Skip to main content

Meet Ken Nakayama


Chuo University fourth-year Ken Nakayama is running Sunday's United Airlines NYC Half Marathon, the eighth year that the New York Road Runners have invited top Japanese university men from November's Ageo City Half Marathon to run their half. You might have seen his training partner Kensuke Horio finish 5th in the Tokyo Marathon in his debut a couple of weeks ago. Nakayama is one of the very top graduating seniors in Japan this year, but his route to that level has been one of the most unconventional.

Japanese distance running is highly systematically organized, with top high schools feeding into top universities where the best runners will run the Hakone Ekiden and get recruited to top corporate teams and then go on to become the country's top marathoners. Scouting at the university level is intense, and for the most part it's pretty clear early on in high school who the cream of the crop are going to be.

Nakayama was nobody in high school. He played soccer in junior high, but heading into high school, he said, "I realized I didn't have any talent." Attending the local Ina Gakuen H.S. in Saitama, he ended up joining the track team for enjoyment. Late in his senior year he ran 15:08.11 for 5000 m, his first time breaking 15:10. For comparison, the star Hakone runners are guys who pretty typically ran under 14 minutes in high school, with the rank-and-file team members having been under 14:15 or under 14:30 at weaker programs. "I never even thought about running Hakone someday," he said.

Attracting zero interest from any university scouts, Nakayama opted to attend Chuo University, one of the oldest Hakone powerhouses, for its academics to study law. He walked on to Chuo's ekiden team, not especially unusual but almost unheard-of for a top-tier runner, and almost immediately got injured. In November of his first year the team had a time trial at which anyone who didn't break 15 minutes would get cut. Nakayama ran 14:58. Three months later he ran his first half marathon, clocking 1:07:14.

Nakayama spent his whole second year training, avoiding injuries but not making Chuo's starting team for any of the Big Three university ekidens. He took his half marathon PB down to 1:04:12, but the bigger breakthrough came his third year. In October that year he ran 59:36 for 20 km at the Hakone Ekiden qualifier, the equivalent of a 1:02:53 half marathon. A week later he ran 13:53.07 for 5000 m. In January he made his ekiden debut at Hakone, finishing 6th on the highly competitive Third Stage in 1:03:42 for 21.5 km, equivalent to a 1:02:31 half marathon. A month later he did it for real with a 1:02:30 at the Marugame Half Marathon.

Those performances put him in the highest bracket of university talent, and considering his background his story was already a good one. But when he ran 28:22.59 a month into his senior year it was clear that it was more than just good. At Ageo in November he finished 2nd in a school record 1:01:32, the 8th-fastest mark ever by a Japanese collegiate man, to earn his invitation to New York. At Hakone he led off for Chuo, pushing defending stage winner Kazuya Nishiyama of Toyo University the whole way only to finish 1 second behind in 2nd, his 1:02:36 for the 21.3 km stage equating to a 1:02:01 half marathon.

That kind of progression, starting his four years of university as a walk-on with times slower than most schools' team managers and ending as one of the all-time best Japanese collegians, is pretty well unprecedented, a mark of both the latent talent he had all along and the skills of Chuo coach Masakazu Fujiwara. Sunday's United Airlines NYC Half will be Nakayama's second time racing outside Japan. Following the race he heads home for his graduation ceremony, after which he will join the Honda corporate team alongside half marathon national record holder Yuta Shitara.

"My first year at Honda I want to focus on the 10000 m and breaking 28 minutes, plus the New Year Ekiden," he said. "I want to run my first marathon about a year from now, but it depends whether they let me." Going by PB and recent performance he's ranked in the top five in the NYC field, but regardless of how he does in his final run in the Chuo uniform his outsider background, his incredible progression and his potential for more marks Nakayama as one of the most exciting runners for Japan post-Tokyo 2020.

solo photo © 2019 @45rpm, all rights reserved
Laimoi photo © 2019 @maco_min, all rights reserved
text © 2019 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Andrew Armiger said…
Fantastic story, look forward to following his pro progression!

Most-Read This Week

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...

Nagoya Asian Games Test Event Canceled After Insulation Falls From Venue Ceiling

A section of insulation material fell from the ceiling of Nagoya Kinjo Futo Arena, the official venue for squash competition at September's Nagoya Asian Games. There were no injuries, but the city suspended use of the arena until its safety could be guaranteed, resulting in the cancelation of the Asian Games squash test event which was scheduled to have begun on May 14. It is not yet clear whether the arena will be usable for the Asian Games as planned. According to city officials, arena staff found that the insulation material had fallen onto a work walkway 13 m above the ground on the night of May 11. The fallen material was 3.6 m long, 50 cm wide and 2.5 km thick, and was found to be waterlogged. The cause of the accident is unknown, but it is possible that it was caused by rainwater leaking in from the roof. The same insulation material is installed across the entire ceiling, and the city plans to check for the extent of the possible flooding. Asked whether the arena will be re...

Everything You Need to Know About the 2026 Hakone Ekiden

The Hakone Ekiden is the world's biggest road race, 2 days of road relay action with Japan's 20 best university teams racing 10 half marathon-scale legs from central Tokyo to the mountains east of Mount Fuji and back. The level just keeps going higher and higher , hitting the point this year where there are teams with 10-runner averages of 13:33.10 for 5000 m, 27:55.98 for 10000 m, and 1:01:20 for the half marathon. It's never been better, and with great weather in the forecast it's safe to say this could be one of the best races in Hakone's 102-year history, especially on Day One. If you've seen it then you know NTV's live broadcast is the best sports broadcast in the world, with the pre-race show kicking off at 7:00 a.m. Japan time on the 2nd and 3rd and the race starting at 8:00 a.m. sharp. If you've got a VPN you should be able to watch it on TVer starting at 7:50 a.m. on the 2nd , and again at 7:50 a.m. on the 3rd . There's even a 2-hour high...