Skip to main content

2021 New Year Ekiden Preview (updated)


Ekiden week rolls on with the first major race of 2021 worldwide, the Jan. 1 New Year Ekiden corporate men's national championships. Asahi Kasei is going for a fifth-straight national title, something they've managed twice before with six-packs of wins in 1978-1983 and 1990-1995. And really, who's going to stop them? 

In September Asahi Kasei took delivery of the world's largest low-pressure altitude training facility so that they didn't have to deal with traveling to get to altitude, and just look at the results. At the National Championships earlier this month they had five guys under 28 minutes for 10000 m including a 27:18.75 national record from rookie Akira Aizawa, and a sixth man, Shuho Dairokuno, across the line in 28:01.29. And both of their Kenyan runners Robert Mwei and Benuel Mogeni are sub-28. And they have other guys like Hiroshi Ichida who aren't quite up to that level but always deliver come ekiden day. 

Asahi Kasei broke the New Year Ekiden course record last year to win over Toyota by more than two minutes, and at November's Kyushu regional qualifier it took six of the seven stages to win in course record time by more than a minute and a half over Mitsubishi Juko. What are you going to do?

Well, for one Toyota picked up the great Bedan Karoki from the disbanding DeNA team. He's done great work as a pacer for Toyota's top duo Yuma Hattori and Taku Fujimoto, and at the Chubu regional qualifier last month he was stellar, running a 22:36 course record for his 8.3 km stage to help Toyota break the overall CR. But no matter how good he is there's a limit to how much weight one runner can carry, and with Hattori a last-second scratch from Fukuoka this month due to an injury and Fujimoto running below potential there it looks like there are cracks in what had been looking to be a legit challenge to Asahi Kasei's dominance.


Last year's 3rd-placer Honda has picked up 10000 m national record breaker Tatsuhiko Ito this year, but Honda has relied heavily on former half marathon and marathon national record holder Yuta Shitara for a big part of its success the last few years, and with Shitara underperforming this season it might not be able to improve much on its 3rd-place finish at the East Japan regional qualifier. Fujitsu pulled off the win there and is definitely strong, but runner-up GMO feels like it has more momentum and could challenge for the top three if rookie Yuya Yoshida has recovered from his win at Fukuoka at the start of the month.

Only 24th at the New Year Ekiden last year, Kansai region winner NTT Nishi Nihon has been developing rapidly and is set to pick up three quality people from DeNA next season. That won't help it at this stage, but it should have a shot at the eight-deep podium. That would be about the best that Chugoku region winner Mazda, 10th last year, could hope for, and would be a dream come true for Hokuriku region winner YKK, only 32nd of 37 teams last year.

There are lots of interesting little rivalries further back in the field, like the battle for independent supermarket chain supremacy between Comody Iida and Sunbelx, and that between hospital teams Hiramatsu Byoin and SID Group, There's even the drama of a team set to be disbanded in March, Nihon Seiko Setouchi, qualifying for the first time in 21 years. What's not to like? It's going to be a great start to the year at every level.

TBS will be broadcasting the race live starting at 8:30 a.m. on Jan. 1 local time. They have a streaming app you can download here, but it is probably not available outside Japan. If you're not in Japan options like mov3.coiTVer, and TVJapanLive might work. Unofficial streams tend to pop up on Youtube once the race gets underway. We'll be doing English commentary on @JRNLive as usual, and will tweet Youtube links if streams turn up. 

2021 New Year Ekiden Entry Lists

Maebashi, Gunma, 01 Jan. 2021
37 teams, 7 stages, 100.0 km

1. Asahi Kasei (Kyushu region)
2. Toyota (Chubu region)
3. Honda (East Japan region)
4. JR Higashi Nihon (East Japan region)
5. GMO (East Japan region)
6. Aisan Kogyo (Chubu region)
7. Yakult (East Japan region)
8. Konica Minolta (East Japan region)
10. Mazda (Chugoku region)
11. Yasukawa Denki (Kyushu region)
12. Toyota Kyushu (Kyushu region)
13. Toyota Boshoku (Chubu region)
14. Chudenko (Chugoku region)
15. Osaka Gas (Kansai region)
16. Sumitomo Denko (Kansai region)
17. Mitsubishi Juko (Kyushu region)
18. Chugoku Denryoku (Chugoku region)
19. Hitachi Butsuryu (East Japan region)
20. SGH Group (Kansai region)
21. Kurosaki Harima (Kyushu region)
22. NTT Nishi Nihon (Kansai region)
23. Kyudenko (Kyushu region)
24. Toenec (Chubu region)
25. JFE Steel (Chugoku region)
26. Aichi Seiko (Chubu region)
27. Chuo Hatsujo (Chubu region)
28. YKK (Hokuriku region)
29. Comody Iida (East Japan region)
30. Hiramatsu Byoin (Kyushu region)
31. Fujitsu (East Japan region)
32. Sunbelx (East Japan region)
33. SID Group (East Japan region)
34. ND Software (East Japan region)
35. Otsuka Seiyaku (Kansai region)
36. Nihon Seiko Setouchi (Chugoku region)
37. Togami Denki (Kyushu region)
DNS - Kanebo (East Japan region)

© 2020 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

j said…
Looks like Aizawa, Yuta Shitara, Endo, Fujimoto, Kenji Yamamoto, Shin Kimura, Shimoda, etc all not racing! Fujitsu is the only one of the top contenders with their top 7 being in their lineup of 7 (and actually improving on their qualifying lineup with Kengo Suzuki for Taisei Nakamura)
Brett Larner said…
We'll see what happens with race morning substitutions. The kukan entry lists are almost never the same as the final starting lineups. Aizawa's injury is a bummer, though.
Unknown said…
So frustrating that I can't watch this outside of Japan. Any ideas? I would even pay for it. They seem to lock it down tight.

Most-Read This Week

10000 m National Championships Preview

  Less than five months since the 2023 10000 m National Championships went down at the 2021 Olympic stadium in Tokyo, the 2024 edition happens Friday at Shizuoka's Ecopa Stadium, with NHK broadcasting it live starting at 19:25 local time. Doubling up on Nationals like this lets Japanese athletes double dip on placing points to try to get into the Paris Olympics on rankings. But between the number of people who've hit the 30:40.00 women's standard and 27:00.00 men's standard and the lopsided eight spots given away to top placers at World XC, there are only four women's spots and three men's available via rankings. Of those, three of the four women's spots and two of the three men's spots are currently occupied by top placers at December's 2023 Nationals, Ririka Hironaka , Haruka Kokai and Rino Goshima for women and Ren Tazawa and Tomoki Ota for men. The 2023 Nationals did get close to the standards, with Hironaka leading the top four women under

Chesang and Kipkoech Win Hot Gifu Half

Hot conditions held back fast times at the Gifu Seiryu Half Marathon Sunday, where Ugandan Stella Chesang and Kenya Hillary Kipkoech took the top spots over last year's winners Dolphine Nyaboke Omare and Amos Kurgat . In the women's race Chesang, Omare and Kenyan-born Bahraini Eunice Chebichii Chumba went out as a trio, Japan-based Hellen Ekarare with them initially but eventually dropping out. After a 15:39 opening 5 km Chumba started to slip off, and by 15 km Chesang was on her own. Chesang won in 1:07:59, solid given the conditions, with Omare 2nd in 1:08:31 and Chumba 3rd in 1:09:10. Rinka Hida was the first Japanese woman, 5th overall in 1:12:06 behind Australian Genevieve Gregson . A lead men's pack of 11 went through 5 km in 14:31, but by 10 km it was down to Kipkoech, Kurgat, , Timothy Kiplagat , Ugandan Stephen Kissa and Japan-based Kenyans Patrick Mathenge Wambui and Anthony Maina . At 15 km in 43:40 only Kurgat and Kipkoech were left, and over the last 5

Drury and Mashiko Lead Four Japanese Golds - U20 Asian Championships Day 4

The closing day of the Dubai U20 Asian Athletics Championships saw Japan go out big, with four gold medals led by dominant runs by Sherry Drury (Tsuyama H.S.) and Yota Mashiko (Gakuho Ishikawa H.S.). Making her international debut, the 16-year-old Drury led start to finish in the women's 1500 m final, grinding down the rest of the field and putting over 4 seconds on runner-up Sandilea Vinod of India over the last 300 m to win in 4:21.41. Drury's splits: 1:11-2:24-(3:19)-3:35-4:21. There's still a long way for Drury to go, but in terms of form and confidence this was the best she has looked since her legendary breakthrough CR at last year's National Women's Ekiden, and you could see more than a glimmer of what everyone is hoping is really there. Mashiko was even more dominant in the men's 3000 m. Coming out on the front end of some pushing and shoving in the first 50 m, Mashiko led the entire way. By 300 m he had a measurable gap that never got smaller, and af