Skip to main content

Niiya Returns From Australia With World Championships Qualifying Mark

5th in the women's 10000 m at the 2013 Moscow World Championships, Hitomi Niiya (30, Nike Tokyo TC) returned to Japan on Dec. 15 from Melbourne, Australia. In her first track 10000 m since Moscow over five years ago Niiya won the Zatopek:10 in 31:32.50 to clear the 2019 Doha World Championships entry standard of 31:50.00. "I just barely cleared my minimum goal," she said of her performance.

In the Zatopek:10 race Niiya showed that her aggressive style lives on. Taking off from the lead group after only 2000 m she ran the entire rest of the way to the win alone. "The last 3000 m were hard," she said. "I understood that I'm not doing enough distance in training." Asked to compare her performance to her golden years in Moscow, where she ran an all-time Japanese #3 mark of 30:56.70 she rated Zatopek "50-60%."

In just her fifth race since starting to make a comeback in the spring from five years of retirement Niiya cleared the World Championships entry standard. Even so, she uncompromisingly refuses to let herself be satisfied. "Breaking the standard basically shouldn't really be hard," she said. "Especially if you are globally competitive and have the ability to make the podium." Niiya plans to continue to redevelop her speed and racing sense as well as adding 20 km runs and uphill training to improve her stamina.

Underlying Niiya's current drive is a desire"to settle up with the past." "There was me in Moscow when I was 25 and me now," she said. "Everyone around me feels the same, but I feel it the most. It's like a ghost  that haunts me." It's a wall that she was to get across, and however much she feels that her strength and speed are still lacking, she has to climb the steps one at a time.

The next step she is planning on that journey is next month's National Women's Ekiden. "It'll be my first time running it in six years," she said. "I want to run the anchor stage for the Tokyo team." No doubt she's planning a repeat of her course record-breaking run on the anchor stage of November's East Japan Women's Ekiden.

source article:
https://headlines.yahoo.co.jp/hl?a=20181216-00000129-sph-spo
translated by Brett Larner
photo © 2018 Masato Yokota, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Most-Read This Week

Japan Announces Complete London Olympics Athletics Team

by Brett Larner Click here for JRN's complete video coverage of the 2012 Japanese Olympic Trials, 27 videos making up nearly three hours of footage. The Japanese Federation and Olympic Committee announced the complete lineup of Japan's team of 48 athletes for this summer's London Olympics track and field events at a press conference on June 11.  The team features 11 national record holders and 18 current national champions and is young overall, with a heavy preponderance of first-time Olympians including a World Junior gold medalist, 13 collegiates and one high schooler.  The Fujitsu corporate team is overwhelmingly the best-represented, boasting 8 Olympic team members, while Chukyo University tops the collegiate list with 3 athletes on the team.  Suzuki, whose Suzuki Hamamatsu AC club team exists outside the corporate league, also has 3 Olympians. No Olympic team selection process is free of controversial decisions, and the omission of women's 10000 m Jr. NR hold

Yamagata-Based Alexander Mutiso Aims to Be #1 in Paris Olympics Marathon

Having been named to the Kenyan men's team for this summer's Paris Olympics, Alexander Mutiso , 27, of the Nanyo, Yamagata-based ND Software corporate team, told the Yamagata Newspaper on May 13 that his goal for the Olympic marathon is "to be #1." Having lived in Yamagata for 10 years, Mutiso has strong attachment to the area and credits its environment for helping him develop, saying, "Ever since I came to Yamagata I've been running well." He left for Kenya on May 14 to join the Kenyan national team training camp, aiming to be in perfect condition when he arrives in Paris for the main event. Mutiso came to Japan in 2015, joining the ND Software team and taking up residence in Nanyo. "I don't like the cold winters in Yamagata so much, but the other seasons are nice." From that base he has grown into the athlete he is now, competing in races across Japan and around the world. Compared to the track, his strengths lie more in long road races

'Reinstate Olympic Marathon Prospects Unfairly Disqualified by World Athletics'

A petition for World Athletics to allow the ten men who made the Paris Olympics marathon quota via world rankings but were replaced by unqualified universality place athletes to run. Sent to JRN by the race director of a major marathon.