Skip to main content

Marathon Legend Ikangaa Visits With Yamagata Middle Schoolers



Tanzanian marathon legend Juma Ikangaa, 58, visited and talked with students at Kita J.H.S. in Nagai, Yamagata on Oct. 19. In the 1980s and early 1990s Ikangaa was one of the top marathoners in the world, representing Tanzania at three Olympic Games. Ikangaa was part of a Tanzanian delegation visiting Nagai, which will host the Tanzanian national team for the 2020 Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games.

The welcome event and exchange with students took place in the school gymnasium, where the visiting delegation sampled local products. After watching students show off their skill at difficult kendama moves Ikangaa tried his hand with the traditional toy. Afterwards while eating lunch he talked to students via an interpreter about various aspects of Tanzanian culture.

"Listening to Mr. Ikangaa made me interested in Tanzania," said one male student. "I'd like to try to learn Swahili." Ikangaa commented, "I was delighted to speak with the students today. I hope that the friendship between Tanzania and Nagai continues on forever."

On Oct. 21 Ikangaa will participate in the opening ceremony of the Nagai Marathon alongside his old rival Toshihiko Seko. Together they will cheer on the runners from the roadside.

source article:
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/html/20181019/k10011677931000.html
translated by Brett Larner

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Anonymous said…
Juma Ikangaa can't be considered to be a LEGEND, he has never won an Olympic medal or set a world record at any race.
To be called a legend you have to fulfill that doubleheader.

Sorry for the cheerleaders Please find another name to give to him.
CK said…

Thanks for including the video clip. I can actually remember seeing that iconic top 6 result in the athletics press in 1983. So finally to get to watch the race end feels like one of life's many fragmented circles has been closed.
For anybody too young to remember, Ikanga was a 1980s legend. He famously said "You have two choices - you can throw in the towel or you can use it to wipe the sweat off your face."
The 1982 Commonwealth Games marathon (Brisbane) when he was a near unknown was the first time many of us witnessed it (watch from 11 mins (or better still from 8 mins))
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRI6X7orA-M
A year later he duelled with Seko at Fukuoka, and from then he had nearly a decade at or near the top. Even as he slowed with age he was still in the big races, eg OG92 Barcelona, WC95 Gottenberg. Returned to run Fukuoka several times in the mid-1990s.

Most-Read This Week

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...

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...

Nat'l University Ekiden Updates Here

Looks like I just went over my update limit on Twitter - sorry, it's the first time I've tried to use it for this. I'll look for another option next time. In the meantime I'll add updates to the comments below. Not sure if that has a max too but I guess we'll find out. Update: Part one of the Nationals commentary can be found here .