Japan Marathon Championship Series IV last night in Tokyo, the whole thing streamed live on Youtube. The two-year series, in this case running from April, 2023 to March, 2025, scores marathoners on time and place in domestic races and high-level international races, with athletes' two best performances combining to give them their series rankings. Series winners score guaranteed places on the 2025 Tokyo World Championships team , with the top 8 women and men earning prize money: 1st: Â¥6,000,000 (~$40,000 USD) 2nd: Â¥3,000,000 (~$20,000) 3rd: Â¥1,000,000 (~$6,700) 4th: Â¥800,000 (~$5,300) 5th: Â¥700,000 (~$4,700) 6th: Â¥500,000 (~$3,300) 7th: Â¥300,000 (~$2,000) 8th: Â¥200,000 (~$1,300) Points for time are scored according to World Athletics scoring tables, with placing points based on races' designated level. Given the JAAF's financial interests in the big domestic races and the income stream from their TV broadcasts, the scoring system ...