Skip to main content

Shigetomo Wins Osaka International Women's Marathon in 2:23:23, Koda and Murayama Take Half

by Brett Larner

After heavy pre-race favorite Kayoko Fukushi (Team Wacoal) faltered soon into the second half of the Jan. 29 Osaka International Women's Marathon, second-time marathoner Risa Shigetomo (Team Tenmaya) was there to pick up the pieces as she took eight minutes off her debut time from last year's London Marathon to win in 2:23:23, the fastest time by a Japanese woman since Mizuki Noguchi's 2:21:37 course record at the Nov., 2007 Tokyo International Women's Marathon.   Shigetomo's performance puts her as the leading contender for a spot on the Olympic team with one selection race to go, and barring a slew of spectacular runs at the Mar. 11 Nagoya Women's Marathon she is likely to become the fourth-straight Tenmaya runner to make an Olympic team.  Ukrainian Tetiana Gamera-Shmyrko and former pro XC skiier Azusa Nojiri (Team Daiichi Seimei) also ran well, both running new PBs under 2:25 to take 2nd and 3rd after Gamera-Shmyrko ran a solid negative split to pass Nojiri coming onto the track.

The race went out largely according to schedule, with a group of four pacers taking the lead pack out on low-2:22 pace with Fukushi patiently staying at the back of the group.  Gamera-Shmyrko, running a crafty race, hung back with veterans Chika Horie (Team Univ. Ent.) and Kiyoko Shimahara (Second Wind AC) in the second pack.  By 20 km the lead pack was down to pacer Yuko Shimizu (Team Sekisui Kagaku), Fukushi, Nojiri and Shigetomo as the pace ratcheted down into 2:21 territory.  Shimizu, with a half marathon PB of 1:12:22, deserves significant props for taking the leaders through halfway in 1:10:58 after the premature exit of the other pacers.  Nojiri fell away before the 22 km turnaround, and when Shimizu finished her duties a few hundred m later it was down to a duel between Shigetomo and Fukushi.

Surprisingly it was Shigetomo, impressively relaxed and smooth, who did the breaking as she took the pace under 3:20/km, opening a few m on Fukushi.  The separation turned into a gap, and by 27 Shigetomo was free.  She sailed on at sub-2:22 pace before slowing in the later km, but her final time of 2:23:23, very close to pre-race best-case scenario expectations, was the 17th-fastest ever by a Japanese woman and made her the all-time 9th-best Japanese woman, a welcome newcomer and a good start to the year if somewhat pale behind the glow of Friday's Dubai Marathon where the task of what Japanese women face if they hope to regain their global medal competitiveness was made more than clear.

Fukushi faded and was run down first by Nojiri, then others one by one.  Nojiri was strong over the final km, taking over 30 seconds off her PB despite getting caught by the fast-closing Gamera-Shmyrko, who took 3 1/2 minutes off her best and opened 11 seconds on Nojiri over the final 400 m lap of the track with a 7:06 final 2.195 km split, the fastest in the field by a wide margin.  Second-packers Horie and Shimahara both just went under 2:30, Shimahara in her final race before taking time off to start a family.  Fukushi dropped as far as 9th, finishing only 2 1/2 minutes faster than her disastrous debut four years ago.  Having said that she is not thinking about the track at all for the London Olympics despite running sub-31 less than a year ago, Fukushi's next move remains a question mark.  At this stage with one selection race remaining Shigetomo and Daegu World Championships 5th-placer Yukiko Akaba (Team Hokuren) look very solid for the Olympic marathon team, with the final place a toss-up between Yokohama International Women's Marathon winner Ryoko Kizaki (Team Daihatsu) and the winner in Nagoya.  With the Osaka results in hand expect Akaba to make an announcement shortly on whether she will run next month's Tokyo Marathon or try to improve her standing in Nagoya.

The Osaka Half Marathon, held concurrently with the marathon, continued its development into a significant early-year event with decently strong performances on both the men's and women's sides.  2:11 marathoner Takaaki Koda (Team Asahi Kasei), in a tuneup for the Tokyo Marathon, won the men's race in 1:03:54 two seconds ahead of fellow 2:11 man Satoru Kasuya (Team Toyota Boshoku).  Maiko Murayama (Team Yamada Denki) had the women's win by over a minute, running 1:12:46.

2012 Osaka International Women's Marathon
Osaka, 1/29/12
click here for complete results

1. Risa Shigetomo (Team Tenmaya) - 2:23:23 - PB
2. Tetiana Gamera-Shmyrko (Ukraine) - 2:24:46 - PB
3. Azusa Nojiri (Team Daiichi Seimei) - 2:24:57 - PB
4. Chika Horie (Team Univ. Ent.) - 2:28:35
5. Kiyoko Shimahara (Second Wind AC) - 2:29:51
6. Yumi Sato (Team Shiseido) - 2:32:49
7. Irene Mogaka (Kenya) - 2:35:36
8. Lauren Shelley (Australia) - 2:35:57
9. Kayoko Fukushi (Team Wacoal) - 2:37:35
10. Naoko Sakamoto (Team Tenmaya) - 2:39:27
11. Constantina Dita (Romania) - 2:40:08
DNF - Lidiya Grigoryeva (Russia)

2012 Osaka Half Marathon
Osaka, 1/29/12
click here for complete results

Men
1. Takaaki Koda (Team Asahi Kasei) - 1:03:54
2. Satoru Kasuya (Team Toyota Boshoku) - 1:03:56
3. Kenichi Shiraishi (Team Asahi Kasei) - 1:03:57
4. Takanobu Otsubo (Osaka Police Dept.) - 1:03:57
5. Noritaka Fujiyama (Team Sumco) - 1:04:11

Women
1. Maiko Murayama (Team Yamada Denki) - 1:12:46
2. Yui Ouchi (Team Noritz) - 1:13:58
3. Kanade Iida (Osaka Geidai Univ.) - 1:14:19
4. Rei Miura (Team Otsuka Seiyaku) - 1:14:24
5. Shiori Hayashida (Osaka Geidai Univ.) - 1:15:04

(c) 2012 Brett Larner
all rights reserved

Comments

TokyoRacer said…
My 2:23:30 prediction was almost right on...but the wrong person.
Boy, when Fukushi falls apart, she really falls apart, doesn't she? Although after 30k she was probably just jogging it in.
I don't think the marathon is for her!
Brett Larner said…
Good call, Bob. The call in my preview was not too bad either.

It's really too bad about Fukushi. What's next? Go for the 10000 m in London? Run Berlin and go for the NR like Shibui did when she didn't make Athens?
yuza said…
Well done to Shigetomo! I like the fact that she went for it from the start and was able to hang on; it shows that she has guts.

I am starting to wonder whether Fukushi was actually fit. I know I sound like some nutjob on the internet screaming "conspiracy", but here me out. She hit the wall much worse in Osaka than in Chicago, yet her split at halfway in Osaka was over 90 seconds slower than Chicago.

It does not make sense given that she was apparently better prepared for this marathon. Though having said that she looked so good early on in the race, so who knows? I am merely speculating on a hypothesis. She probably just had a bad day.

I would love to see her run a fast marathon.

Brett, do you know if Japanese coaches exchange much information between each other relating to training? I can not imagine Fukushi would ever leave Nagayama, but maybe he could have a chat with Hirose and/or Koide.

Other than that I hope Noguchi is able to run Nagoya. It would also be nice to see Niiya run it as well, but I do not think that will be happening.
Brett Larner said…
I agree. Like I said, Shigetomo is a welcome addition and I'm glad she had a good run. History is kind of against her, but hopefully she breaks the mold in her future marathons.

It looks like Fukushi is going to shoot for the track for the Olympics. Mika wanted to actually watch Osaka after returning to Tokyo, so I saw it for a second time and on seeing it again I kind of felt the same way you do. When I was tweeting the race I said that she looked heavy after only one lap; what I interpreted at that point as her biding her time at the back of the pack looks more like lifelessness on second viewing, but maybe that is just 20/20 hindsight. She was passive and hung back from the leaders in Chicago, but even so it seemed pretty extreme this time. Only one move to even attempt to draw even with the lead, the rest of the race spent trailing. Strange and unfortunate, at any rate.

As far as coaching, there is a lot of interconnection between people at different levels, but I don't know anything about Nagayama in particular.

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 ...