The qualifying race for the Nov. 22 National Corporate Women's Ekiden took place Oct. 18 in Munakata, Fukuoka, with Sekisui Kagaku winning the six-stage, 42.195 km race for the second year in a row in 2:17:03 and the top fourteen teams qualifying. Two-time national champion Daiichi Seimei's 21-year qualification streak was broken as it finished 15th. As the first national-level road race to take place since the start of the coronavirus crisis, teams were asked not to have their cheering squads along the course and other COVID countermeasures were put in place.
On the ekiden's 7.0 km opening stage, Kako Okada, an athlete with the Kyocera team, collapsed less than 100 m from the first exchange zone and was unable to continue. Okada went into full-body convulsions and on-site medical staff called an ambulance. Hearing the news from the First Stage supervisor, the race's chief referee quickly made the decision to officially stop Okada.
Two years ago another athlete suffered a fracture during the same ekiden and crawled to the exchange zone on her hands and knees. Following that incident, the JAAF moved to stipulate in the rules the criteria and procedure for stopping athletes under duress who try to continue. The chief referee and race medical staff can now stop such athletes regardless of what the athlete's coach says. The new rule was applied in this situation.
According to race officials, Okada seemed to be suffering from dehydration and was taken to the hospital. She was later discharged and returned to her team.
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translated by Brett Larner
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The cynical part of me wants to know if gambling on these events occurs too?