Skip to main content

Bat-Ochir and Kawauchi Duel at Hofu Yomiuri Marathon (updated)

by Brett Larner

Click here for photos from the Hofu Yomiuri Marathon via M. Kawaguchi.

Mongolia's Serod Bat-Ochir successfully defended his title at the Dec. 18 Hofu Yomiuri Marathon, dropping Japanese amateur Yuki Kawauchi (Saitama Pref.) in the final kilometers to win in 2:11:56, the fastest time in Hofu since Ethiopian Haile Negussie's 2:08:16 CR in 2002.  The race ran at 2:13-flat pace through 25 km, splitting 1:06:31 at halfway, but following the departure of pacer Hiroyoshi Umegae (Team NTN) at 25 km things broke up quickly.  Kawauchi, who ran 2:09:57 in Fukuoka only 2 weeks ago, surged into the lead at 25 km, clocking under 3:00 for each of the next 2 km to kill off most of his competition.  Bat-Ochir was the only runner to follow, and for the next 10 km the pair traded feints.  They split 15:02 from 25 to 30 km, and after the pace slowed to 35 km Bat-Ochir made a decisive move away from Kawauchi with 6 km to go.  He continued pushing the pace, splitting 6:55 for his final 2.195 km to seal the win in the second-best time of his career, just missing his 2:11:35 PB from this year's London Marathon.

Kawauchi, who in his good races has typically faded after 25 km to return with a strong finish, showed the fatigue of both Fukuoka and his uncharacteristic move at 25 km as he was unable to respond to Bat-Ochir's closing surge.  Nevertheless, like Bat-Ochir he ran a negative split to record the third-best time of his career, 2:12:33, also faster than any time run in Hofu since 2002.  And only two weeks after a 2:09:57.  The top Japanese finisher in Hofu receives a paid trip to run the following year's Berlin Marathon, so it is likely that we will see Kawauchi in Berlin regardless of whether or not he makes the Japanese Olympic team.

Further back in the field, first-year pro Norimasa Nishina (Team Fujitsu) was 3rd in 2:15:12 in his marathon debut, running down Korean Seungho Baek near the end of the race.  2010 Asian Games marathon gold medalist Youngjun Ji (South Korea) faded badly after running in the lead pack through 20 km.  Three-time Olympics and World Championships marathon 5th-placer Shigeru Aburuya (Team Chugoku Denryoku), running his final marathon before retiring from competition, also faded after only 3 km.  59+ world record holder Yoshihisa Hosaka (Natural Foods) recovered well from his DNF in Fukuoka to finish in 2:47:41.  In the women's race, 2009 Hofu winner Noriko Hirao (F-Dream AC) led through 25 km before being overtaken by 2006 winner Hisae Yoshimatsu (Shunan City Hall), who pulled away to win in 2:44:28.

Update: Federation director of men's marathoning Yasushi Sakaguchi told the Mainichi newspaper, "If you consider that it has only been two weeks [since Fukuoka] this was incredible.  He's getting stronger the more he races, and that shows that he's not a fluke."  Kawauchi commented, "[The fatigue from Fukuoka] came out in my legs. I couldn't go after him in the race.  I'm really disappointed to lose, but that's the difference experience makes."  Approaching winner Bat-Ochir after the race, Kawauchi told him, "Congratulations, you were very strong.  But I'm not going to lose to you in London."

In post-race comments to Sanspo.com Kawauchi said, "This makes me more confident about aiming for 2:07 at [February's] Tokyo Marathon.  It's fuel for [making] the Olympics."  Prior to Tokyo he plans to run the Mari Tanigawa Half Marathon, which he won in 2010, and the Okumusashi Ekiden in January, and February's Kagawa Marugame International Half Marathon where he ran his PB of 1:02:40 last year.

2011 Hofu Yomiuri Marathon
Hofu, 12/18/11
click here for complete results and splits

Men
1. Serod Bat-Ochir (Mongolia) - 2:11:56
2. Yuki Kawauchi (Saitama Pref.) - 2:12:33
3. Norimasa Nishina (Team Fujitsu) - 2:15:12 - debut
4. Seungho Baek (South Korea) - 2:15:20
5. Jun Matsumoto (Team Aichi Seiko) - 2:16:56
6. Kota Noguchi (Team Toyota) - 2:17:28
7. Tomohiro Seto (Team Kanebo) - 2:20:08
8. Takeshi Tagen (Team Monteroza) - 2:21:30
9. Yoshihiro Yamamoto (Team Tokuyama) - 2:22:37
10. Dishon Karukuwa Maina (Kenya/Team Aisan Kogyo) - 2:23:21
-----
59. Youngjun Ji (South Korea) - 2:39:26
163. Yoshihisa Hosaka (Natural Foods) - 2:47:41
DNF - Shigeru Aburuya (Team Chugoku Denryoku)

Women
1. Hisae Yoshimatsu (Shunan City Hall) - 2:44:28
2. Noriko Hirao (F-Dream AC) - 2:50:22
3. Nana Higashi (Yamato AC) - 2:52:24

10 km - Men
1. Shinnosuke Ogura (Team Kurosaki Harima) - 30:32

10 km - Women
1. Yurie Fujita (Hagi Kogyo H.S.) - 33:49

(c) 2011 Brett Larner
all rights reserved

Comments

Kevin said…
Will there be a startlist for Osaka 2012 Marathon on December 18th? I think Yuri Kano might run.
Brett Larner said…
The 2012 Osaka Marathon will be on Nov.25, not Dec.18. Yes, there will be a start list, but I imagine it will not be publicly available until October.

Most-Read This Week

Nationally-Ranked Gakuho Ishikawa H.S. Withdraws From Region Championships Due to Bear Attacks

5th at last year's National High School Ekiden boys' race, Fukushima's Gakuho Ishikawa H.S. has withdrawn its boys' and girls' team from the Nov. 6 Tohoku Region Ekiden Championships in Fukushima. A school spokesperson commented, "We made this decision based on the likelihood of our students coming into contact with bears in the city when out running in the morning." The Akita Athletics Association had already made an announcement on its website on Oct. 31 that due to the high number of bear encounters within the city of Akita this year , the ekiden would be held on a track instead of as a road race. Organizers said that they are leaving it up to each individual school whether to participate, and that they will accept schools choosing not to participate due to safety concerns. The Gakuho Ishikawa boys and girls both won the Fukushima Prefecture High School Ekiden in October, earning them places at the Tohoku regional meet and December's National High...

Komazawa Back On Top With 17th National University Ekiden Title

#3-ranked Komazawa University came on strong over the second half of the National University Ekiden to take a record 17th national title, more than any other program in the national championship race's 57-year history. It had its share of dominant single-stage runs, but more than that this year's Komazawa lineup was consistent across the board, the only school to put all 8 of its runners into the top 5 on their stages, all but 2 of them in the top 3. Over the first 2 legs it was never more than 3 seconds out of 1st, moving up into that position by 1 seconds on the 3rd leg with a good run from 4th-year Yudai Kiyama . 3rd-year Kaisei Yasuhara was the weakest link with only the 5th-best time on the 4th leg, dropping Komazawa back to 4th and 35 seconds behind #2-ranked Chuo University 's Daichi Shibata . But on the next leg Komazawa 4th-year Aoi Ito turned it back around with the biggest run at this year's Nationals, running 35:01 for the 12.4 km 5th leg, 17 seconds unde...

Hofu Yomiuri Marathon Elite Field

Everything in Japanese marathoning is already about qualifying for the MGC Race, Japan's trials race for the L.A. Olympics. Scheduled the same day as the Fukuoka International Marathon, the Dec. 7 Hofu Yomiuri Marathon counts the same weight as Fukuoka, Tokyo and Osaka in men's qualification, with trials spots up to be had by the first 6 Japanese men under 2:09:00 and the first Japanese woman under 2:27:00. The only real contender to do that among the women is Mizuki Nishimura , running her first marathon off a 1:41:42 CR at the Kumanichi 30k in February. Given the Tenmaya corporate team's track record of success in the marathon, including the current women's NR of 2:18:59, her chances are pretty good. Ayumi Morita ran a 2:31:38 PB in Tokyo last year, but it's a big jump for her to get down to 2:26 and it'll mostly be a question of whether Nishimura executes the same way she did at Kumanichi. For men there are 6 under 2:09:00 in the last 3 years, with Ryoma T...