Skip to main content

Weekend Overseas Marathon Results

15 Japanese men and 6 Japanese women lined up at overseas marathons Sunday to try one last time to qualify for the MGC Race, Japan's new 2020 Olympic trials marathon event, ahead of its Apr. 30 deadline, or to try to get under the Olympic standard before the Sept. 15 MGC Race. For men the needed marks were 2:08:30 or two races inside the qualifying window averaging 2:11:00 or better. For women, 2:24:00 and 2:28:00.

Already in, Kentaro Nakamoto (Yasukawa Denki) ran the Krakow Marathon in hopes of clearing the 2:11:30 men's standard. Running steadily and under control on 2:10:20 pace, Nakamoto lasted until a final move by eventual winner Cyprian Kotut (Kenya) around 37 km put him away. As Kotut took off to win in 2:09:18, Nakamoto began to fade, holding on the 2nd place but just missing the Olympic standard in 2:11:34.

The Hamburg Marathon saw the largest number of Japanese athletes, with 4 women and 13 men. Among the women Yuka Takashima (Shiseido) had the easiest task, only needing 2:29:47 for the two-race option after running 2:26:13 in Tokyo last year. But with a DNF in Tokyo last month behind her Takashima was on shaky ground to start with and DNFd again. Likewise for London World Championships team member Mao Kiyota (Suzuki Hamamatsu AC), a DNF after a disappointing 2:33:04 in Tokyo. High-volume marathoner Miharu Shimokado (Brooks) took the top Japanese spot at 16th in 2:36:14 in her third marathon in 7 weeks, with Shiho Takechi (Japan/Yamada Denki) 20th in 2:42:12, each of them more than 9 minutes off qualifying.

The men's race saw almost all the men in a single second pack, Yuki Oshikawa (NTN) the only one to go with the faster lead group in the early going. Pacing was set for 2:08-flat to give people the chance of hitting the 2:08:30 single-race qualifying standard, and as the race went along the numbers dwindled even as the pace slowed. In the end Ryu Takaku (Yakult) took the top spot with a 2:10:03 PB for 7th, clearing his MGC two-race average standard by 12 seconds. No small feat after having run 2:11:49 in Tokyo last month.


The next 3 Japanese men also cleared the standard via two-race averages, Kohei Ogino (Fujitsu) and Tadashi Isshiki (GMO) doing it with room to spare as they only needed mid-2:12 marks after having both broken 2:10 in Tokyo last year. The fourth, Kengo Suzuki (Fujitsu) needed to run 2:11:39, having debuted in Tokyo last year in 2:10:21 just before graduating from university. With a heart-stopping last km Suzuki crossed the line in 2:11:36, making the MGC cut by 3 seconds if just missing the 2:11:30 standard.

Takumi Kiyotani (Chugoku Denryoku) ran a decent 2:11:55 but came up over a minute short of his MGC mark. The other 8 Japanese men also missed out, the most heartbreaking being a DNF from 2017 Gold Coast Marathon winner Takuya Noguchi (Konica Minolta), whose 2:08:59 win on the Gold Coast came about a month too early for the MGC window and who missed qualifying by 3 seconds back at Gold Coast last year.

In a final bid to save face, three-time defending New Year Ekiden national champion Asahi Kasei, Japan's most legendary old-school marathon team, fielded 2 men to try again to get somebody into the MGC race. Kenta Murayama, a DNS in Tokyo, needed 2:12:10 but faded badly after 35 km to finish 38th in 2:21:25. Takuya Fukatsu needed 2:10:27 but was a DNF after having run 2:11:33 at Beppu-Oita in February.

At the London Marathon, new Wacoal teammates Yuka Ando and Mao Ichiyama were in the women's race, Ando already qualified but trying to get back toward her 2:21 form and the 21-year-old Ichiyama trying to hit the two-race option after debuting in Tokyo in 2:24:33 in March. Although she only needed to run 2:31:27 Ichiyama went with the 2:23-pace main group while Ando held back in 2:25 territory. Later in the race Ichiyama faded and was overtaken, Ando going on to finish 13th in 2:26:47. Ichiyama landed 15th in 2:27:27, the final woman to make the MGC grade and setting herself up for 3 hard marathons in 6 months at age 21/22. In the men's race, Yohei Suzuki (Aisan Kogyo) initially went with the 2:06-paced Callum Hawkins (Great Britain)-centered group before dropping back to finish 32nd in 2:18:53.

Krakow Marathon

Krakow, Poland, 4/28/19
complete results

Men
1. Cyprian Kotut (Kenya) - 2:09:18
2. Kentaro Nakamoto (Japan/Yasukawa Denki) - 2:11:34
3. Philip Cheruiyot Kangogo (Kenya) - 2:13:46

Women
1. Viktoriya Khapilina (Ukraine) - 2:28:03
2. Gladys Kipsoi Chepchirchir (Kenya) - 2:33:21
3. Askale Tafa Magarsa (Ethiopia) - 2:37:12

Hamburg Marathon

Hamburg, Germany, 4/28/19
complete results

Men
1. Tadu Abate (Ethiopia) - 2:08:25
2. Ayele Abshero (Ethiopia) - 2:08:26
3. Stephen Kiprotich (Uganda) - 2:08:31
4. Jiksa Tolosa (Ethiopia) - 2:08:51
5. Lucas Rotich (Kenya) - 2:09:48
-----
7. Ryu Takaku (Japan/Yakult) - 2:10:03 - PB
9. Kohei Ogino (Japan/Fujitsu) - 2:10:15
11. Tadashi Isshiki (Japan/GMO) - 2:11:23
13. Kengo Suzuki (Japan/Fujitsu) - 2:11:36
14. Takumi Kiyotani (Japan/Chugoku Denryoku) - 2:11:55
19. Yuta Shimoda (Japan/GMO) - 2:13:42
24. Yuki Oshikawa (Japan/NTN) - 2:14:35
38. Kenta Murayama (Japan/Asahi Kasei) - 2:21:25
42. Masato Kikuchi (Japan/Konica Minolta) - 2:23:22
48. Takuya Fukatsu (Japan/Asahi Kasei) - 2:28:11
99. Yusuke Ogura (Japan/Yakult) - 2:40:50
-----
DNF - Takuya Noguchi (Japan/Konica Minolta)
DNF - Ryoma Takeuchi (Japan/Hitachi Butsuryu)

Women
1. Dibabe Kuma (Ethiopia) - 2:24:41
2. Magadalyne Masai (Kenya) - 2:26:02
3. Fauluna Matanga (Tanzania) - 2:27:55
4. Veronica Nyaruai (Kenya) - 2:29:14
5. Hanna Lindholm (Sweden) - 2:29:34
-----
16. Miharu Shimokado (Japan/Brooks) - 2:36:14
20. Shiho Takechi (Japan/Yamada Denki) - 2:42:12
-----
DNF - Mao Kiyota (Japan/Suzuki Hamamatsu AC)
DNF - Yuka Takashima (Japan/Shiseido)

London Marathon

London, Great Britain, 4/28/19
complete results

Men
1. Eliud Kipchoge (Kenya) - 2:02:37 - CR
2. Mosinet Geremew (Ethiopia) - 2:02:55 - NR
3. Mule Washihun (Ethiopia) - 2:03:16
4. Tola Shura KItata (Ethiopia) - 2:05:01
5. Mo Farah (Great Britain) - 2:05:39
-----
32. Yohei Suzuki (Japan/Aisan Kogyo) - 2:18:53

Women
1. Brigid Kosgei (Kenya) - 2:18:20
2. Vivian Cheruiyot (Kenya) - 2:20:14
3. Roza Dereje (Ethiopia) - 2:20:51
4. Gladys Cherono (Kenya) - 2:20:52
5. Mary Keitany (Kenya) - 2:20:58
-----
13. Yuka Ando (Japan/Wacoal) - 2:26:47
15. Mao Ichiyama (Japan/Wacoal) - 2:27:27

© 2019 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

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...

Restaurant Owner Selected as Olympic Torchbearer Dies in Fire After Becoming Despondent Over Impact of Coronavirus Crisis (updated)

On the evening of Apr. 30, the 54-year-old male owner of a restaurant in Tokyo's Nerima ward specializing in tonkatsu deep fried pork cutlets died from full-body burns in a fire at the restaurant. The man had been one of the people chosen as a torchbearer for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics torch relay. With the coronavirus crisis causing both the postponement of the Olympics and a loss of business at the restaurant, the man had recently started talking pessimistically about the future to those around him. With evidence of the man's body having been doused in tonkatsu cooking oil, metropolitan police from the Hikarigaoka Police Station are carefully examining the cause of the fire. At around 10:00 p.m. on the 30th, the fire broke out in the tonkatsu restaurant on the first floor of a three-story building. A neighborhood resident who noticed smoke called the fire department. Firefighters found the floor and part of a wall burning, with the man lying on the floor in the customer seat...

Kawauchi Wins Inaugural Kawauchi Half Marathon

http://www.minyu-net.com/sports/running/FM20160501-070419.php translated by Brett Larner 川内優輝ロード pic.twitter.com/rEJk7CQPFV — みとっぽ (黒) (@mitoppo_tmyk) April 30, 2016 Yuki Kawauchi Road in Kawauchi, Fukushima Held to inspire former residents to return to the area after the nearby TEPCO Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident five years ago, the village of Kawauchi held the first " Kawauchi no Sato Kaeru Half Marathon - From Reconstruction to Creation " on April 30.  The course started and finished at the village heliport.  1188 runners from across the country gathered to celebrate the village's revival as they ran through its springtime streets. The event's organizing committee was made up of local government and board of education members with support from the Fukushima Minyu Newspaper and other sponsors.  The race's purpose was to transmit the vitality and charm of the reconstructing Kawauchi village to the rest of the nation in hopes of helpin...