Skip to main content

Crisis Situation as 15th Member of Japanese Team Tests Positive for COVID

On July 18, JAAF sprint director Hiroyasu Tsuchie announced that another coach and three more athletes at the Oregon 22 World Championships, 200 m and 4x100 m team member Yuki Koike, 110 m hurdler Shunsuke Izumiya, and 400 m hurdler Takayuki Kishimoto, have tested positive for COVID-19. They bring the total number of people on the Japanese national team to have tested positive at the Championships to 15. "The impact is enormous," said Tsuchie. "Our team this team included a core of younger athletes who had been set to gain valuable experience."

The first athletes to test positive were three of the marathoners, but it has now spread to the sprints and hurdles squads. Koike reported having a fever the morning of the 200 m heats, and when his test results came back positive he was forced to withdraw from what would have been his first race, the 200 m heats. He has also withdrawn from the 4x100 m relay. Tsuchie commented, "Up to this point he had been peaking into excellent condition like the veteran he is, so it's very disappointing for both his individual race and the relay team. I can't imagine how he feels." 

The men's 4x100 m relay heats take place on the eighth day of the meet. Koike was one of the six people entered on the relay team, which will be going for its third-straight World Championships medal. In practice for the relay, contact between athletes is inevitable during baton pass work. "We have measures in place to mitigate risk during group practice," said Tsuchie, "but with athletes sharing rooms, showers and toilets in the dormitories it's fundamentally difficult to take full precautions against infection. All the team doctors can tell us right now is to be as careful as we can about the measures we can control. People can't train wearing a mask, so we have to focus on things like maintaining distance when talking."

Team leader Akira Kazama discussed the continued spread of the virus among the Japanese team, saying, "It's a very difficult situation, but we are talking with the athletes about what to do to overcome it." Team doctor Hirofumi Kamata described the situation as a "crisis," and said the following additional steps are being taken:
  • The JAAF has asked World Athletics to move Japanese team members into private rooms in the Athletes' Village dormitories. Currently 2 to 3 team members share a room.
  • An emergency meeting was held with team members to reiterate the critical importance of thorough disinfection and mask usage.
  • Additional steps for individual team members to manage their physical condition.
Along with six coaches and three JAAF team officials, the athletes who have tested positive so far are:
  • Yuki Koike - 200 m, 4x100 m relay
  • Shunsuke Izumiya - 110 m hurdles
  • Takayuki Kishimoto - 400 m hurdles
  • Kengo Suzuki - marathon
  • Mao Ichiyama - marathon
  • Hitomi Niiya - marathon
source articles:
translated and edited by Brett Larner

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Most-Read This Week

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

Queens Ekiden Streaming and Preview

Sunday is the first big race of championship ekiden season, the Queens Ekiden in Sendai, the season-ending national championship for corporate women. 24 teams race 42.195 km in 6 legs, with the top 8 scoring places for 2025. TBS' live nationwide broadcast starts at 11:50, with multi-camera streaming on Youtube above. Last year Sekisui Kagaku won by almost a minute and a half, and with Paris Olympian Yuma Yamamoto , 2023 World Championships marathoner Sayaka Sato on its entry list and collegiate 1500 m record holder Mizuki Michishita having come on board this season it looks like a contender for another win. But last year's runner-up Japan Post got a big boost this season with the addition of its first non-Japanese member, two-time double 1500 m and 3000 m high school champion Caroline Kariba . The Queens Ekiden limits non-Japanese athletes to a 3.8 km leg, so it'd be tough for Kariba to bridge a 1:25 gap by herself with that little ground to work with. But what she can

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