Skip to main content

Fukushi 3rd at Chicago Marathon

by Brett Larner

Fukushi at 26 miles. Photo (c) 2011 Dr. Helmut Winter

Multiple national record holder Kayoko Fukushi (Team Wacoal) ran a solid performance at her second marathon, running a promising 2:24:38 for 3rd at the 2011 Chicago Marathon.  Fukushi ran the first half of the race shadowing eventual winner Liliya Shobukhova (Russia) at Japanese national record pace but faded after 25 km, slowing dramatically in the final kilometers.  Nevertheless she still finished with the fourth-best time of the year by a Japanese woman and the third-fastest time ever run by a Japanese woman within the United States..  In so doing she also became the 20th Japanese woman to break 2:25 and the 50th to break 2:27.

In post-race comments to Jiji.com Fukushi said, "It was a 2:24, so it was good.  I wanted to take it as far as I could.  I couldn't have done any better.  I was able to move my legs a bit after 30 km.  If I can run more comfortably than this [at the Olympic selection race next year] it would be nice."

Top Japanese man Gokaya at 26 miles. Photo (c) 2011 Dr. Helmut Winter

In the men's race top-ranked men Atsushi Sato (Team Chugoku Denryoku) and Takayuki Matsumiya (Team Konica Minolta) did not perform anywhere near potential, Sato dropping out after 30 km and Matsumiya running a PW 2:22:46.  Developmental Japanese athletes took 7th through 10th, the top Japanese man also being its youngest and least-experienced, Koji Gokaya (Team JR Higashi Nihon) who was just off his PB in 2:12:15 after closing with the 3rd-fastest last 2.195 km split in the men's field, 6:55.  Gokaya told Jiji.com, "Even though I was falling off the pack from the faster runners I was able to really get into my running this time.  My legs were dead in the second half, so that's my mission for next time."

2011 Chicago Marathon Top Results
Chicago, IL, 10/9/11
click here for complete results

Women
1. Liliya Shobukhova (RUS) - 2:18:20 - PB
2. Ejegayehu Dibaba (ETH) - 2:22:09 - debut
3. Kayoko Fukushi (Team Wacoal) - 2:24:38 - PB
4. Belainesh Gebre (ETH) - 2:26:17 - PB
5. Christelle Daunay (FRA) - 2:26:41
6. Claire Hallissey (GBR) - 2:29:27 - PB
7. Yue Chao (CHN) - 2:32:57
8. Askale Tafa (ETH) - 2:33:35
9. Cruz Nonata da Silva (BRA) - 2:35:35
10. Jeannette Faber (U.S.A.) - 2:36:58

Men
1. Moses Mosop (KEN) - 2:05:37 - CR
2. Wesley Korir (KEN) - 2:06:15 - PB
3. Bernard Kipyego (KEN) - 2:06:29
4. Bekana Daba (ETH) - 2:07:59
5. Ryan Hall (U.S.A.) - 2:08:04
6. Evans Cheruiyot (KEN) - 2:10:29
7. Koji Gokaya (Team JR Higashi Nihon) - 2:12:15
8. Hironori Arai (Team Chugoku Denryoku) - 2:13:17
9. Takashi Horiguchi (Team Honda) - 2:14:48
10. Masaki Shimoju (Team Konica Minolta) - 2:17:49
-----
29. Takayuki Matsumiya (Team Konica Minolta) - 2:22:26
50. Yuki Moriwaki (Team JFE Steel) - 2:27:33
DNF - Atsushi Sato (Team Chugoku Denryoku)

(c) 2011 Brett Larner
all rights reserved

Comments

yuza said…
I was hoping Fukushi would run around 2hrs 22, but in the end it was not a bad run. If you compare her run in Chicago to Osaka this was a lot better.

In Chicago she was over a minute faster at halfway compared to Osaka and although she did not finish that strongly it was a lot better than Osaka. I hope she can run a bit more conservatively in her next marathon and get on the team.

Liliya Shobukhova was amazing yesterday, especially with the second fastest last split FOR EVERYBODY. It goes to show that the pace was a bit hot for most of the men.

It would have been nice to see a bit more of Gokaya and the rest of the Japanese men running, but I am glad most of them ran respectable times.
Brett Larner said…
Agreed. She was good. Not great, but good. Curious to see whether she runs Osaka or Nagoya, but I don't think she'll have too much trouble with the competition either way.

Nice to see Gokaya run well for his level, but of course Sato and Matsumiya were disappointing to say the least. Still only three men have ever broken 2:10 in the U.S.
Hi Brett. I have a blog of interview to spanish athletes (http://www.misatletas.blogspot.com). Since I watched the Kayoko Fukushi´s videos in Osaka Marathon she has become a hero for me. I would like to make an interview with her. Do you know how is possible to contact her?

Regards from Spain. Your blog is fantastic.
yuza said…
Takaoka, Seko....Who is the third?

If they are fit I think Fukushi and Akaba will make the team. Obviously the big mystery is Noguchi, I hate to say it, but I do not like the chances of her running a marathon again at peak fitness. After that it is a chook raffle, though (and I am sure you know more about this) I hope Niiya runs a marathon next year, because I think she has a very fast marathon in her.

The men are always a mystery. I think it could be a while before we see a Japanese man challenge the elites.
Brett Larner said…
Noriaki Igarashi ran 2:09:35 in Chicago in '01.

No arguments from me on the rest of it. I think things are on the way back, not in time for London but Rio should be interesting.

Most-Read This Week

Arao Becomes 1st Man in 40 Years to Score Back-to-Back Ome Road Race Wins

30 km is an under-appreciated distance, and both of Japan's big races at that distance happened Sunday. At the Ome Road Race in western Tokyo's mountains, Sydney Marathon 6th-placer Masato Arao (ND Software) became the first man since the great Kunimitsu Ito in 1985-1986 to win back-to-back years. Arao, who finished 39th of 40 on his leg at the New Year Ekiden last month, stayed in the pack through 20 km before going on the attack, putting over a minute on New Year Ekiden Sixth Stage CR breaker Yudai Shimazu (GMO). Sub-1:31 winning times are rare on the tough and hilly Ome course, but Arao's 1:30:54 almost equaled his 1:30:50 from last year, making him the first Japanese man ever to do it twice and second only to CR holder Ezekiel Cheboitibin . Next up Arao races the Tokyo Marathon, where he is targeting sub-2:06. Shimazu was 2nd in 1:31:58 and Yuta Nakayama (JR Higashi Nihon) 3rd in 1:32:07. Cheboitibin was only 9th, running almost 8 minutes off his CR in 1:36:42. Shi...

Osaka Marathon Preview

The Osaka Marathon is Sunday, one of Japan's biggest mass-participation races and the next stop on the calendar for its elite marathoners hoping to qualify for the L.A. Olympics marathon trials in the fall of 2027. Last year it snowed mid-race, but this year is looking warmer than ideal given the season, with sunny skies, almost no wind, and temps forecast to be 11˚ at the start and rising to 19˚ by the time the winners are finishing. NHK is broadcasting Osaka with a heavy emphasis on the men's race, and if you've got a VPN you should be able to watch it from overseas. There's also official streaming on Youtube starting at 8:30 a.m. local time, although it doesn't look like it's the same as what NHK will be showing. Given Osaka's history at the elite level as the continuation of the men-only Lake Biwa Mainichi Marathon, the women's field is small relative to the men's, just enough to tick World Athletics' label requirements and with almost no do...

Nagoya Women's Marathon Elite Field

Last year's top 3 Sheila Chepkirui , Sayaka Sato and Eunice Chebichii Chumba are back for this year's Nagoya Women's Marathon on Mar. 8, but things are being set up more for it to be a race between Chepkirui, 2:17:49 in Berlin 2023, Aynalem Desta , 2:17:37 in Amsterdam last fall, and Japanese NR holder Honami Maeda , 2:18:59 at the Osaka International Women's Marathon in 2024. Aynalem has the freshest sub-2:20 of the 3, with neither Chepkirui nor Maeda having done it in 2 years. Maeda's only recent result is a 1:10:07 from Houston last month, but when she ran her NR she didn't have any kind of tuneup race to indicate her fitness so it's probably best not to read too much into that. If it goes out as a 2:18 race those are the only 3 who can probably hang with it. If it turns out to be more of a 2:20 race like when Chepkirui won in 2:20:40 last year then there's a group of 7 at the 2:20-2:22 level who will be in the picture, including Chumba, Selly Chep...