Skip to main content

Some Races Aren't Canceling

It seems like the only news about Japanese road racing these days is that all the races are shutting down, already all the way until mid-March at this point. But there are a few races that have offered some hope by going ahead or planning to.

The June 20 Arakawa Smile Marathon was the first one to happen since early March this year, a small amateur event along a Tokyo riverbank with a variety of distances up to 30 km. It followed up July 4 with another edition. At this point it has editions planned monthly until January, with an extra running planned in Shizuoka in October. Last weekend the Hokkaido University Ekiden also took place on a short loop course in a Sapporo park with five men's teams and four women's teams.

And that's it so far. Looking forward, along with the Smile event's upcoming editions, the elite-level Okukuma Ekiden on Oct. 4 insists that it will go ahead with its first running despite the coronavirus crisis and large-scale flood damage in the area. If it does, it will benefit from the Izumo Ekiden's cancelation by picking up most of the top university men's teams who had originally planned to run Izumo a week later.

The Nov. 1 Saku AC Makomanai Marathon in Hokkaido announced this week that it's going ahead. Limited to 1,500 Hokkaido residents, Makomanai will be run on a 10 km loop course with runners starting in groups of up to 50 people of similar ability staggered over the course of two hours.

Iwate's Miyako Salmon Half Marathon also announced this week that it will happen as planned on Nov. 8 on a reduced scale. Limited to 500 residents of Miyako and three neighboring towns, the race is cutting the half marathon this year and will feature only 10 km, 5 km and 2 km races.

The Dec. 6 Shonan International Marathon, at 16,821 finishers last time the only autumn Japanese marathon with over 5,000 finishers not to cancel this year, announced that it will move to Feb. 28 but intends to go ahead at its full size. On the one hand the cancelation of similarly-sized events in January, February and March isn't encouraging for Shonan's chances of following through, but on the other, Shonan is one of the only privately-organized major marathons in Japan, most others put on by local governments who have a significantly lower threshold of risk aversion. Time will tell.

The Dec. 20 Hofu Yomiuri Marathon has also announced it will go ahead on a limited scale, with an elite field restricted to a dozen invited athletes, 100 corporate league elites, 300 locals, and a few blind runners with guides.

Most of the big ekidens apart from Izumo and the Nihonkai Ekiden, the Fukuoka International Marathon, and the Sanyo Ladies Half Marathon have yet to make a public statement about whether they'll go ahead. It's hard to see Fukuoka completely canceling, and at the very least the national level ekidens will probably go ahead in some form, but with not much reason for optimism on the whole, it's nice to see at least a few events finding ways to adapt to the new challenges of the times. Big, rigid and inflexible events and organizations may go the way of the dinosaurs after the asteroid hit, but it'll be the mice scrabbling around in the grass on the fringes that survive to carry things forward. Running finds a way.

© 2020 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Most-Read This Week

Rui Aoki and Shunsuke Kuwata Making U.S. Debut at United Airlines NYC Half

When the National University Half Marathon was canceled in 2011 after the massive earthquake and tsunami struck northeastern Japan 2 days before the race, JRN talked to the New York Road Runners about bringing 2 collegiate runners to the United Airlines NYC Half Marathon the next weekend as a show of support. It wasn't possible to pull it together in the immediate aftermath of the disasters, but a year later we brought 2 young 2nd-years from Hakone Ekiden CR breaker Toyo University , Kento Otsu and Yuta Shitara , who had been the top 2 Japanese collegiate finishers at the Ageo City Half Marathon in November before Hakone. Shitara ran 1:01:48, at the time the fastest-ever by a Japanese man on U.S. soil, with Otsu running a solid 1:03:15. Thanks to that great start the Ageo-NYC partnership became a regular thing, and except for the pandemic it's continued every year since, expanding this year to June's New York Mini 10 km when 2 runners from Mt. Fuji Women's Ekiden runne...

Kuwata Runs Fastest-Ever Half Marathon by Japanese Man Outside Japan at United Airlines NYC Half

When the NYRR changed the United Airlines NYC Half course back in 2018 to more or less its current Boston-style hilly one-way version it seemed like it had been repurposed from a fast course to something more tactical. That went out the window last year with new course records of 59:09 and 1:07:04 from Abel Kipchumba and Sharon Lokedi , and this year's results backed that up. Hellen Obiri ground Lokedi down and took over 30 seconds off her CR, winning in 1:06:33 with Lokedi only 6 seconds off what she ran in 2025 but a distant 2nd in 1:07:10. British road 10 km NR holder Megan Keith rolled up hard late in the race to finish 3rd in 1:07:13 less than 10 seconds off old CR too. The men's race saw a big group of 18 attack the hilly first half on sub-59 pace, American Joe Klecker leading through 5 km in 13:57 and Houston Marathon winner Zouhair Talbi through 10 km in 27:56. Right up in it was Shunsuke Kuwata , a 20-year-old 2nd-year at 2025 National University Ekiden champ Koma...

Chepkirui Over Sato Again to Win 2nd-Straight Nagoya Women's Marathon, Chen Breaks Malaysian NR (updated)

This year's Nagoya Women's Marathon felt like a changing of the guard, with some the bigger domestic names over the last few years fading early and a lot of newer faces stepping up with quality debuts or second marathons. The front group was set to be paced for 2:20 flat with the 2nd group at 2:23:30 to hit the auto-qualifying time for the 2027 MGC Race, Japan's L.A. Olympics marathon trials race in Nagoya. Up front things went out OK, but after a 33:10 split at 10 km Ayuko Suzuki , 2:21:22 here 2 years ago, lost touch, ultimately finishing 23rd in 2:33:28. Windy conditions started to play with pacers' ability to keep things steady and the pace slowed majorly over the next 10 km, but even with a 34:05 second 10 km there were big-name casualties. 2024 Nagoya winner Yuka Ando was next to drop, ending up 17th in 2:30:32. NR holder Honami Maeda was next, followed quickly by Bahraini Kenyan Eunice Chumba and debuting Wakana Kabasawa . Maeda faded to 21st in 2:31:21, whil...