Skip to main content

Tokyo Kokusai University Head Coach Yuji Oshida Resigns After Team Misses Hakone Podium


After finishing 11th at the Jan. 2-3 Hakone Ekiden's 99th edition to end its 3-year streak of making the 10-deep podium, Tokyo Kokusai University announced on Jan. 18 that head coach Yuji Oshida, 60, will resign. After also finishing 8th at October's Izumo Ekiden and 11th at November's National University Ekiden Oshida's resignation came as a way of taking personal responsibility for the program's drop in competitive level. He will be replaced by veteran coach Saburo Yokomizo, 83.

A graduate of Chuo University, where he won Hakone's 8th leg during his senior year, Oshida was the gold medalist in the 1500 m at the 1986 Asian Games. After working as assistant coach at Honda and Chuo, including for Chuo's 1996 Hakone Ekiden win, he has been head coach at Tokyo Kokusai since the program's inception in 2011, building it up from zero in consultation with fellow Chuo alumnus Yokomizo.

Tokyo Kokusai first qualified for the Hakone Ekiden in 2016. In 2020 it finished 5th, making the 10-deep podium for the first time and following that up with podium finishes in 2021 and 2022. In 2021 it won the Izumo Ekiden in its first appearance at the event, following that with appearances at both the National University Ekiden and Hakone to make all three major university ekidens in a single season, the mark of a top-tier team.

Coach Oshida has a reputation for being close with athletes and a polite and respectful coaching style. His success as a coach was evident at both the team and individual level. In high school, Tokyo Kokusai alumnus Tatsuhiko Ito never made it to a national-level competition. But under Oshida's coaching he became one of the highest-level collegiate runners in the country, going on to represent Japan in the 10000 m at their 2021 Tokyo Olympics post-graduation. Kenyan Vincent Yegon broke the course records on Hakone's 2nd, 3rd and 4th legs. Luka Musembi was mostly hidden in Yegon's shadow throughout their four years together at Tokyo Kokusai and never got to run Hakone, but last August he won the Hokkaido Marathon in his debut at the distance.

Despite Tokyo Kokusai's struggles through the 2022-23 season, Oshida's success with the program was widely respected by his peers, and his resignation to take responsibility for the team's failures this year sent waves of surprise across the college ekiden circuit.

His replacement as coach, Yokomizo was the star runner at Chuo University from 1959 through 1962, the team's Hakone wins all 4 years a part of its legendary 6-year streak of Hakone victories from 1959 to 1964. There are no doubts about his qualifications as a coach, but he is already 83 years old, even older than Yoshiyuki Aoba, who was named head coach at Nihon University in 2020 at age 77. Komazawa University grad Takumi Matsumura and Chukyo University alum Yuta Nakamura will serve as Yokomizo's assistant coaches. According to an involved source, Yokomizo's appointment is temporary, and a new permanent head coach may be named at a later date.

source article:
translated and edited by Brett Larner

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Most-Read This Week

Chepkirui Wins Nagoya Women's Marathon

Heavy-duty favorite Sheila Chepkirui took the win at Sunday's Nagoya Women's Marathon , pulling away after 30 km to cruise in for 1st in 2:20:40. Erratic pacing early saw the first and second groups only seconds apart for much of the first half of the race, the top group slower than planned and the 2nd group a bit ahead of schedule. At halfway in 1:10:37 the front group included Chepkirui, #2-ranked Ruti Aga and last year's runner-up Eunice Chumba , and Japanese contingent Sayaka Sato , Rika Kaseda , Natsuki Omori and Mao Uesugi . Omori was the first to drop, then Uesugi, then Aga, who ultimately dropped out before 30 km. When the pacers stopped at 30 km Chepkirui made a move that dropped Kaseda and strung out Chumba and Sato behind her, but all four came back together once before another surge put Kaseda away for good. As Chepkirui inched away Sato and Chumba passed each other repeatedly, and Chumba could only watch as the top Japanese runner got away from her again thi...

Nagoya Women's Marathon Preview

The Nagoya Women's Marathon , the world's largest women-only marathon and the last race in the selection cycle for September's Tokyo World Championships, happens Sunday. Weather conditions are looking better than what they had in Tokyo and Osaka the last two weekends, 7Ëš at the start and rising to 12Ëš with sunny skies. The wind looks a bit stronger than ideal, but it could be worse. Fuji TV has the live broadcast starting at 9:00 a.m. Sunday local time, and if you've got a VPN you should be able to watch the TVer streaming . One option for  a leaderboard is here , and another here . We'll have some coverage on @JRNLive . Just like last time around there are three Ethiopian and Kenyan-born athletes at the top list, this time it being sub-2:20 women Sheila Chepkirui , winner in NYC last year, and Ruti Aga , winner in Xiamen in January, and last year's Nagoya runner-up Eunice Chebichii Chumba . But last year Yuka Ando still pulled off the win, so there's a c...

Who's Running Tokyo Worlds?

The Japanese marathon teams will be the most prestigious ones to be on for September's Tokyo World Championships, and with Sunday's Nagoya Women's Marathon the window for Japanese athletes to get onto the JAAF's shortlist closed. Who's on it? The final decision won't be made until Mar. 26, but let's look through the selection criteria and see who's guaranteed, who's pretty likely, and who has a chance. 1. Marathon medalists at the Paris Olympics - There weren't any, so nobody makes the team this way. Akira Akasaki (Kyudenko) and Yuka Suzuki (Daiichi Seimei) were the top placers, both of them running PBs in the Olympics to finish 6th. You'd think that would count for something a year later, but you'd think wrong. 2. JMC Series IV Champions - The top point scorers in the Japan Marathon Championship Series IV, which ran from April, 2023 to March, 2025, earn places on the marathon teams along with cash prizes. For women that's Yuka ...