Skip to main content

Osaka International Women's Marathon and Osaka Half Marathon Preview


Despite Osaka being named to a preliminary state of emergency as Japan goes deeper into its omicron wave, this weekend's Osaka International Women's Marathon and Osaka Half Marathon are going ahead on their traditional public road courses. Osaka Women's is Japan's last remaining purely elite marathon, and with the mass-participation Osaka Marathon moving to the last weekend of February this year and targeting WA platinum label status the writing has to be on the wall for its future. It just doesn't seem sustainable to have this race four weeks before the start of a three-week run of platinum label races, one in the same city, one in Tokyo and one in Nagoya.

But for this year, at least, Osaka Women's clearly has the support up top in the local government to keep moving, and that counts for something. Like the 2021 race, despite its name it's a Japanese-only field with male pacers, kind of inevitably on the first point given Japan's ongoing border fortification but a bit regrettably on the second. Take out the "International" and "Women's" and what have you got left?

The win looks almost definitely to be between Mizuki Matsuda (Daihatsu) and Sayaka Sato (Sekisui Kagaku). Matsuda has one of the best records in the sport, with three wins and a 5th-place in Berlin out of five marathon starts, all between 2:21:47 and 2:22:44. The only misfire she's had was a 2:29:51 for 4th in Japan's Olympic marathon trials that left her as alternate. How she would have done if she'd replaced one of the less-than-100% women who ran the Olympics is one of last year's biggest what-ifs. Sato was the 4th-fastest Japanese woman in 2020 and 2021 and set the 25 km NR en route in her marathon debut, a mark that Matsuda broke while winning Nagoya last year. Sato will need a big step up and/or another miss from Matsuda to compete, but it should be a good race.

The supporting cast includes 2019's fastest Japanese woman Reia Iwade (Adidas), and 2021's 3rd and 4th-placers Yukari Abe (Shimamura) and Mao Uesugi (Starts). Osaka Women's factors into the complex algorithms for making the Oregon World Championships team and Paris Olympics marathon trials, and with six other women in the field having run under the 2:27:00 B-standard for qualification for the Olympic trials the race to finish in the 4th-6th place B-standard bracket should be just as good as the one to make the 1st-3rd place A-standard bracket.


Alongside the marathon, the Osaka Half Marathon will also feature two-time Osaka International winner Kayoko Fukushi (Wacoal) in her final race. Fukushi's marathon debut in Osaka in 2008 was possibly the wildest elite-level marathon debut in history, and while she might not have another marathon in her it's great to see her bring her career to a close back where she had one of its most unforgettable highlights. Sub-61 half marathoner Kenta Murayama (Asahi Kasei) leads the men's field in the half in a tune-up for one of the big marathons a month away whose future is still up in the air.

Fuji TV is handling TV broadcasting duties starting at noon Sunday Japan time. Official streaming looks to be through the TVer subscription service, so get your VPNs now. You might have luck with mov3.co too, but use a popup blocker. JRN will also be covering the race on @JRNLive.

41st Osaka International Women's Marathon

Elite Field Highlights
Osaka, 30 Jan. 2022
times listed are best within last 3 years except where noted

Mizuki Matsuda (Daihatsu) - 2:21:47 (1st, Osaka Int'l 2020)
Sayaka Sato (Seiksui Kagaku) - 2:23:27 (5th, Nagoya Women's 2020)
Reia Iwade (Adidas) - 2:23:52 (5th, Nagoya Women's 2019)
Yukari Abe (Shimamura) - 2:24:41 (3rd, Osaka Int'l 2021)
Mao Uesugi (Starts) - 2:24:52 (4th, Osaka Int'l 2021)
Mizuki Tanimoto (Tenmaya) - 2:25:28 (11th, Nagoya Women's 2019)
Ayano Ikemitsu (Kagoshima Ginko) - 2:26:07 (12th, Nagoya  Women's 2019)
Ayumi Hagiwara (Toyota Jidoshokki) - 2:26:15 (5th, Osaka Int'l 2021)
Natsumi Matsushita (Tenmaya) - 2:26:26 (3rd, Nagoya Women's 2021)
Haruka Yamaguchi (AC Kita) - 2:26:35 (7th, Osaka Int'l 2020)
Hanae Tanaka (Daiichi Seimei) - 2:26:49 (5th, Nagoya Women's 2021)
Misaki Kato (Kyudenko) - 2:27:20 (8th, Nagoya Women's 2021)
Madoka Nakano (Iwatani Sangyo) - 2:27:39 (4th, Osaka Int'l 2019)
Shiho Kaneshige (GRlab Kanto) - 2:28:51 (16th, Osaka Int'l 2020)
Anna Matsuda (Denso) - 2:29:52 (8th, Osaka Int'l 2021)
Rie Kawauchi (Otsuka Seiyaku) - 2:31:34 (17th, Nagoya Women's 2021)
Ayano Ikeuchi (Denso) - 2:33:29 (19th, Nagoya Women's 2021)
Mai Fujisawa (Hokkaido Excel AC) - 2:35:52 (1st, Kanazawa 2021)
Asuka Yamamoto (Edion) - 2:36:14 (21th, Osaka Int'l 2020)
Tomomi Sawahata (Sawahatas) - 2:37:02 (1st, Gunma 2021)
Mai Ito (Otsuka Seiyaku) - 2:38:07 (25th, Nagoya Women's 2021)
Michi Numata (Toyota Jidoshokki) - 2:38:30 (39th, Nagoya Women's 2019)
Saki Tokoro (Kyocera) - 2:38:49 (40th, Nagoya Women's 2019)
Mitsuko Ino (Linkstyle) - 2:39:04 (10th, Osaka 2019)

© 2022 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Stefan said…
Your assessment of this race is spot on. Mizuki Matsuda is a deserved favourite to win and as much as I'd love to see Sayaka Sato cause an upset I think it is unlikely. What I would love to see is a PB from Sayaka Sato and with her recent current form I think it is on the cards. Hopefully, it is not a windy day and she runs to her full potential. Early on I expect Reia Iwade to hang on to the pace but I would think by the 25km mark if not sooner it will be a race of two with Mizuki Matsuda pushing to another victory in a good time.

By the way, what has happened to Honami Maeda? Is she injured, taking some time off or retired? I have not seen her in any races post Olympics nor in the Exiden events. Her presence is certainly missed.

Most-Read This Week

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...

Nagoya Women's Marathon Preview and Streaming (updated)

Japan's winter marathon season of 6 major races in 7-straight weekends wraps up Sunday with the world's largest women-only marathon, the Nagoya Women's Marathon . The weather is looking pretty good, 6˚ at the start rising to 10˚ by the finish and sunny skies, but a moderate 7 m/s NW wind means a headwind finish that might impact the potential for some fast times. Official streaming kicks off at 9:00 a.m. local time. Live results will be here . Sheila Chepkirui won last year in 2:20:40, breaking away from Sayaka Sato and Eunice Chebichii Chumba at 30 km and hanging on for the win. Sato negative split a 2:20:59 PB for 2nd, Chumba fading to 3rd in 2:21:36. All 3 are back this time, but they have pretty serious competition from Aynalem Desta , 2:17:37 in Amsterdam last fall, and Selly Chepyego Kaptich , 2:20:03 in Barcelona 2023. And of course, Japanese NR holder Honami Maeda . Maeda ran 2:18:59 at the Osaka International Women's Marathon in 2024 to make the Paris Oly...

How it Happened

Ancient History I went to Wesleyan University, where the legend of four-time Boston Marathon champ and Wes alum Bill Rodgers hung heavy over the cross-country team. Inspired by Koichi Morishita and Young-Cho Hwang’s duel at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics I ran my first marathon in 1993, qualifying for Boston ’94 where Bill was kind enough to sign a star-struck 20-year-old me’s bib number at the expo. Three years later I moved to Japan for grad school, and through a long string of coincidences I came across a teenaged kid named Yuki Kawauchi down at my neighborhood track. I never imagined he’d become what he is, but right from the start there was just something different about him. After his 2:08:37 breakthrough at the 2011 Tokyo Marathon he called me up and asked me to help him get into races abroad. He’d finished 3rd on the brutal downhill Sixth Stage at the Hakone Ekiden, and given how he’d run the hills in the last 6 km at Tokyo ’11 I thought he’d do well at Boston or New York. “I...