Skip to main content

Panasonic Pulls Off Last-Second Win at Princess Ekiden


The Princess Ekiden, the official qualifying race for the Nov. 27 National Corporate Women's Ekiden, happened Sunday in Munakata, Fukuoka, 31 teams racing 42.195 km in 6 stages to pick up one of the 16 places available at Nationals. It was an unusually dynamic ekiden; except for Fourth Stage winner Teresiah Muthoni (Daiso), every woman who ran the fastest time on her stage did it while taking the overall lead, and 4 of those 5 were from different teams.

Up front, Panasonic anchor Sora Shinozakura pulled off a brilliant last-second come-from-behind win to take 1st in 2:18:06. Panasonic was never out of the top 4, 2nd runner Nanami Watanabe taking the lead before the team dropped back again. Shinozakura started the 6.695 km anchor leg in 3rd, 24 seconds behind leader Momoka Hanafusa of the Kyudenko team, and steadily cut down the distance to 1st. It looked like she might run out of road before she got there, but with a hard surge from 400 m out she flew past Hanafusa to take the win by 6 seconds. Hanafusa was in that position thanks to a CR 34:02 from teammate Wakana Itsuki on the 10.4 km Fifth Leg, and with the 4th-fastest time on the anchor stage it wasn't like she was a non-factor. Shinozakura was just in a different class.

Tenmaya was 3rd in 2:18:45, with Olympic marathoner Honami Maeda making a good comeback from corona on the anchor stage where she was 3rd-fastest. Daiichi Seimei was 4th, 3rd runner Haruka Kokai running the fastest time on the longest leg, the 10.7 km Third Stage, to move into 1st and 4th runner Hanae Tanaka holding on. Daiso was 5th in 2:20:07 thanks in big part to Muthoni, who was just 3 seconds slower than her own CR on the 3.8 km Third Stage in 11:28. Toyota Jidoshokki started in the lead with a 22:56 stage win on the 7.0 km opening leg from Momoka Kawaguchi before falling to 12th.

With 16 qualifying spots the race down around that cutoff was tense and exciting over the last three stages. 16th after the Fourth Stage, Hitachi was repeatedly passed and knocked back to 17th over the last two stages only to overtake other teams and claw its way back into 16th. Nitori anchor Kyoka Sugano started 8 seconds back from Hitachi's Mei Sasaki in 17th and quickly made up 2 seconds, but when she stalled after that quick start the 16 qualifiers looked settled. But in an ekiden it's really never over til it's over.


Running safely in 15th just ahead of Sasaki, Kyocera anchor Mei Shirai was just about to overtake Route Inn Hotels and Shimamura in 13th and 14th with about a km to go. Then, the unexpected struck. Shirai suddenly stumbled and fell. On replay it looked like she somehow lost her balance, twisted her left ankle and fell, landing full force on the pavement on one of her knees. She immediately curled up and held the knee, never moving as first Hitachi, then Higo Ginko, then team after team went by. Thankfully she didn't try to crawl her way to the finish so the team wouldn't DNF, an indication of how serious the situation was. Taken to a hospital for examination, Shirai was found to have suffered a fracture of her left femur.

With Shirai's bad luck knocking Kyocera out of the race Higo Ginko unexpectedly pulled out the final qualifying spot. They and the other 15 teams will now join the 8 auto-qualifiers in Sendai on Nov. 27 for the Queen's Ekiden, the stage name for the National Corporate Women's Ekiden.

8th Princess Ekiden

National Corporate Women's Ekiden Qualifier
Munakata, Fukuoka, 23 Oct. 2022
31 teams, 6 stages, 42.195 km
top 16 teams qualify for National Corporate Women's Ekiden

Top Individual Stage Results
First Stage (7.0 km)
1. Momoka Kawaguchi (Toyota Jidoshokki) - 22:56
2. Rei Ohara (Tenmaya) - 22:57
3. Maki Izumida (Daiichi Seimei) - 22:58

Second Stage (3.6 km)
1. Nanami Watanabe (Panasonic) - 11:15
2. Kaede Kawamura (Iwatani Sangyo) - 11:31
3. Hibiki Sakurazawa (Daiichi Seimei) - 11:34

Third Stage (10.7 km)
1. Haruka Kokai (Daiichi Seimei) - 34:47
2. Minami Yamanouchi (Shimamura) - 35:00
3. Honoka Tanaike (Otsuka Seiyaku) - 35:04

Fourth Stage (3.8 km)
1. Teresiah Muthoni (Daiso) - 11:28
2. Pauline Kamulu (Route Inn Hotels) - 11:33
3. Agnes Mwikali (Kyocera) - 11:39

Fifth Stage (10.4 km)
1. Wakana Itsuki (Kyudenko) - 34:02 - CR
2. Kaori Morita (Panasonic) - 34:24
3. Momoko Watanabe (Tenmaya) - 34:45

Sixth Stage (6.695 km)
1. Sora Shinozakura (Panasonic) - 21:25
2. Misaki Kato (Daiso) - 21:38
3. Honami Maeda (Tenmaya) - 21:47

Team Results
1. Panasonic - 2:18:06
2. Kyudenko - 2:18:12
3. Tenmaya - 2:18:45
4. Daiichi Seimei - 2:19:09
5. Daiso - 2:20:07
6. Mitsui Sumitomo Kaijo - 2:20:18
7. Iwatani Sangyo - 2:20:23
8. Otsuka Seigaku - 2:20:59
9. Uniqlo - 2:21:07
10. Edion - 2:21:10
11. Starts - 2:21:11
12. Toyota Jidoshokki - 2:21:13
13. Route Inn Hotels - 2:21:36
14. Shimamura - 2:21:40
15. Hitachi - 2:22:06
16. Higo Ginko - 2:22:28
-----
17. 18 Ginko - 2:22:38
18. Nitori - 2:23:03
19. Sysmex - 2:23:12
20. Senko - 2:24:36
21. SID Group - 2:24:40
22. Miyazaki Ginko - 2:24:53
23. Noritz - 2:25:33
24. Canon - 2:26:26
25. Kagoshima Ginko - 2:26:34
26. Comodi Iida - 2:27:52
27. Tokyo Metro - 2:28:18
28. Aichi Denki - 2:28:58
29. Toto - 2:29:32
30. Memolead - 2:32:58
-----
DNF - Kyocera
© 2022 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Stefan said…
Congrats to the Panasonic team for a great comeback win. I felt badly for the rookie runner, Momoka Hanafusa from Kyudenko who ran a great last leg but I truly felt bad for Mei Shirai from Kyocera who suffered that absolutely terrible injury, apparently it was a left thigh fracture according to this article. Source: https://mainichi.jp/articles/20221023/k00/00m/050/122000c

Edion disappointed, most especially their premier runner, Kaede Hagitani who finished 12th in her leg. She certainly has not been in the best form of late and she did look in a bit of distress rather early so perhaps there is something else going on such as an injury.

Wakana Itsuki (Kyudenko) was super impressive as she has been on the track of late. She fights very hard till the end and she deserved that course record. Well done to her!

I was glad to see Honami Maeda run a solid time and she looks to be in good form but it might be problematic for her to run a marathon this year with the Queen's Exiden a week prior to the Hofu Marathon which was the one I expected her to enter. I guess she could use the run in the Queen's Exiden as part of her training plan but surely, it would not be an ideal preparation if the Hofu Marathon is indeed one she wants to enter.

It's a shame TBS geo-blocked their Youtube channels so us viewers in Australia could not see the coverage via that avenue. I'm not sure why they did this as they allowed us to watch the event last year on their Youtube channels. It was disappointing. Thankfully, I was able to find another way to watch the main TBS channel. It was a very exciting event this year and well done to all the teams that took part and I do hope that Mei Shirai can recover fully from her thigh fracture. It is a major injury for a 21 year old and will, no doubt, raise concerns about over training once again.
Kyle S. said…
That was certainly an exciting and dramatic battle for the win! Plus, the fight for the last qualifying spots for next month's national championship was a nailbiter, as usual. With ekiden season now in full swing, I'm quite looking forward to all of the big races in the coming months.

It appears as if the Princess Ekiden has had a lot of concerning incidents regarding runner health and safety over the past ~5 editions. This year was Kyudenko's Shirai breaking her leg. In 2020 there was Kako Okdada, also from Kyocera, collapsing within 100m of the end of the first leg. Then in 2018 there was Iwatani Sangyo's Rei Iida crawling to finish the second stage after an injury and Mitsui Sumitomo Kaijo's Harumi Okamoto becoming disoriented and delirious in the last kilometers of the third stage. Maybe I'm experiencing some recency bias, but I can't shake the feeling that it's probably tied to deeper issues with how much of a meat grinder many of the women's corporate teams seem to be. I really hope that Shirai has a safe and speedy recovery.
Brett Larner said…
Agree that it seems to have become almost a given that something like this is going to happen there these days. There was also the thing with Mitsui's Hiromi Katakai running in socks and tearing her feet up a couple of years ago. I definitely don't remember it being so common in the past, and it doesn't happen as frequently at other ekidens, except maybe Hakone. The New Year Ekiden qualifying races don't have problems this frequently. Not sure what to make of it.

But yes, here's to Shirai coming back from this.
Brett Larner said…
Sorry to hear TBS blocked the streaming. It's frustrating.

Most-Read This Week

Tokyo Olympics Marathon Trials Winner Nakamura Enters Waseda Grad School

An Olympian in the marathon at the Tokyo Olympics, Shogo Nakamura (Fujitsu) announced on his social media that he has entered Waseda University 's Graduate School of Sport Science with the start of the new academic year this week. A graduate of Mie's Ueno Kogyo H.S. , Nakamura went to Komazawa University before joining Fujitsu in 2015. His senior year of high school he was 3rd overall and 2nd Japanese in the 5000 m at the National High School Track and Field Championships, and in the fall the same year he ran what was at the time the 7th-fastest high school mark ever, 13:50.38. At Komazawa he scored four individual stage wins across the three big university ekidens. In 2019 he won the MGC Race, Japan's marathon trials for the Tokyo Olympics, where he was 62nd in 2:22:23. Nakamura indicated that he would be studying "top sports management" under professor Takeo Hirata . "I'll be balancing competition and academics," Nakamura wrote. "I'm r...

Australian YouTuber Handed Lifetime Ban by Ageo City Half Marathon After Running 1:06 with Another Runner's Bib (updated)

After discussion with their race's chief JAAF referee, on Nov. 27 the organizers of the Ageo City Half Marathon handed down a lifetime ban from their event against 36-year-old Australian Matt Inglis Fox  for running the Nov. 15 race wearing the bib number of another JAAF-registered runner. The incident came to light after Fox posted on his personal Instagram account that he had run a PB of 1:06:33 and finished 203rd in Ageo with a 10 km split of 31:03, along with photos and video of himself in the race wearing a bib number beginning with 11. Fox did not appear in the results by name or in that time or place, the closest match being a 1:06:54 gross, 1:06:50 net finish time with a 31:21 10 km split for 18th place in the JAAF-registered division and 209th overall by bib number 1129, registered to a non-Japanese Tokyo-resident club runner. The club runner, Harrisson Uk , readily confirmed that he had given his bib to Fox, saying, "I gave my number to Matt. It wasn't me."...

Weekend Road and Track Roundup

A roundup of the main road and track action on the last weekend of Japan's 2024-25 academic and fiscal year: Doubling off a 2:07:06 PB at the Tokyo Marathon 4 weeks ago, Tatsuya Maruyama took bronze at the Asian Marathon Championships in Jiaxing, China in 2:11:56. Gold went to North Korea's Il Ryong Han in a breakaway 2:11:18, with silver medalist Tianyu Chen of China just ahead of Maruyama in 2:11:50. Japan's Shungo Yokota was a distant 4th in 2:14:00, with Japan-based Mongolian NR holder Ser-Od Bat-Ochir 6th in 2:15:14. Japanese women Kaede Kawamura and Natsumi Matsushita were 5th and 6th in 2:31:26 and 2:34:40, with medals going to China's Bing Wu , gold in 2:26:01, North Korea's Kwang-Ok Ri , silver right behind her in 2:26:07, and defending gold medalist Khishigsaikhan Galbadrakh landing in bronze this time in 2:28:56, her third sub-2:29 performance so far in 2025. Back home, four men broke 2:20 at the Fukui Sakura Marathon . Ko Kobayashi from the Shi...