Skip to main content

MGC Race Olympic Marathon Trials Qualifier - Hiroto Inoue

Hiroto Inoue

age: 26
sponsor: MHPS
graduated from: Chinzei Gakuin H.S., Yamanashi Gakuin University

best time inside MGC window:
2:06:54, 5th, 2018 Tokyo Marathon

PB: 2:06:54, 5th, 2018 Tokyo Marathon

other PBs:
5000 m: 13:38.44 (2018) 10000 m: 27:56.27 (2018) half marathon: 1:01:39 (2014)

marathons inside MGC window (Aug. 1 2017 – April 30 2019)
12th, 2019 Boston Marathon, 2:11:53
1st, 2018 Jakarta Asian Games Marathon, 2:18:22
5th, 2018 Tokyo Marathon, 2:06:54 – PB
2nd, 2017 Tohoku Miyagi Fukko Marathon, 2:23:47
26th, 2017 London World Championships Marathon, 2:16:54

other major results:
4th, 2019 HDC Fukagawa 10000 m, 28:08.10
1st, 2019 Tamana Half Marathon, 1:02:12
6th, 2019 Karatsu 10-Miler, 46:42
1st, 2019 New Year Ekiden Fourth Stage (22.4 km), 1:04:37
2nd, 2018 Hachioji Long Distance Meet 10000 m, 27:56.27 – PB
1st, 2018 Kyushu Corporate Ekiden Fifth Stage (13.0 km), 38:05
1st, 2018 Golden Games in Nobeoka 5000 m, 13:38.44 – PB
7th, 2018 National Championships 10000 m, 28:42.91
3rd, 2017 Kumamoto Kosa 10-Miler, 46:12 – PB
8th, 2017 Tokyo Marathon, 2:08:22
7th, 2016 Kumamoto Kosa 10-Miler, 46:51
9th, 2016 Lake Biwa Marathon, 2:12:56
10th, 2015 National Championships 10000 m, 28:58.70
3rd, 2015 Hakone Ekiden Third Stage (21.5 km), 1:02:56
36th, 2014 Copenhagen World Half Marathon Championships, 1:02:25
3rd, 2014 Marugame Half Marathon, 1:01:39 – PB
7th, 2013 Hakone Ekiden Third Stage (21.5 km), 1:06:40

Inoue has worked his way up from nothing to becoming the only current Japanese man to break 2:07 not wearing Vaporfly 4%. At Yamanashi Gakuin University he went from good, 7th on the historic 2013 Hakone Ekiden Third Stage behind top three Yuta Shitara, Suguru Osako and Shogo Nakamura, to great, with a 1:01:39 PB for the half marathon a little over a year later in Marugame.

His marathon debut was also good, a 2:12:56 at the 2016 Lake Biwa Marathon, and with a 2:08:22 a year later in Tokyo he qualified for the 2017 London World Championships team. London went badly, only a 2:16:54, but in his next serious marathon after that he went exactly 10 minutes faster, running 2:06:54 for 5th behind Shitara’s new national record in a great head-to-head duel.

From there Inoue took a different approach to the other guys at the fast end of the Japanese spectrum, opting to focus on racing instead of going for fast times. He did break his 5000 m and 10000 m PBs, but in the marathon he took the gold medal at the Jakarta Asian Games medal and then ran Boston, the one race the JAAF had gone out of its way to specify by name wouldn’t count toward MGC qualification. Heading into Boston Inoue was focused, determined, and had trained well, telling the Japanese media he was going for the win, but like in London it was only a mediocre run, 2:11:53 for 12th.

His only serious race since Boston went decently, a 28:08.10 for 4th in Fukagawa in July, and it was enough for him to tell the media, “Osako may be the fastest, but I’m the strongest.” With the exception of Yuma Hattori (Toyota) that’s probably true, and it’s also true that of the four heavy favorites in the men’s race he’ll be the only one doing it with an all-natural spring in his stride. But while he’s very likely to make the top three, his history of being beaten by other Japanese runners and of underperforming in the highest-pressure races has to count against his chances of winning.

Next profile: Yuta Shitara (Honda).

© 2019 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Andrew Armiger said…
✊ Love the gritty underdog, he's one of my 3 hopefuls to make the team for Tokyo.
Andrew Armiger said…
Your next two profiles: Shitara and Osako. I probably don't know enough about form to pick a dark horse. 🙂

Most-Read This Week

'Kobe 2024: Aitchison, Athmani Lead Record-Breaking Thursday'

  https://www.paralympic.org/news/kobe-2024-para-athletics-world-championships-aitchison-athmani-lead-record-breaking-thursday Complete results and daily schedule from the Kobe World Para Athletics Championships are here .

Chesang Wins Osaka Women's Marathon in 2:19:31, Yada Drops 2:19:57 Debut NR

This year's Osaka International Women's Marathon was a race run with a high level of methodicalness, starting slower than the planned 3:19/km but ramping up until the lead pack was skimming around the 2:20:15-30 projected finish level. After hitting halfway in 1:10:13 with a group of 6, by 25 km only 4 were left up front, sub-2:19 runners Workenesh Edesa , Stella Chesang and Bedatu Hirpa , and the debuting Mikuni Yada , and when the last 2 pacers stepped off at 30 km it was Yada who went to the front. Despite never have raced longer than the 10.6 km Third Stage at November's Queens Ekiden where she had helped the Edion team score its first-ever national title, Yada was very, very impressive, fearlessly surging from 12 km and never letting up, even laughing and smiling to fans along the course. When she started sustaining a pace around 3:15/km the projected finish dropped under 2:20 and all the way down to 2:19:28 by 35 km, and even when all 3 of the more experienced ru...

Hirayama Breaks Osaka Half CR, Martinez Set Puerto Rican NR

The Osaka Half Marathon took another big step up the domestic half marathon rankings from a mass-participation race run alongside the Osaka International Women's Marathon to one of the country's top-tier races. In the women's race, the debuting Jecinta Nyokabi (Denso) went out fast, only to be run down by veteran Yumi Yoshikawa (Canon AC) by 10 km. Nyokabi faded to 6th in 1:10:41, but Yoshikawa pushed on to a PB 1:09:14 for the win. Rina Shimizu (Noritz), Yuna Takahashi (Shimamura) and Makoto Tsuchiya (Ritsumeikan Univ.) all broke 70 minutes, Tsuchiya taking the Kansai Region collegiate title in 1:09:32 for 4th overall. Everyone in the top 10 who wasn't debuting ran a PB, a mark of how fast the day was even with cold and windy conditions. The men's race went out on sub-61 pace courtesy of Yudai Shimazu (GMO), then got a big injection of speed when Kyuma Yokota (Toyota Kyushu) took off close to 60-flat pace. Yokota opened a 10-second lead by 15 km, but over ...