Skip to main content

Shimada and Stenson Break Launceston Half CR


With great conditions at what organizers billed as the highest-label half marathon in the southern hemisphere, the only half marathon in the south with a World Athletics Elite Label or better, Japan's Teruki Shimada and Australian Commonwealth Games champ Jessica Stenson broke the men's and women's course records at the McGrath Launceston Running Festival Peppers Silo Half Marathon Sunday in Tasmania.

The men's race start list read like a rematch of February's Marugame Half Marathon, with most of the 10 fastest men in the race having run there. On the Australian side was an interesting lineup of marathon NR holder Andy Buchanan, half marathon NR holder Brett Robinson, and road 10 km NR holder Sam Clifford, with Teikyo University duo Shimada and Jinya Ozaki and Rikkyo University pair Kento Baba and Hiroto Kuniyasu leading the Japanese contingent in their collective international debuts.

Baba, who ran 1:00:26 to finish 2 seconds ahead of Buchanan, was tasked with pacing through 10 km in 28:50 but struggled to hit that, clocking 29:14 before stepping off. Including Australians Isaac Heyne and Liam Boudin, the pack progressively whittled down as different people took turns at the front. Just before 20 km it was down to Heyne, Robinson and Shimada when Shimada, 5th on the First Stage at this year's Hakone Ekiden and 1:00:56 in Marugame, made the first real surge of the race. Robinson responded and took the lead on a corner just after 20 km, but at a 180˚ turnaround a few hundred meters later Heyne and Shimada went by him again.

Shimada surged just before the final corner and managed to hold Heyne off by 1 second, breaking Robinson's CR by 26 seconds to win in 1:01:12. Heyne was next in 1:01:13 and Robinson 3rd in 1:01:20, with Ozaki running a 1:01:24 PB for 4th and Kuniyasu 5 seconds off his PB in 1:01:35 for 5th. All 5 were under the old CR.

Shimada, who had never been outside Japan before and had to get his first passport to come to the race, missed the Australian all-comers record by just 1 second but didn't care much. "It was a big honor to get invited here, and I wanted to make the most of the chance with a good run," he said post-race. "I was pretty nervous running my first race against really good people like this, but I planned to save as much as I could for the last part of the race and I'm really happy it worked out the way it did." Post-race he presented the other podium finishers with gifts he had brought from Japan.

In the women's race Stenson and the only other sub-70 woman in the field, Japan's Yumi Yoshikawa, went out together with company from Australian Caitlin Adams. Adams dropped off just after 8 km, the trio going through 10 km in 33:11, 33:12 and 33:22, and just past 10 km Stenson started to pull away from Yoshikawa. "It was a bit depressing to watch her inch away and just be like, 'Noooo, don't goooooo!' Yoshikawa laughed post-race.

Stenson ran the 2nd half unchallenged, running the first-ever sub-71 and sub-70 in Launceston with a 1:09:51 CR for the win. Yoshikawa got under the old CR too in 1:10:43 for 2nd, with Adams hanging on for a PB in 3rd in 1:11:14. Running most of the race in 4th just a week after winning the Ulaanbataar Marathon, Mongolian NR holder Khishigsaikhan Galbadrakh faded to 6th in 1:13:54 after getting run down by Australians Sarah Klein and Milly Clark.

McGrath Launceston Running Festival

Peppers Silo Half Marathon
Launceston, Australia, 1 June 2025

Men
1. Teruki Shimada (Japan/Teikyo Univ.) - 1:01:12 - CR
2. Isaac Heyne (Australia) - 1:01:13 (CR), PB
3. Brett Robinson (Australia) - 1:01:20 (CR)
4. Jinya Ozaki (Japan/Teikyo Univ.) - 1:01:24 (CR), PB
5. Hiroto Kuniyasu (Japan/Rikkyo Univ.) - 1:01:35 (CR), PB
6. Liam Boudin (Australia) - 1:01:40 - PB
7. Sam Clifford (Australia) - 1:02:00 - PB
8. Andy Buchanan (Australia) - 1:02:42
9. Ryan Gregson (Australia) - 1:03:10
10. Ryuichi Yoshioka (Japan/Honda Tochigi) - 1:03:19
-----
17. Ser-Od Bat-Ochir (Mongolia/Shin Nihon Jusetsu) - 1:04:53
21. Kento Otsu (Japan/Chuo Hatsujo) - 1:06:56
-----
pacer - Kento Baba (Japan/Rikkyo Univ.) - 29:14 at 10 km

Women
1. Jessica Stenson (Australia) - 1:09:51 - CR
2. Yumi Yoshikawa (Japan) - 1:10:43 (CR)
3. Caitlin Adams (Australia) - 1:11:14 - PB
4. Sarah Klein (Australia) - 1:13:19
5. Milly Clark (Australia) - 1:13:44
6. Khishigsaikhan Galbadrakh (Mongolia) - 1:13:54
7. Breanna Golub (Australia) - 1:15:16 - PB
8. Isobel Hume (Australia) - 1:15:22 - debut
9. Eve Mure (Australia) - 1:17:40
10. Natasha Richards (Australia)- 1:19:14

© 2025 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Most-Read This Week

CHN and JPN National Records Go Down - Weekend Track Update

There weren't any Japanese athletes in action at the Rabat Diamond League meet Sunday, but 2 lower-tier domestic meets produced new national records. At the Nittai University Time Trials meet in Yokohama, Samuel Kibathi (Toyota) led the top 5 in the men's 10000 m under 28 minutes in 27:39.97. In 3rd, China's Wenjie Wang took just over a second off his own NR from the same meet last year, setting a new record of 27:47.53. His teammate Haoran Tang was 6th in a 28:27.44 PB, with the top Japanese time in the race being a 28:33.39 for 8th from Jin Yuasa (Toyota). Amazingly, Wang and Tang were back the next day on day 2 of the Nittai meet, Wang running a PB of 13:35.58 for 4th in the A-heat and Tang winning the B-heat in a PB of 13:38.80. Isaac Ndiema took the A-heat in 13:26.49, with the fastest Japanese time going to Yuhei Urano (Fujitsu) with a 13:35.94 for 5th behind Wang. Other Nittai highlights: Deborah Chemutai (Univ. Ent.) won a photo finish against Yua Nagamori ...

Australian YouTuber Handed Lifetime Ban by Ageo City Half Marathon After Running 1:06 with Another Runner's Bib (updated)

After discussion with their race's chief JAAF referee, on Nov. 27 the organizers of the Ageo City Half Marathon handed down a lifetime ban from their event against 36-year-old Australian Matt Inglis Fox  for running the Nov. 15 race wearing the bib number of another JAAF-registered runner. The incident came to light after Fox posted on his personal Instagram account that he had run a PB of 1:06:33 and finished 203rd in Ageo with a 10 km split of 31:03, along with photos and video of himself in the race wearing a bib number beginning with 11. Fox did not appear in the results by name or in that time or place, the closest match being a 1:06:54 gross, 1:06:50 net finish time with a 31:21 10 km split for 18th place in the JAAF-registered division and 209th overall by bib number 1129, registered to a non-Japanese Tokyo-resident club runner. The club runner, Harrisson Uk , readily confirmed that he had given his bib to Fox, saying, "I gave my number to Matt. It wasn't me."...

Ngetich Breaks CR, Murayama and Sasaki Make U.S. Debut at New York Mini 10k

WR holder Agnes Ngetich  soloed a fast one at the 54th edition of the Mastercard New York Mini 10k, leading inside the first mile and pulling away the rest of the race to run a 30:07 CR for the win, the fastest time ever on U.S. soil albeit on a slightly net downhill course. On a warm day that saw over 10,000 women finish  Tsigie Gebreselama  was on her own most of the way too, a distant 2nd in 30:53 and 17 seconds up on past champ Hellen Obiri . Further back, 2026 World University Cross Country bronze medalist Amisa Murayama  and 2025 Morinomiyako Ekiden 3rd leg CR breaker Nazuki Sasaki  from 2025 National University Women's Ekiden runner-up Tohoku Fukushi University  made their U.S. debuts. Murayama was targeting the fastest-ever Japanese time at the Mini, 32:37, but struggled on the hills just before 5 km and late in the race, fading to finish 23rd in 34:08. Sasaki, recovering from a stress reaction in her upper back a few months ago, ran a conservative ...