The 50th anniversary National Corporate Half Marathon and 10 km Championships went off with a bang Sunday in Yamaguchi with historic results in both the women's and men's races despite cold and rainy conditions.
© 2022 Brett Larner, all rights reserved
In the women's half marathon, debut marathon NR holder Yuka Ando (Wacoal) and Rino Goshima (Shiseido), course record breaker on November's National Corporate Women's Ekiden 10.0 km Fifth Stage and 2019 World University Games 10000 m silver medalist, went out relatively conservatively on track for just over 69 minutes at 5 km in 16:24. Kenyan Dolphine Nyaboke Omare (U.S.E.) caught up shortly after that and really got things moving, taking them through 10 km in 32:33 and 15 km in 48:29. That was too much for Goshima, who dropped 9 seconds behind by 15 km, and a bit later for Ando. Omare hammered on to go through 20 km in 1:04:19 en route to a 1:07:56 course record for the win, 15 seconds under the old record set by Yukiko Akaba in 2008.
Goshima caught Ando at 20 km and pushed on to break Akaba's 1:08:11 women-only NR by 8 seconds in 1:08:03, going 10 seconds faster than Omare after 20 km with a 3:08 closing km. Ando just missed also breaking Akaba's mark, taking 3rd in 1:08:13, a solid tune-up for next month's Nagoya Women's Marathon. Sakiho Tsutsui (Yamada Holdings) was the only other woman under 70 minutes, taking 4th in 1:09:54. National record holder Hitomi Niiya (Sekisui Kagaku) ran at target Tokyo Marathon pace on track for mid-69 but faded rapidly late in the race, covering the last km in 3:23 and finishing 5th in 1:10:12, just holding off teammate Chikako Mori and Yuna Daito (Tenmaya) who both clocked 1:10:12 PBs.
The women's 10 km started off like a JV race before going wild, with the first 5 km going out in only 17:26 and Moe Shimizu (Wacoal) clocking a massive negative split 16:01 second half to win in 33:28 vs. the 32:09 CR set by Yui Fukuda in 2018. Only ten women cleared 34 minutes and there was no men's race, leaving the 10 km distance one of the most puzzlingly underexploited in the Japanese system.
But the shinkansen effect was in full effect in the men's half marathon. It was massive, with 15 runners under 61 minutes, all Japanese, and world record-setting counts of 56 under 62 minutes, 110 under 63, 143 under 64, and 161 under 65. Yusuke Tamura (Kurosaki Harima), Yuki Muta (Hitachi Butsuryu) and 20-year-old Hiroto Hayashida (Mitsubishi Juko) took it out in 14:29 for the first 5 km, 1:01:07 pace, with a lead pack of 138 in tow, and pure momentum took it from there.
2020 winner and 2021 Fukuoka International Marathon runner-up James Gitahi Rungaru (Chuo Hatsujo), Daniel Muiva Kitonyi (Track Tokyo), last year's top Japanese man Takashi Ichida (Asahi Kasei) and Tamura led at 10km in 28:50, 1:00:50 pace, with the lead pack down to 51. Tamura, Hayashida, and three others including Toyo University's Kazuki Matsuyama were up front at 15 km in 43:14, 1:00:48 pace with the pack down to 23.
21-year-old Chikara Yamano (Komazawa Univ.), one of ten university runners given permission to run the Corporate Championships after last week's Marugame Half Marathon was canceled on short notice, was the first one to make a break for it, opening a 2-second lead over Tamura, Hayashida, Matsuyama and four others just before 20 km. But the more experienced corporate leaguers timed their responses perfectly, Hayashida, Ken Nakayama (Honda) and Tamura all overtaking Yamano on the back straight of the track finish to go 1-2-3 in a shared 1:00:38 that put them at all-time Japanese #8. Yamano was 4th in 1:00:40, the fastest-ever by a Japanese-born collegiate runner.
The next 11 all broke 61, ranging from 19-year-old first-year Ayumu Yamamoto (Koku Gakuin Univ.) in a 1:00:43 debut for 8th, to 35-year-old Yuki Sato (SG Holdings) in a PB 1:00:46 for 11th in prep for next month's Tokyo Marathon, everyone who finish ahead of Sato aged 24 or younger. Tokyo Olympian Yuma Hattori (Toyota) continued his comeback from the heatstroke he suffered there, running a PB 1:01:24 for 30th.
And the numbers just kept on going up, with new best-time-for-place records down to at least the sub-65 level. Super-deep Japanese men's half marathons are nothing new, the shinkansen effect, massive numbers of people going out as hard as they can by mutual consensus and riding the shared momentum, helping a lot of them make it to the end. But even by those standards, and even for the super shoe era, this was something else.
50th National Corporate Half Marathon and 10 km Championships
Yamaguchi, 13 Feb. 2022
Women's Half Marathon
1. Dolphine Nyaboke Omare (Kenya/U.S.E.) - 1:07:56 - CR, PB
2. Rino Goshima (Shiseido) - 1:08:03 - NR
3. Yuka Ando (Wacoal) - 1:08:13 - PB
4. Sakiho Tsutsui (Yamada Holdings) - 1:09:54
5. Hitomi Niiya (Sekisui Kagaku) - 1:10:12
6. Chikako Mori (Sekisui Kagaku) - 1:10:12 - PB
7. Yuna Daito (Tenmaya) - 1:10:12 - PB
8. Kaede Kawamura (Iwatani Sangyo) - 1:10:17 - PB
9. Ryo Koido (Hitachi) - 1:10:20 - PB
10. Anna Matsuda (Denso) - 1:10:29 - PB
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DNF - Marie Imada (Canon)
Men's Half Marathon
1. Hiroto Hayashida (Mitsubishi Juko) - 1:00:38 - PB
2. Ken Nakayama (Honda) - 1:00:38 - PB
3. Yusuke Tamura (Kurosaki Harima) - 1:00:38 - PB
4. Chikara Yamano (Komazawa Univ.) - 1:00:40 - PB
5. Kazuya Nishiyama (Toyota) - 1:00:41 - PB
6. Takato Imai (Asahi Kasei) - 1:00:42 - PB
7. Tomoya Ogikubo (Yakult) - 1:00:43 - PB
8. Ayumu Yamamoto (Koku Gakuin Univ.) - 1:00:43 - debut
9. Kazuki Matsuyama (Toyo Univ.) - 1:00:43 - debut
10. Ayumu Kobayashi (NTT Nishi Nihon) - 1:00:44 - PB
11. Yuki Sato (SG Holdings) - 1:00:46 - PB
12. Takashi Namba (Toenec) - 1:00:46 - PB
13. Masashi Nonaka (Osaka Gas) - 1:00:48 - PB
14. Yohei Ikeda (Kanebo) - 1:00:59 - PB
15. Kota Murayama (GMO) - 1:00:59 - PB
16. Kotaro Shinohara (Komazawa Univ.) - 1:01:01 - debut
17. Shu Hasegawa (Kanebo) - 1:01:02 - PB
18. Toshiya Sato (Toyota) - 1:01:06 - PB
19. Tsuyoshi Bando (Osaka Gas) - 1:01:07 - PB
20. Shun Yuzawa (SG Holdings) - 1:01:09 - PB
21. Yuki Muta (Hitachi Butsuryu) - 1:01:10 - PB
22. Daiki Hattori (Toyota Boshoku) - 1:01:12 - debut
23. Kenta Koshikawa (Hitachi Butsuryu) - 1:01:18 - PB
24. Ken Yokote (Fujitsu) - 1:01:18 - PB
25. Daniel Muiva Kitonyi (Kenya/Track Tokyo) - 1:01:19 - PB
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50. Hiroyuki Ishikawa (Aisan Kogyo) - 1:01:55 - PB
56. Daisuke Higuchi (Chuo Hatsujo) - 1:01:59 - debut
75. Yuki Arimura (Asahi Kasei) - 1:02:16 - PB
100. Kandai Kawahigashi (Nishitetsu) - 1:02:49
110. Shun Sadakata (Mazda) - 1:02:59
125. Nagisa Moriso (Chugoku Denryoku) - 1:03:36
143. Yuta Suzuki (Yasukawa Denki) - 1:03:58 - debut
150. Kosuke Minamoto (Osaka Police) - 1:04:15
161. Masahiro Kamidoi (JR Higashi Nihon) - 1:04:56
175. Suguru Otaguro (Yachiyo Kogyo) - 1:05:59
188. Shiki Shinsako (Chugoku Denryoku) - 1:06:58
200. Kenji Kaneuchi (Saku AC Hokkaido) - 1:07:52
201. Tomoaki Koga (Mitsubishi Chemical) - 1:07:54
208. Yoshihiro Shinohara (Nishitetsu) - 1:08:56
221. Shohei Mori (Tokai Carbon) - 1:09:58
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DNF - Shoya Kawase (Honda)
Women's 10 km
1. Moe Shimizu (Wacoal) - 33:28 - debut
2. Hibiki Onishi (Universal) - 33:32
3. Mei Kanemaru (Miyazaki Ginko) - 33:33
4. Yuri Tasaki (Sysmex) - 33:34 - debut
5. Honoka Narutaki (Sysmex) - 33:39
6. Rio Tateyama (Miyazaki Ginko) - 33:40
7. Sora Shinozakura (Panasonic) - 33:48 - debut
8. Chinatsu Takeda (Daihatsu) - 33:49
9. Minori Nezuka (Mitsui Sumitomo Kaijo) - 33:54 - debut
10. Aoi Suzuki (Nitori) - 33:59
Comments
Those results with rainy conditions? Super impressive and great that the runners were all so close to each other till the end.
Always nice to see Kazuaya Nishiyama giving it all up front.
The Komazawa duo was impressive but if Yamano is entering a final year and disappointed a bit at the last Hakone I found the performance of Kotaro Shinohara outstanding. A first year who was an alternate at Hakone.
Same goes for Ayumu Yamamoto.
It's not a knock on these 10 guys from university who partecipated here (Juntendo's Iyoda and Ishii went well though I imagined them being at the front of the University runners) but one has to wonder what kind of race would we have had if the elite Hakone guys were running here.
Different course and conditions and everything but going back to Yamato first stage split being one minute faster than the split here and with the performances we saw last month at Hakone on the first 4 stages, one has to wonder what would have happened if the elite guys were here and no rain.
Are we going to see a sub 60 sooner than later?
I don't know but I'm definitely looking ahead to more races hopefully soon.
No, I am from Sydney, Australia.