Skip to main content

Suzuki Anchors Aichi to National Women's Ekiden Title


video highlights by NHK

Coming back from a win in her marathon debut at last August's Hokkaido Marathon, 2016 10000 m national champion Ayuko Suzuki anchored the Aichi prefecture team to the National Women's Ekiden title in a back-and-forth race with hosts Kyoto. An entertaining format with teams made up of the best junior high school, high school, university and pro runners from each of Japan's 47 prefectures, the National Women's Ekiden and its male counterpart next weekend in Hiroshima make up the peak of championship ekiden season.

Aichi took the lead on the second of the day's nine stages thanks to a stage win by high schooler Yumi Fujinaka and from there to the end was never out of the top two. After a brief challenge from Chiba Aichi didn't get its first real threat until Kyoto pulled up even on the Fifth Stage, both teams handing off simultaneously to the Sixth. Kyoto fell as far as 26 seconds behind over the next two stages, but junior high schooler Koko Kamada made it up on the 3.0 km Eighth Stage to run down Aichi's Nayu Hayashi and even open a two-second lead.

Kamada set up a great anchor stage battle for the sin, with Suzuki starting for Aichi just behind Kyoto's Mao Ichiyama, one of the best of the younger corporate generation. The pair stayed locked together until around 7 km into the 10 km anchor stage, Suzuki splitting 15:56 at halfway to Ichiyama's 15:58. Then Suzuki got down to business, dropping Ichiyama with ease and opening more than a minute on her over the last 3 km. Suzuki's 2nd half split of 15:12 was unmatched in the field, more than enough to bring Aichi home for the win and a good sign that she has handled the recover from her marathon debut well.

But Suzuki aside, most of the day's best running was to be found outside Aichi, and most of it by the younger runners in the field. With corporate league women on six of the nine stages six were won by high school students, two by junior high schoolers, and one by a club runner. And that's part of what makes the National Ekidens' mixed-aged formats so entertaining. Top-ranked high schooler Ririka Hironaka (Nagasaki) outmuscling Diamond League runner Rina Nabeshima (Kochi) and National Corporate Women's Ekiden First Stage winner Kaori Morita (Kanagawa) to win the First Stage? Sure. Relatively unknown high school runner Narumi Kobayashi (Nagano) going head-to-head with two-time defending 10000 m national champion and 2:22 marathoner Mizuki Matsuda (Osaka) in pursuit of 2:21 marathoner Yuka Ando (Shizuoka) and easily dropping Matsuda in the last kilometer to win the stage on time? Why not?


There was so much good running it was hard to pick a highlight, but along with Suzuki, Hironaka and Kobayashi there were two other clear choices. The junior high school student who ran Aichi down to briefly put Chiba in the lead on the 3.0 km Third Stage, 14-year-old Hinata Minami, was a joy to watch, her long, graceful stride carrying her to a course record 9:10. Suzuki aside, the Third Stage winners rarely survive the transition to senior running. In Minami's case she just exuded a sense of future, so let's hope she's another exception to the rule and that there are years more ahead for her.

At the opposite end of the spectrum, the rescendent Hitomi Niiya followed up her brilliant East Japan Women's Ekiden anchor stage course record and Zatopek:10 win to beat Suzuki for the anchor stage title. Running the way she knows best, Niiya went through halfway in 15:30 almost dead even with Kayoko Fukushi's course record split. She faded slightly over the second half but still came in faster than Suzuki, passing seven competitors en route to a 31:06 stage win and 9th-place finish overall for Tokyo. Niiya is targeting the 2020 Tokyo Olympics 10000 m in her comeback from 5 years of retirement. Most of her strongest competition for the team may be headed for the marathon, but this trio of performances shows that she is still the one to beat.

37th National Women's Ekiden

Kyoto, 1/13/19
47 teams, 9 stages, 42.195 km
complete results

Top Individual Stage Performances
First Stage (6.0 km, open)
1. Ririka Hironaka (Nagasaki) - 19:24
2. Rina Nabeshima (Kochi) - 19:26
3. Yuka Suzuki (Akita) - 19:36

Second Stage (4.0 km, open)
1. Yumi Fujinaka (Aichi) - 12:43
1. Mai Nishiwaki (Okayama) - 12:43
3. Yuna Wada (Nagano) - 12:44

Third Stage (3.0 km, J.H.S.)
1. Hinata Minami (Chiba) - 9:10 - CR tie
2. Nanaka Yonezawa (Shizuoka) - 9:14
3. Sora Sakai (Aichi) - 9:17

Fourth Stage (4.0 km, open)
1. Narumi Kobayashi (Nagano) - 12:50
2. Mizuki Matsuda (Osaka) - 12:56
3. Yuma Goto (Hyogo) - 13:00

Fifth Stage (4.1075 km, open)
1. Azusa Mihara (Kyoto) - 13:18
2. Miki Nagai (Aichi) - 13:28
3. Miku Sakai (Fukuoka) - 13:29

Sixth Stage (4.0875 km, open)
1. Hikari Onishi (Hyogo) - 12:44
2. Sakiko Naito (Chiba) - 12:45
3. Yumi Furukawa (Kagoshima) - 12:53

Seventh Stage (4.0 km, H.S.)
1. Mayu Matsumuro (Osaka) - 12:31
1. Yuna Arai (Hyogo) - 12:31
3. Akane Ogasawara (Aichi) - 12:35
3. Tomo Muramatsu (Kyoto) - 12:35

Eighth Stage (3.0 km, J.H.S.)
1. Asuka Ishimatsu (Hyogo) - 9:58
2. Koko Kamada (Kyoto) - 10:11
3. Rina Suzuki (Saitama) - 10:14

Ninth Stage (10.0 km, open)
1. Hitomi Niiya (Tokyo) - 31:06
2. Ayuko Suzuki (Aichi) - 31:08
3. Honami Maeda (Osaka) - 31:49

Top Team Performances
1. Aichi - 2:15:43
2. Kyoto - 2:16:45
3. Osaka - 2:17:01
4. Hyogo - 2:17:13
5. Chiba - 2:17:28
6. Nagano - 2:17:47
7. Kanagawa - 2:18:15
8. Shizuoka - 2:18:38
9. Tokyo - 2:18:54
10. Okayama - 2:19:11

© 2019  Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Most-Read This Week

Ngetich Breaks CR, Murayama and Sasaki Make U.S. Debut at New York Mini 10k

WR holder Agnes Ngetich  soloed a fast one at the 54th edition of the Mastercard New York Mini 10k, leading inside the first mile and pulling away the rest of the race to run a 30:07 CR for the win, the fastest time ever on U.S. soil albeit on a slightly net downhill course. On a warm day that saw over 10,000 women finish  Tsigie Gebreselama  was on her own most of the way too, a distant 2nd in 30:53 and 17 seconds up on past champ Hellen Obiri . Further back, 2026 World University Cross Country bronze medalist Amisa Murayama  and 2025 Morinomiyako Ekiden 3rd leg CR breaker Nazuki Sasaki  from 2025 National University Women's Ekiden runner-up Tohoku Fukushi University  made their U.S. debuts. Murayama was targeting the fastest-ever Japanese time at the Mini, 32:37, but struggled on the hills just before 5 km and late in the race, fading to finish 23rd in 34:08. Sasaki, recovering from a stress reaction in her upper back a few months ago, ran a conservative ...

Federation Tells World Championships Marathoner Horibata To Go On Diet

http://hochi.yomiuri.co.jp/sports/etc/news/20110307-OHT1T00258.htm translated by Brett Larner Having made the 2011 World Championships marathon team by running a PB of 2:09:25 to come in 3rd overall and as the top Japanese finisher at the Mar. 6 Lake Biwa Mainichi Marathon, Hiroyuki Horibata (24, Team Asahi Kasei), talked to the media at Osaka Airport on Mar. 7. Following Sunday's race Rikuren director Keisuke Sawaki , 67, told Horibata, "Let's cut things down a bit until the World Championships," directing him to go on a diet. The 189 cm Horibata weighs 72 kg [~6'3", 160 lbs]. When he joined Team Asahi Kasei in 2005 at age 18 he weighed 65 kg, and this weight is still generally listed on his profile at races and in the media. "For some reason it never changes," he said with a grin. His coach Takeshi Soh , 58, commented, "If he was hungrier for glory his world would change completely," slapping the 'heavyweight division runner...

National Track and Field Championships Entry List Highlights

Entry lists are out for next week's National Track and Field Championships in Nagoya, the main selection event for Japan's teams for September's Nagoya Asian Games and Copenhagen World Road Running Championships. Top entries in each event with best time in 2025-26. Asterisks indicate 2025 national champions. Men Men's 100 m *Yoshihide Kiryu (Nihon Seimei) - 9.99 Sorato Shimizu (Seiryu H.S.) - 10.00 Yuhi Mori (Watanabe Pipe) - 10.00 Yuki Koike (Sumitomo Denko) - 10.06 Fukuto Komuro (Chuo Univ.) - 10.08 Ryota Yamagata (Seiko) - 10.08 Shuhei Tada (Sumitomo Denko) - 10.10 Ryota Suzuki (Suzuki) - 10.11 Naoki Inoue (Osaka Gas) - 10.12 Rikuto Higuchi (Suzuki) - 10.12 Men's 200 m Shota Iizuka (Mizuno) - 20.45 Aoto Suzuki (Sumitomo Denko) - 20.49 Kota Uematsu (Chuo Univ.) - 20.50 Yuji Michael Orisa (GK Line) - 20.51 Soshi Mizukubo (Miyazaki T&F) - 20.51 Mitsuhiro Numata (Legalis) - 20.58 Seisho Sasaki (Iwate Univ.) - 20.60 Sota Miwa (Koizumi) - 20.61 Naoki Uemoto (Lega...