Skip to main content

Sera Breaks National High School Boys Ekiden Course Record

by Brett Larner
video highlights courtesy of broadcaster NHK

The shadow of the late Samuel Wanjiru still looms large over the National High School Boys Ekiden Championships, his 2004 stage record-setting run powering Sendai Ikuei H.S. to a course record 2:01:32 win that no team since has ever approached.  The buzz was in the air this year that defending champion Sera H.S. was ready to do it, its seven starters averaging 14:01.95 for 5000 m, enough to compete at the university level.  Before the race captain Shiki Shinsako made it clear, saying, "This team is good enough to break 2:01."

For that to happen the race, 7 stages totalling 42.195 km, had to start fast on its longest stage, the 10.0 km First Stage.  Luck was with Sera as the talented Takuya Hanyu (Yachiyo Shoin H.S.) was happy to oblige, dropping a 2:47 opening km, 27:50 pace, and pulling the whole field with him.  The entire way Hanyu kept things moving, shaking the front end competition down to just himself, Sera's Taiju Nakashima and Hayato Seki (Saku Chosei H.S.) on the 70 m-high hill mid-stage.  Nakashima lost touch at 8 km as the pace picked up again on the downhill, and in the last kick Seki pulled ahead, handing off in 29:08 with the hard-working Hanyu a second behind.  Nakashima was 3rd in 29:16, but the 8 second deficit meant nothing with what was to come.

Sera's second runner Hiroyuki Inoue opened in 2:41 on his 3.0 km stage, easily passing both Saku Chosei and Yachiyo Shoin to run a stage-winning 8:15 and open a 9-second lead before handing off to Kenyan star Paul Kamais.  Like every Kenyan who has run the Third Stage since 2004 Kamais was up against the invisible presence of Wanjiru, his intimidating 22:40 record for the hilly 8.1075 km Third Stage exerting unseen pressure like in Beijing when Wanjiru controlled the pack from the rear mid-race.  Where others have cracked under the pressure and gone out at a ridiculously unsustainable pace Kamais was stable and steady after a 2:40 opening km, saving himself for the hills mid-stage.  But despite his best effort it wasn't enough, handing off with a time of 22:51, 11 seconds off Wanjiru's invulnerable mark.

But Kamais did succeed in the bigger goal.  When he handed off to Sera's fourth runner, 13:50.67 second-year Keita Yoshida, Sera was 26 seconds ahead of Sendai Ikuei's 2004 CR pace, what proved to be its largest margin of safety.  Yoshida ran a solid if unremarkable 23:32 for the 8.0875 km Fourth Stage, handing off with Sera down to 11 seconds ahead of CR pace.  Sera's fifth man Kazuya Yamaguchi won his 3.0 km stage in 8:38, picking up 1 second to reopen Sera's margin to 12 seconds.  Sixth man Takumi Uemura likewise topped his 5.0 km stage in 14:25, the margin back down to 11 seconds.  It was all up to team captain Shinsako to deliver on the 5.0 km anchor stage.

With a 14:00.45 best for 5000 m on the track Shinsako said his goal was to break the 13:58 stage record.  Despite only needing to run 14:35 for the overall CR he went out hard, clocking 2:40 for the first km, 13:20 pace.  Needless to say that was unsustainable, but despite fading Shinsako did his job, running 14:21 to cross the line in 2:01:18, cutting 14 seconds off Sendai Ikuei's legendary mark and giving Sera the double national title along with its girls' win earlier in the day.  Along with the record it was also Sera's ninth time winning the national title, the most in the event's 66-year history.

Fighting their way up mid-race Kyushu Gakuin H.S. and Kurashiki H.S. were head-to-head until the last 100 m, Kyushu Gakuin anchor Shota Nakagawa pulling away to win the stage in 14:16 and take 2nd in 2:03:06 with Kurashiki 2 seconds back.  Both schools placed in the all-time top 10, with the top 7 all breaking 2:05.  At every level, sub-2:05, sub-2:06, sub-2:07 and on, record numbers of schools had breakthrough performances.  The incredible depth of quality left race announcers talking in amazement about a new era and showed that the wave sweeping collegiate running runs even deeper.  There's no telling what will happen between now and 2020.

National High School Boys Ekiden Championships
Kyoto, 12/20/15
59 teams, 7 stages, 42.195 km
click here for complete results

Top Team Results
1. Sera H.S. - 2:01:18 - CR
2. Kyushu Gakuin H.S. - 2:03:06 - all-time #7
3. Kurashiki H.S. - 2:03:08 - all-time #8
4. Saku Chosei H.S. - 2:04:05
5. Kobayashi H.S. - 2:04:15
6. Rakunan H.S. - 2:04:18
7. Gakuho Ishikawa H.S. - 2:04:40
8. Kato Gakuen H.S. - 2:05:09
9. Yachiyo Kogyo H.S. - 2:05:09
10. Omuta H.S. - 2:05:09

Top Individual Stage Results
First Stage - 10.0 km
1. Hayato Seki (Saku Chosei H.S.) - 29:08
2. Takuya Hanyu (Yachiyo Shoin H.S.) - 29:09
3. Taiju Nakashima (Sera H.S.) - 29:16

Second Stage - 3.0 km
1. Hiroyuki Inoue (Sera H.S.) - 8:15
2. Rintaro Takada (Kyushu Gakuin Univ.) - 8:18
3. Genki Nishijima (Rakunan H.S.) - 8:19

Third Stage - 8.1075 km
1. Paul Kamais (Sera H.S.) - 22:51
2. Silas Kingori (Sendai Ikuei H.S.) - 23:00
3. Charles Nijioka (Kurashiki H.S.) - 23:21

Fourth Stage - 8.0875 km
1. Takuma Nagai (Mizuki H.S.) - 23:17
1. Naoki Soh (Tosu Kogyo H.S.) - 23:17
3. Yuta Kanbayashi (Kyushu Gakuin H.S.) - 23:21

Fifth Stage - 3.0 km
1. Kazuya Yamaguchi (Sera H.S.) - 8:38
2. Hiroto Okura (Kyushu Gakuin H.S.) - 8:41
3. Ryo Miyamoto (Kato Gakuen H.S.) - 8:45
3. Ryo Matsushita (Tosu Kogyo H.S.) - 8:45

Sixth Stage - 5.0 km
1. Takumi Uemura (Sera H.S.) - 14:25
2. Reiri Nakajima (Kurashiki H.S.) - 14:26
3. Hikaru Sakata (Kyushu Gakuin H.S.) - 14:32

Seventh Stage - 5.0 km
1. Shota Nakagawa (Kyushu Gakuin H.S.) - 14:16
2. Shiki Shinsako (Sera H.S.) - 14:21
3. Takahiro Nakatani (Kurashiki H.S.) - 14:23

© 2015 Brett Larner
all rights reserved

Comments

Two Questions -
1) What is the fastest JPN-only record?
2) Has a single team ever swept all the legs?
Brett Larner said…
The fastest time by an all-Japanese team was Saku Chosei's 2:02:18 win in 2008, now all-time #4. I'm not sure if a single team has ever swept every stage but I don't think it's likely.
Bruce said…
Seems like the meet is growing in size, with teams from talent-deep regions getting more chances. Last year the boys had the 10 regional extra slots (not sure when this began) and this year the girls got 10 more, plus both getting one more for the hosting prefecture (Kyoto). These 22 regional extras all placed ahead of many prefectural champions. Sumagakuen, Toyokawa and Kitakyushu Municipal girls even finished in the top 10! The rest of these 22 extras finished mostly in the mid pack. In earlier years they would not have even run. I hope they continue this trend. 60 runners on the line constitutes an unnecessarily small field.

Most-Read This Week

Ayaka Suzuki, Younger Sister of Olympic Marathoner Yuka Suzuki, Faces Final East Japan Women's Ekiden

The final edition of the East Japan Women's Ekiden takes place Nov. 10. 18 teams representing the eastern prefectures will bring high-level women's competition to the streets of Fukushima. Getting attention on the Akita team is Ayaka Suzuki , the younger sister of Paris Olympics marathon 6th-placer Yuka Suzuki . Ayaka is a 3rd-year at Akita's Omagari H.S. She began running seriously after entering high school, citing her sister's influence. "When I saw her winning her stages and helping her team in university ekidens, I thought that I might be able to do the same and decided to give it a try," she said. Before her excellent run at the Paris Olympics Yuka ran the East Japan Women's Ekiden 3 times, inspiring others as she went from a young athlete to one of the best in the world. "I was surprised that she was competitive at that level," said Ayaka. "When I saw how strong she was running it really moved me." In junior high school Ayaka w...

CR Holder Teruki Shimada Returns to Launceston Half - Preview and Streaming

Last year's McGrath Launceston Running Festival Peppers Silo Half Marathon in Tasmania, Australia shaped out into a great Australia vs. Japan dual meet , with Jessica Stenson outrunning Yumi Yoshikawa to take the women's title in a 1:09:51 CR, and Teikyo University school record holder Teruki Shimada executing a tactically brilliant race to drop Isaac Heyne , then-NR holder Brett Robinson , and Teikyo teammate Jinya Ozaki for the win in 1:01:12, just a second off the Australian all-comers record. Marathon NR holder Andy Buchanan took that record down to 1:01:08 at the Gold Coast Half a month later, but its chances of surviving this weekend aren't looking good. Shimada leads last year's top 4 back to Launceston this year, and there's a lot of tough new competition. 2025 National Corporate Half winner Tsubasa Ichiyama , Australia's Haftu Strintzos , new Teikyo record holder Yuta Asakawa and American Ethan Shuley have all run faster that Buchanan's rec...

Weekend Track and Road Update

Kanto Regionals were the big domestic meet this weekend, but there were other important results here and overseas. At the Xiamen Diamond League meet: 110 mH NR holder Rachid Muratake (JAL) was 2nd in 13.13 (+0.5) behind winner Jamal Britt (U.S.A.) in 13.07. The only other Japanese athlete in Xiamen, women's javelin throw NR holder Haruka Kitaguchi (JAL) was 7th at 60.08, down from her performance last week at the Seiko Golden Grand Prix Meet in Tokyo and eclipsed by the brilliant all-time #2 71.74 m throw by China's Ziyi Yan . 4 Japanese athletes ran at the Sound Running L.A,.Track Fest meet, 3 of them graduates of Kyoto's Rakunan H.S. like Kanto Regionals D1 men's 5000 m winner Kaisei Okada (Chuo Univ.). The only non-Rakunan guy there, Hibiki Obara (GMO) ran only 8:33.21 for 9th in the men's 3000 mSC A-heat. Daichi Shibata (Chuo Univ.) was last in the same heat in 8:49.91. Itta Tameike (SG Holdings) had a great run in the men's 5000 m B-heat, breakin...