Skip to main content

Rematch: Yamauchi, Shibui and Kano in Matsue Ladies Half Marathon

by Brett Larner

The Mar. 15 Matsue Ladies Half Marathon will serve up a spectacular rematch of the 2nd through 4th place finishers from last November's Tokyo International Women's Marathon. Defending Matsue champion Mara Yamauchi (U.K.) will return this year, fresh from a 1:08:29 PB win at February's Kagawa Marugame International Half Marathon and in preparation for April's London Marathon.

Facing Yamauchi is the runner she defeated in Marugame, 2008 Sapporo International Half Marathon and Rock 'n' Roll Half Marathon San Jose winner Yuri Kano (Second Wind AC). Kano lost to Yamauchi in Marugame by nearly a minute, but with a PB of 1:08:57 from her Sapporo win last summer she will be in a position to offer Yamauchi another stiff challenge. Kano is also preparing for London and is likely to be named to the national team for this summer's World Championships.

Bringing an element of chaos to the matchup is 10000 m national record holder and 2000 Matsue winner Yoko Shibui (Team Mitsui Sumitomo Kaijo). While neither Yamauchi nor Kano are elligible to run in the National Jitsugyodan Half Marathon, held the same day in nearby Yamaguchi, Shibui is skipping the national championship race to run against the two runners who beat her in Tokyo last November. Shibui's PB of 1:09:31 is surprisingly slow considering her 10000 m and marathon bests of 30:48.89 and 2:19:41, but with the roll she has been on during the last year she may set a sizeable new mark as she, along with Kano, looks toward August's World Championships marathon.

The Matsue Ladies Half Marathon also serves as the National University Women's Half Marathon Championships. The top university finishers in the race will be selected for the national team for July's World Student Games half marathon in Serbia. The race begins at 10:02 a.m. on Mar. 15. A recorded version will be broadcast nationwide on Fuji TV on Mar. 17 from 2:55 a.m. to 3:50 a.m. International viewers should be able to watch online through one of the sites listed here.

Click here for a complete listing of Matsue's invited elite field.

(c) 2009 Brett Larner
all rights reserved

Comments

Anonymous said…
Commenting on Radcliffe’s withdrawal from this year’s race, Flora London Marathon race director Dave Bedford said: “This is a major blow for Paula. I know how much she wanted to run here this year but luck just does not seem to be on her side.

Paula’s priority must now be to get fully fit hopefully for the World Championships and we wish her all the best for a speedy recovery.

Even without Paula, however, the elite women’s field for 26th April is still one of the strongest we’ve ever had in London and I am sure the race will be a superb spectacle.”
Irina Mikitenko GER 2:19:19
Catherine Ndereba KEN 2:18:47
Zhou Chunxiu CHN 2:19:51
Berhane Adere ETH 2:20:42
Lyudmila Petrova RUS 2:21:29
Constantina Dita ROM 2:21:30
Svetlana Zakharova RUS 2:21:31
Gete Wami ETH 2:21:34
Yuri Kano JPN 2.24.27
Tomo Morimoto JPN 2.24.33
Mara Yamauchi GBR 2:25:03
Martha Komu KEN 2:25:33
Mika Okunaga JPN 2.27.52
Kirsten Melkevik Otterbu NOR 2:29:12
Inga Abitova RUS 2:33:55
Kate O’Neill USA 2:34:04
Liliya Shobukhova RUS Debut
Jo Pavey GBR Debut
Anonymous said…
I think it's smart of Kano to run London. She's going to face sub 2:20 athletes, top 6 olympic athletes. She's probably using this race for experience and to run a personal best.
Brett Larner said…
Thanks, Dennis, I had missed that. Okunaga too. Should be interesting.

Most-Read This Week

Yuya Yoshida 2:05:16 CR to Win Fukuoka International Marathon

Yuya Yoshida 's story is really the kind you love to read. A guy who never got to run the big races at Aoyama Gakuin University until his very last chance his senior year, when he dropped a course record at the 2020 Hakone Ekiden in what he was thinking of as his last race. Then a 2:08:30 marathon debut for 3rd at Beppu on his coach's advice. Then a 2:07:05 win at the Fukuoka International Marathon later the same year after deciding to keep going and joining the GMO corporate team. A few years of setbacks, then a 2:06:37 PB in Osaka this spring. And now this. A 2:05:16 CR for the win in Fukuoka, 1:02:58 at halfway and a smoking 1:02:18 mostly solo 2nd half, 2 seconds under the old record set back in pre-super shoe days in 2009 by the great Tsegaye Kebede . Really, what else is there to say? Yoshida was great. In the pack through 25 km, then throwing down at dropping 2:06:31 man Yusuke Nishiyama and everyone else except Israeli Tadesse Getahon , who lasted another 5 km befor...

Fukuoka, Hofu, Kosa 10-Miler and More - Weekend Preview

It's a massive weekend of racing in Japan, so let's get to it. Fukuoka International Marathon Right now only four Japanese men have qualified for next year's Tokyo World Championships, and with recent times between 2:05:59 and 2:06:54 the main domestic group up front, Kenya Sonota , Yusuke Nishiyama , Yuya Yoshida , Kazuya Nishiyama and Daisuke Doi , will be aiming to add to that list. It's been a while since there's been this good a Japanese field in Fukuoka. There was a near-miss on China scoring its first Fukuoka win last year, and there's a strong Chinese contingent back this time including NR holder Jie He , 2:06:57, Shaohui Yang , 2:07:09, Jianhua Peng , 2:09:59, and Bo Li , 2:11:23. Israel has a small crew of three, Tesema Moges , Tadesse Getahon and Yitayew Abuhay , and the main Kenyan group including two-time winner Michael Githae , Bidan Karoki , Bethwel Yegon , Lemeck Too and Vincent Raimoi , is pretty well-positioned to help make it a race under t...

Singh Breaks Indian NR to Win Hachioji Long Distance 10000 m, with 39 Going Sub-28

For the second time in two months Gulveer Singh was in Japan to race, and for the second time he outkicked Toyota corporate team rookie and 2023-2024 Komazawa University captain Mebuki Suzuki to win with a new Indian national record. Last time around it was September's Yogibo Athletics Challenge Cup 5000 m in Niigata, where Singh ran a 13:11.82 NR, outpowering Suzuki over the last 200 m but Suzuki still coming in with an all-time Japanese #8 13:13.80. This time it was the Hachioji Long Distance 10000 m time trial meet in suburban Tokyo. Running the fastest heat targeting the 27:00.00 Tokyo World Championships standard, Singh started at the back of the pack and worked his way forward as the race progressed. The front end of the pack wore down to just Singh, Suzuki and Japan-based Kenyans Samwel Masai (Kao), Gilbert Kiprotich (Sunbelx) and Emmanuel Kiplagat (Mitsubishi Juko), splitting en route: 2:42 5:25 (2:43) 8:08 (2:43) 10:51 (2:43) 13:36 (2:45) 16:19 (2:43) 19:04 (2:45)...