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How to Get to Lake Biwa


A piece I wrote for PodiumRunner looking at how Japan produced the incredible depth seen at last weekend's Lake Biwa Mainichi Marathon, where a record 42 men went under 2:10.

The part estimating a 2-minute shoe effect was originally longer but cut back for reasons of overall length.  As Paul Gains details, Cornell University researchers estimated an impact of from 2 to 4 minutes depending on the individual. Applying that to the field as a whole, as I wrote a 2-minute effect would be equivalent to a 2:06:56 winning time in Lake Biwa, 4 men in 2:08, and 10 in 2:09, a pretty reasonable estimate based on past Japanese results.

A 3-minute effect would give a 2:07:56 winning time, 4 men in 2:09, and a whole lot of people in the 2:10~12 range. Considering that Fukuoka 2003 had 3 Japanese men in 2:07, 2 in 2:08 and 1 in 2:09, this seems too conservative as it would suggest no progression in almost 20  years. A 4-minute handicap would give 2:08:56 for the winning time and nobody else under 2:10, That's definitely way too conservative for how the race looked and felt compared to past Japanese races with results like that.

Given all that, I think for the average of the field 2 minutes is about right. It's worth noting that even with a 4-minute handicap, Lake Biwa had 107 men under 2:20, eclipsing the 1991 London Marathon's 105. In that regard it's safe to say this was the greatest marathon ever seen.

© 2021 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

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Comments

Andrew Armiger said…
Fantastic piece, enjoyable and quite informative!
Andrew Armiger said…
BTW, nice LCD nugget. ✌️

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