Skip to main content

Mungara Over Kawauchi by One Second, Horie Cracks Course Record at Gold Coast Airport Marathon

by Brett Larner

One for the ages.


In the men's marathon, 2 past Gold Coast Airport Marathon winners, 40+ world record holder Kenneth Mungara of Kenya and, just 2 weeks after a 50 km national record, Japan's indefatigable Yuki Kawauchi (Saitama Pref. Gov't), head to head for the last 12 km of the race.  Kawauchi, with big plans for the fall, from the gun up front behind the pacers, never relenting on his front line position.  Mungara, crafty, holding back in the pack of 11, holding back until Kawauchi set off in pursuit of a breakaway pacer just before 30 km.  30 km, unusually early for the always fast-closing Kawauchi to go to the front.  Anyone else and Mungara, top 3 in 5 of his last 6 races including 3 wins and multiple resettings of his own 40+ WR, might have let it go.  But a champ recognizes a champ.

A gap from Kawauchi, and Mungara was on it.  In touch by 32 km and ahead.  Kawauchi closing.  In contact.  Physically, Mungara showing irritation at heel clipping.  Side-by-side.  Kawauchi ahead.  Mungara ahead.  A #1 sign to the crowd and surge from Mungara, matched immediately by Kawauchi.  One of the fastest closers and one of the craftiest of the crafty of the sport, down to the end, to the left turn into the Gold Coast finish chute, Mungara kicking away on the curves, Kawauchi closing in the straight.  Mungara, 42, with the win in 2:09:00, Kawauchi a second behind in 2:09:01 in his first sub-2:10 in over a year and a half.  Mungara, the first man in almost 20 years to win back-to-back Gold Coast titles.  Kawauchi, the first Japanese man ever to run sub-2:10 outside Japan lthree times in his career.  Race director Cam Hart: "With no disrespect at all to Rob De Castella's Commonwealth Games win, this was the greatest race on Australian soil."  Mungara hopes to return next year for a third-straight win.  Kawauchi's next marathon comes in September at the Berlin Marathon where he hopes to run 2:07, followed by a shot at the Porto Marathon course record in November.


And in the women's race.  From the start, 2:23 Ethiopians Gulume Chala, the 2015 Frankfurt Marathon winner, and Meseret Biru, the 2015 Paris Marathon winner, and little-known Japanese also-ran Misato Horie (Noritz), on course record pace steadily sub-2:27.  Horie, uncharacteristically confident for a Japanese athlete pre-race, despite a 4-minute difference in PB saying, "There's nobody here I can't beat."  Horie, applying the pressure, cracking Biru to the point she DNFd, cracking Chala, alone after 33 km, sailing on alone, under the sun, Yukiko Akaba's 2:27:17 course record never out of range.  Alone in the chute.  Alone in the home straight.  Alone across the line in 2:26:40, the fifth Japanese woman in a row to win on the Gold Coast.  "I never thought of myself as someone who could compete with Africans or break the course record," Horie said post-race.  "This was an incredible confidence builder.  I think I can make the London World Championships team."  To reach that end Horie plans to run her next marathon at one of the upcoming winter domestic Japanese selection races, Saitama, Osaka and Nagoya.


Mungara wasn't the only one to push barriers.  In 3rd in the men's race, 41-year-old Moroccan-born Belgian Abdelhadi El Hachimi, outkicking Japan's Chiharu Takada (JR Higashi Nihon) with a 2-minute PB of 2:10:35 for 3rd.  40-year-old Katie Kemp of New Zealand with a PB of 2:40:05 for 7th in the women's race.  15-year-old Katrina Robinson of Australia debuting in the 10 km in 34:27.  And, in the marathon, Kawauchi's mother, Mika Kawauchi, his childhood coach, running the marathon for the first time at age 52, clearing her sub-4 goal with ease in 3:53:53, 3:48:39 on net time, her son there to meet her and hold her up at the finish.  Is there a record for mother and son in one marathon?  "The training she put me through when I was young was harsh, but I'm here today because of that," Kawauchi said post-race.  A 42-year-old former barber and a civil servant, two of the men farthest outside the box in the sport today.  An unknown smacking down two far more accomplished Africans in course record time.  Mother following son.  One for the ages.



Gold Coast Airport Marathon
Gold Coast, Australia, 7/3/16
click here for complete results

Men
1. Kenneth Mungara (Kenya) - 2:09:00 (age 42)
2. Yuki Kawauchi (Japan/Saitama Pref. Gov't) - 2:09:01
3. Abdelhadi El Hachimi (Belgium) - 2:10:35 - PB (age 41)
4. Chiharu Takada (Japan/JR Higashi Nihon) - 2:10:43
5. Abraraw Tegegne (Ethiopia) - 2:11:39
6. Milton Rotich (Kenya) - 2:14:25
7. Peter Some (Kenya) - 2:15:09
8. Birhanu Achamie (Ethiopia) - 2:15:22
9. Tatsunori Hamasaki (Japan/Komori Corp.) - 2:15:37
10. Beraki Zerea (Eritrea) - 2:16:25
-----
12. Ser-Od Bat-Ochir (Mongolia/NTN) - 2:17:55
-----
DNF - John Cheruiyot (Kenya)
DNF - Willy Kibor Koitile (Kenya)

Women
1. Misato Horie (Japan/Noritz) - 2:26:40 - CR, PB
2. Gulume Chala (Ethiopia) - 2:27:49
3. Leah Kiprono (Kenya) - 2:34:02
4. Rika Takenaka (Japan/Edion) - 2:34:39
5. Yoko Shibui (Japan/Mitsui Sumitomo Kaijo) - 2:38:13
6. Hitomi Nakamura (Japan/Panasonic) - 2:38:52
7. Katie Kemp (New Zealand) - 2:40:05 - PB (age 40)
8. Victoria Beck (New Zealand) - 2:43:39 - PB
9. Alice Mason (New Zealand) - 2:45:19 - PB
10. Kirsten Molloy (Australia) - 2:45:30
-----
139. Weiwei Sun (China) - 2:54:11
1610. Mika Kawauchi (Japan) - 3:53:53 - debut (age 52)
-----
DNF - Meseret Mengitsu Biru (Ethiopia)
DNF - Agnes Mutune (Kenya)

ASICS Half Marathon
Gold Coast, Australia, 7/3/16
click here for complete results

Men
1. Duer Yoa (Australia) - 1:03:50
2. Hiroyuki Sasaki (Japan/Nissin Shokuhin) - 1:03:56
3. Masaya Kakihara (Japan/SGH Group) - 1:05:38
4. Scott Westcott (Australia) - 1:05:55
5. Josh Harris (Australia) - 1:05:59

Women
1. Cassie Fien (Australia) - 1:11:21
2. Virginia Moloney (Australia) - 1:12:25 - PB
3. Sinead Diver (Australia) - 1:13:19 - PB
4. Rowan-Marie Torckler (New Zealand) - 1:14:40 - PB
5. Yuko Watanabe (Japan/Edion) - 1:15:13

Southern Cross University 10 km
Gold Coast, Australia, 7/2/16
click here for complete results

Men
1. Hugh Williams (Australia) - 29:23
2. Andrew Buchanan (Australia) - 29:26 - PB
3. Jack Curran (Australia) - 29:56

Women
1. Leanne Pompeani (Australia) - 33:59 - PB
2. Gemma Maini (Australia) - 34:26
3. Katrina Robinson (Australia) - 34:27 - debut (age 15)

© 2016 Brett Larner
all rights reserved

Comments

TokyoRacer said…
Love it - Kawauchi's mother's race was the best run of the day.
TokyoRacer said…
And well, can't forget Yoko Shibui in 5th, who's no youngster.
jbj said…
Fantastique ! Amazing Kawauchi ! Must be his 9th time offially under 2h10' (actually his 10th time, when he ran 2h10'01 at Gold Coast Marathon in 2013 he didn't sart on the front line and his net time was 2h09'58.

Unknown said…
It's going to be fun to see Horie over the next few years...
Brett Larner said…
You'll be delighted to know, Anna, that when she had to do an interview on the broadcast within about a minute of finishing she turned to me and asked, "髪の毛大丈夫?" "Is my hair okay?"

Most-Read This Week

2026 Tokyo Marathon Elite Field

The Mar. 1 Tokyo Marathon has great fields this year, so let's get right to it. The women's field has 3 of last year's top 10, winner for the 2nd year in a row and Tokyo CR holder Sutume Asefa Kebede , 3rd-placer and 2025 Chicago winner Hawi Feysa , and 5th-placer and 2025 Berlin winner Rosemary Wanjiru , plus 2024 Valencia winner Megertu Alemu , 2025 Prague winner Bertukan Welde , 2024 Paris winner Mestawut Fikir , 2024 Osaka winner Waganesh Mekasha , former WR holder Brigid Kosgei , and a lot more. Japanese hopes pretty much go to all-time #7 Ai Hosoda , 2:20:31 in Berlin 2024 but who announced this month that she is retiring after Tokyo despite having qualified for the 2028 Olympic marathon trials with her 2:23:27 for 6th in Sydney last year. Other internationals include Canadian Malindi Elmore , American Sara Hall , a big Chinese group led by Yuyu Xia , Poland's Aleksandra Brzezińska and Australian Vanessa Wilson . The men's race has 5 of last year's top 1...

Ai Hosoda Announces Retirement

photo © 2025 Victah Sailer/Photo Run, all rights reserved On Jan. 8 the Edion women's corporate team announced that Ai Hosoda , 30, will retire at the end of March this year. The Tokyo Marathon will be her last race. At Nagano Higashi H.S. Hosoda ran in the National High School Ekiden her 2nd and 3rd years. During her 3rd year at Nittai University she won both the 5000 m and 10000 m at the Kanto Region University Track and Field Championships, going on to win the bronze medal in the 10000 m at the World University Games in her 4th year at Nittai. After graduating she joined the Daihatsu corporate team, debuting at the 2019 Nagoya Women's Marathon in 2:29:27. 2 years later she transferred to Edion. She qualified for the Paris Olympics marathon trials at the 2022 Nagoya Women's Marathon and finished 3rd in the trials in the fall of 2023, but was later bumped down to Olympic alternate after another athlete ran a faster time. Instead of the Olympics, Hosoda ran the 2024 Ber...

Measuring Marathon Courses by Bicycle

http://news.searchina.ne.jp/disp.cgi?y=2013&d=0110&f=column_0110_034.shtml translated by Brett Larner The full marathon is a sport where you compete over 42.195 km, but how do they go about measuring that distance?  Today we're going to look a little bit at how they go about certifying the distance of a marathon. The reality is that major international marathons use a bicycle to measure the distance.  This rule is an international standard, and the same method of measurement is used everywhere.  It was put into place in 1986.  In order to ensure that the same method is used everywhere, a bicycle that meets IAAF specifications must be used for measurement. In the case of Japan's major marathons, to be certain that the distance is correct a provisional measurement is first made.  Before the course is certified using a bicycle the course is measured using a 50 m-long length of wire to determine that it is in fact 42.195 km.  When a bicycle is u...