Skip to main content

National University Women's Ekiden Preview


Sunday is the 40th edition of Sendai's Morinomiyako Ekiden, the National University Women's Ekiden Championships. NTV will be broadcasting the race live starting at noon local time, with coverage also on @JRNLive. 26 teams are racing for the national title, the complete course covering 38.1 km in 6 legs.

Last year Meijo University led start-to-finish en route to a fifth-straight win, taking 5 of the 6 individual stage titles with 3 of them in course record time. 2 of the stage winners have graduated, but in their place Meijo has a very strong class of first-years led by Nanaka Yonezawa, 8:59.57 for 3000 m and 15:31.33 for 5000 m. 4 others are under 9:15 for 3000 m or under 15:50 for 5000 m, making solid support for the 4 returning members from last year. A lot depends on 4th-year Narumi Kobayashi, who ran a 10000 m  collegiate record 31:22.34 last year but hasn't run well most of her senior year so far. 4th-year Yuma Yamamoto on the other hand is fresh off a 15:16.71 PB for 5000 m, and with an 8:52.19 best for 3000 m she's the fastest woman in the entire race. If Kobayashi can keep it together Meijo's chances of pulling off a first-ever 6th-straight national title look very good.


Who could challenge them? Daito Bunka University has been 2nd 4 of the last 5 years, but with the graduation of sub-15:40/sub-32:00 duo Yuka Suzuki and Natsuki Sekiya it's not the team it was. 3000 mSC specialist 4th-year Reimi Yoshimura and fellow 4th-year Mizuho Yamaga lead the team with bests of 15:48.96 and 15:49.88, but beyond that DBU looks thin.

Ritsumeikan University has finished in the top 4 every year for the last 20 years, and this year's team is an improvement on last year's 4th-place squad. 1st-year Yu Muramatsu looks very promising with 9:09.54 and 15:49.33 bests, adding to 4th-year Rinka Hida's 15:47.59 and 2nd-year Tomo Muramatsu's 15:53.55. That's half a solid team.

On paper last year's 5th-placer Nittai University looks good enough to beat DBU, but Ritsumeikan is a stretch and Meijo far out of reach. 2nd-year Risa Yamazaki, 9:07.32 and 15:33.49, is its best runner, and with enough sub-9:20 people to handle the shorter stages the main question will be what Nittai can do on the 9.2 km Fifth Stage.


That's where Takushoku University's Seira Fuwa had her big coming out last year. It's hard to describe what it was like watching it happen, mind-blanking splits coming from Fuwa every kilometer en route to a 28:00 CR for the 9.2 km stage, 30:26 pace for a road 10 km from an 18-year-old 1st-year who'd never raced that far before. Watch it for yourself, at 8:30 in the video up top. Fuwa almost singlehandedly gave Takushoku its best-ever finish, 3rd overall behind Meijo and DBU, and more than backed that run up over the rest of the season including destroying Kobayashi's new collegiate 10000 m record with a 30:45.21 in her debut at the distance in December.

But an Achilles injury in January kept her out of racing most of this year until a tentative comeback with a low-key win in the 10000 m at September's National University Track and Field Championships. The big question here is how much she's progressed in the weeks since then. It doesn't seem like there's any chance she'd be in a condition to repeat last year's show, and without that Takushoku just isn't strong enough to place that high again.

But even just an OK run should put them inside the top 8, earning a guaranteed return trip to next year's Morinomiyako. It's pretty safe to say that a very big chunk of the TV audience will be there specifically to see what Fuwa does. There's just nobody else as exciting in Japanese women's distance running right now. It's a lot of pressure, and hopefully she and Takushoku head coach Toshiharu Igarashi have learned from last year's mistakes and won't reach too high too soon again.


© 2022 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Stefan said…
You are spot on when you say a very big chunk of the TV audience will be there specifically to see what Fuwa does. I am one of them! I'm very curious as well to see what Kobayashi does and if she can return to form. I can't see Meijo Univeristy losing other than by some unforseen mishap such as an injury. They are just so formidable as a team with no weak links.

I've been looking forward to this event for a while now. And yes, the pressure on Fuwa and head coach Toshiharu Igarashi must be enormous. They certainly have got a lot of publicity in recent times. And I agree, she will find it difficult to repeat last year's spectacular run.

I'm curious what 21 year old Ririka Hironaka and holder of the 2nd fastest 10000m time in Japan makes of all this and how she will respond in a month's time in the Queens Exiden.

Most-Read This Week

Wanjiru Breaks Own MR, Fuwa and Ishida Return - Kanto Regionals Day 1 Highlights

Japan's best college meet kicked off Thursday at Tokyo's National Stadium at the 103rd Kanto Region University Track and Field Championships . Looking like she was doing a controlled tempo run, 2nd-yr Sarah Wanjiru (Daito Bunka Univ.) lapped the entire field to win the women's 10000 m in a meet record 32:02.87, almost 15 seconds under the record she last year in her debut. 3rd-yr Aoi Takahashi (Josai Univ.) was 2nd in 33:29.22 and 2nd-yr Nana Nagashima (Josai Kokusai Univ.) 3rd in a PB 33:30.28, but the other main news alongside Wanjiru's new record was the return of collegiate 10000 m record holder Seira Fuwa (Takushoku Univ.) in her first 10000 m in 19 months. Fuwa hung at the back of the chase pack for the first half, made a move to lead it in the second half, and ultimately faded to 9th in 33:40.20. Every comeback has to start somewhere. The D1 men's 10000 m had a tight group up front with the top 6 all finishing within 6 seconds and under 28:10. 3rd-yr Jam

Two-Time Olympic Marathon Medalist Erick Wainaina Referred to Prosectors on Suspicion of Assault

  According to investigators, two-time Olympic marathon medalist Erick Wainaina has had his case referred to prosecutors after allegedly injuring a railway employee by striking him in the face at a station in Setagaya, Tokyo. Wainaina, 50, was the bronze medalist in the marathon at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics and won silver in the 2000 Sydney Olympics. Wainaina is suspected of assaulting a woman in her late teens and a male Tokyu Denentoshi Line employee by hitting them in the face during an altercation at Komazawa University Station in March this year, resulting in minor injuries to the man's face. According to investigators, the incident began on the train between Wainaina and the woman, and after getting off at Komazawa University Station he hit her in the face when she asked him to go to the station office with her to report it. When the male railway employee responded to the situation Wainaina reportedly hit him too. In response to questioning Wainaina is said to have answered,

Kanto Regionals Day Two Highlights

Day two of the 103rd Kanto Regionals meet took place Friday at Tokyo's National Stadium and other facilities. The 1500 m was the only mid or long-distance final on the program, and in the D1 women's final 4th-yr Yuiri Ogata (Nittai Univ.) scored a dominant win with a 4:19.08 PB that put her 2 1/2 seconds up on 2nd-placer Yui Yoshii (Daito Bunka Univ.). 4th-yr Hiroto Takamura (Nittai Univ.) won the D1 men's title in 3:45.65, with 2nd-yr Ryoto Aoki (Rikkyo Univ.) taking the top spot in a strategic D2 men's final in 3:52.93. D2 men also had a round of 5000 m qualifiers on the program. Kenyans took the top four spots in Heat 1 led by newcomer Brian Kiptoo (Reitaku Univ.) in 13:50.47, with Hakone Ekiden runner-up Komazawa University 4th-yr Kota Nakaya outrunning Hakone champ Aoyama Gakuin University 1st-yr Sota Orita for 1st in the slower Heat 2, 14:04.47 to 14:04.95. The final happens Sunday alongside the D1 men's and women's races. In other noteworthy per