Skip to main content

Yokohama Starts Olympic Selection Cycle, Ageo, Noguchi and More Up This Weekend

by Brett Larner

Just a week after the busiest ekiden weekend of the year comes another big weekend of racing in Japan.  The Yokohama International Women's Marathon is the most important of them, the first of the three domestic selection races for the Japanese women's Olympic marathon team.  Despite a bad race at August's Daegu World Championships, defending champ, course record holder and 2009 World Championships silver medalist Yoshimi Ozaki (Team Daiichi Seimei) is the domestic favorite.  It's not a one-woman race, though, as Ryoko Kizaki (Team Daihatsu) comes in fresh from a solid 15:22.87 5000 m PB at the end of September and may be ready for something big.  Kaoru Nagao and her teammate Chika Horie (Team Univ. Ent.) should also be in contention for the top Japanese woman position.  If she's fast enough the top Japanese woman will secure an Olympic spot.  The Japanese women face competition from the likes of Robe Guta (Ethiopia), Alevtina Ivanova (Russia), Salina Kosgei (Kenya) and Mara Yamaguchi (Great Britain).  The race will be broadcast live on TV Asahi beginning at noon Japan time on Nov. 20.  Overseas viewers should be able to watch online for free via Keyhole TV.

With multiple national record holder Kayoko Fukushi (Team Wacoal) having completed her move up to the marathon this fall Yokohama may end being the weakest of the three selection races thanks to the almost-there return of marathon national record holder Mizuki Noguchi (Team Sysmex).  Absent for years with injury after injury, Noguchi rocked a stage win at her regional corporate ekiden championships earlier this fall and promptly announced that she plans to run January's Osaka International Women's Marathon.  She takes the next step toward that goal in Sunday's Zevenheuvelenloop 15 km road race in the Netherlands.  If she starts and runs well it will be another step toward completing one of the most welcome and inspiring comebacks in recent memory.

Another of Japan's marathon favorites, 2:08:37 man Yuki Kawauchi (Saitama Pref.) is the invited star for Sunday's Ageo City Half Marathon, the world's deepest half.  Most of the Kanto region men's university teams use Ageo as an intramural trial to determine contenders for their Hakone Ekiden entry lists, and the result is hundreds of young guys going all-out.  2011 Hakone winner Waseda University has had Ageo winners the last two years, with first-year Suguru Osako setting the Asian junior record of 1:01:47 last year.  This year Waseda fields two of its best men, seniors Yusuke Mita and, newly announced as a recruit to the Nissin Shokuhin team next spring, Yo Yazawa, along with nearly a dozen other team members.  Look for them to be among the top contenders for the win.  Kawauchi will run Ageo as his final tuneup for December's Olympic selection Fukuoka International Marathon.

The universities from western Japan, which do not compete in Hakone, have a big ekiden of their own on Saturday, the Biwako University Ekiden.  Kyoto Sangyo University is the favorite, but expect challenges from Ritsumeikan University and Daiichi Kogyo University.

The Nittai University Time Trials leads track action for the weekend, but look also for large time trial meets in Shizuoka and the Chugoku region.  Nittai features top-ranked Kenyans Bitan Karoki (Team S&B), Paul Kuira (Team Konica Minolta), Clement Langat (Team Subaru) and Gideon Ngatuny (Team Nissin Shokuhin), Japanese track stars Megumi Kinukawa (Team Mizuno), Yuki Sato (Team Nissin Shokuhin) and Yuta Takahashi (Team S&B) along with marathoners Arata Fujiwara (Tokyo T&F Assoc.), Atsushi Ikawa (Team Otsuka Seiyaku) and Ryo Yamamoto (Team Sagawa Express), while Shizuoka has dominant Kenyan high schoolers Jeremiah Karemi (Toyokawa H.S.) and Beatrice Wainaina Murugi (Toyokawa H.S.) along with most of 2011 national women's champion Ritsumeikan University's squad.

There is a minor ekiden in Shikoku in which Daegu World Championships marathoner Mai Ito will run with Team Otsuka Seiyaku, but the last noteworthy events of the weekend are the first runnings of the 20,000-strong Kobe Marathon and the new Nagasaki International Marathon.  The elite field in Kobe is somewhat second-tier, featuring mostly retired athletes and talented amateurs, but among them are marathon greats Stefano Baldini (Italy) and Douglas Wakiihuri (Kenya) along with Japanese notables Tadayuki Ojima, Mari Ozaki and Chihiro Tanaka.  JRN will be on-site at Kobe for the debut of one of Japan's biggest marathons.

Look for coverage of all these events as they unfold over the weekend.

(c) 2011 Brett Larner
all rights reserveds

Comments

Kevin said…
Did Yukiko Akaba got selected for being the top Japanese finisher at the world champs.

Most-Read This Week

19-Yr-Old Munakata Breaks Miura's U20 NR to Win Ageo City Half Marathon

The Ageo City Half Marathon is always big, the main race that the coaches of Hakone Ekiden-bound university men's teams use for firming up their entry rosters for the big show. That makes what's basically an idyllic small town race into one of the world's great road races, with depth unmatched anywhere. One of the top-tier people on the start list at 1:02:07, Kodai Miyaoka (Hosei Univ.) took the race out fast, but the entire pack was keying off the fastest man in the race, Reishi Yoshida (Chuo Gakuin Univ.), 1:00:31. Yoshida reeled Miyaoka in before 5 km and kept things steady in the low-1:01 range, wearing down the lead group to around 10 including his CGU teammate Taisei Ichikawa , a quartet from Izumo and National University Ekiden runner-up Komazawa University , 2 runners from local Daito Bunka University , 2:07:54 marathoner Atsumi Ashiwa (Honda), and Australian Ed Goddard . Right after 15 km Komazawa went into action, Yudai Kiyama , Hibiki Murakami and Haru Tanin

10000 m NR Attempt In the Works Saturday at Hachioji Long Distance - Streaming and Preview

There are a bunch of other time trial meets this weekend and next, but Saturday's Hachioji Long Distance is the last big meet for Japanese men, 8 heats of Wavelight-paced 10000 m finely graded from target times of 28:50 down to 26:59 for the fastest heat. Heat 6 at 17:55 local time is effectively the B-race, with 35 Japan-based Kenyans targeting 27:10 at the front end, and in a lot of cases a spot on their teams at the New Year Ekiden national championship on Jan. 1. Corporate teams are only allowed to field one non-Japanese athlete in the New Year Ekiden, and only on its shortest stage, and getting to that has a big impact on African athletes' contracts and renewal prospects. Toyota Boshoku , Yasukawa Denki , Chugoku Denryoku , Aisan Kogyo , JR Higashi Nihon , Subaru and 2024 national champion Toyota are all fielding two Kenyans, and Aichi Seiko three. For people like Toyota's Felix Korir and Samuel Kibathi , getting as close to the 27:10 target time as they can and

Ageo City Half Marathon Preview and Streaming

This weekend's big race is the Ageo City Half Marathon , the next stop on the collegiate men's circuit. Most of the universities bound for the Jan. 2-3 Hakone Ekiden use Ageo to thin down the list of contenders for their final Hakone rosters, and with JRN's development program that sends the first two Japanese collegiate finishers in Ageo to the United Airlines NYC Half every year a lot of coaches put in some of their A-listers too. That gives Ageo legendary depth and fast front-end speed, with a 1:00:47 course record last year from Kenyan corporate leaguer Paul Kuira (JR Higashi Nihon) and the top 26 all clearing 63 minutes. Since a lot of programs just enter everybody on their rosters you never really know who on the entry list is actually going to show up, but if even a quarter of the people at the top end of this year's list run it'll be a great race, even if conditions are looking likely to be a bit warmer than ideal. Chuo Gakuin University 's Reishi Yoshi