Skip to main content

Weekend Road and Track Roundup


It was the busiest weekend so far this year in Japanese road racing. At the National Corporate Half Marathon and 10 km Championships, Joseph Karanja (Aichi Seiko) took the men's title in 1:00:25, leading 11 under 61 minutes. 3rd overall, Ryota Kondo (Mitsubishi Juko) was the top Japanese man in 1:00:32. Depth-wise it was pretty typical for a top-level Japanese half:

sub-61: 11
sub-62: 26
sub-63: 46
sub-64: 78
sub-65: 93
sub-66: 106

After a CR and women-only NR last year the women's race was unexpectedly slow this time. 2022 champ Dolphine Nyaboke Omare (U.S.E.) made it two in a row with an easy solo win in 1:10:16, with Shiori Yoshizono (Tenmaya) 2nd in 1:10:48. Sora Shinozakura (Panasonic) won the women's 10 km title in 33:09.


At the Karatsu 10-Miler, marathoner Hiroto Fujimagari (Toyota Kyushu) held off Hideaki Sumiyoshi (Kyudenko) for the win 46:56 to 46:58. Naruha Sato (Shiseido) won the women's 10 km, bettering Shinozakura's time at the National Corporate Championships in 32:48. Kazu Matsui (Oita Tomei H.S.) led the top 5 under 30 minutes in the high school boys' 10 km, winning in 29:44. Fuka Kurimoto (Takakawa Gakuen H.S.) won the high school girls' race in 16:56.

In marathon action, Waseda University 3rd-year Koki Sato pulled an upset at the Nobeoka Nishi Nihon Marathon, winning his debut in 2:11:13 over corporate leaguers Kenta Murayama (Asahi Kasei) and Ryota Ejima (Mitsubishi Juko). Murayama surged after 30 km to open a 16-second lead, but by 40 km Sato had reeled him back in and was 7 seconds out front. Sato's winning time was the second-fastest in Nobeoka history and the first time since 1966 that a college student has won it. In the end Murayama was 2nd in 2:11:26, Ejima another second behind in 3rd and 4th and 5th-placers Takashi Soma (Otsuka Seiyaku) and Ryoichi Matsuo (Asahi Kasei) just making it under 2:12. Amateur Yuka Adachi won the women's race in 2:51:14.



In Osaka, Mongolians Khishigsaikhan Galbadrakh and Munkhbayar Narandulam were back at the Senshu International Marathon at the end of a 6-week training camp in Japan to win again. Galbadrakh led the women's race start to finish in pursuit of her first sub-2:30 but fell off pace slightly in the hilly last 10 km, winning in a PB of 2:30:41 for her fourth-straight Senshu victory. Kanon Suda (Kobe Gakuin Univ.) ran down Ugandan Priscilla Chelangat late in the race for 2nd in 2:40:49, Chelangat fading to 3rd in 2:49:15.

Narandulam, the 2018 Senshu men's winner, initially led a group of four including Ugandan Nathan Ayeko, but frustrated by the other's unwillingness to take turns leading he took off solo. Ayeko reeled him back in right at 31 km, and for the next 9 km they stayed side by side. But with 2 km to go Narandulam surged again to win in 2:16:28. Ayeko was 2nd in a PB of 2:17:09, the only other runner to go sub-2:20.


At the Ehime Marathon, Yoshiki Nakamura (Ehime Ginko) had a narrow win over 100 km world champion Haruki Okayama, Nakamura taking the men's title in 2:17:27 to Okayama's 2:17:56. Rui Nishida (Higo Ginko) won the women's race in 2:40:51, her nearest competitor Eri Suzuki a kilometer back in 2:44:40 for 2nd. A total of 8.895 people finished Ehime's 60th edition, making it the biggest of the three major domestic marathons this weekend.

Overseas, the Japanese team did well in unfamiliar indoor environment at the Asian Indoor Championships in Astana, Kazakhstan, taking 6 gold medals, 4 silvers, 4 bronzes, and setting three NR and one U20 NR. In women's events, Masumi Aoki took 0.04 off her own 60 mH NR to win gold in 8.01. Sumire Hata won gold in the long jump with a 6.64 m NR. Mayu Nasu won gold in the pole vault, clearing everything up to 4.0 m on her first attempt. Yuki Yamasaki took bronze in the pentathlon, breaking the NR by 5 points with a final score of 4078. Yume Goto won silver in the 1500 m in 4:19.29, Ayano Shiomi matching that with a silver in the 800 m in 2:07.18. National champion Meijo University's Yuma Yamamoto took bronze in the 3000 m, running 9:09.29. 

In men's events, fresh off an indoor mile NR last week, Kazuto Iizawa won 1500 m gold in 3:42.83. Yuma Maruyama and Keisuke Okuda went 1-2 in the heptathlon, Maruyama not far off the NR at 5801 for gold and Okuda scoring 5497 for silver. Ryoichi Akamatsu cleared 2.28 m on his second attempt to take high jump gold. Just 3 weeks after his 19th birthday, Hakone Ekiden champ Komazawa University's Keita Sato added a fourth U20 NR to his resume, running over 33 seconds under the old record dating back to 1999 with a 7:56.41 for silver in his first-ever indoor race. Ryota Suzuki won bronze in the 60 m, running 6.66, with Shuhei Ishikawa winning bronze in the 60 mH in 7.70.

Times in distance events were also good at the BU Valentine Invitational, with standout performances including sub-8 clocking in the men's 3000 m from Takato Suzuki, Kanta Shimizu and Shunsuke Yoshii, a 13:29.76 from Yoshii's older brother Yamato Yoshii in the 5000 m, and yet another NR from Nozomi Tanaka with an 8:45.64 for 4th in the women's 3000 m.

© 2023 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Most-Read This Week

19-Yr-Old Munakata Breaks Miura's U20 NR to Win Ageo City Half Marathon

The Ageo City Half Marathon is always big, the main race that the coaches of Hakone Ekiden-bound university men's teams use for firming up their entry rosters for the big show. That makes what's basically an idyllic small town race into one of the world's great road races, with depth unmatched anywhere. One of the top-tier people on the start list at 1:02:07, Kodai Miyaoka (Hosei Univ.) took the race out fast, but the entire pack was keying off the fastest man in the race, Reishi Yoshida (Chuo Gakuin Univ.), 1:00:31. Yoshida reeled Miyaoka in before 5 km and kept things steady in the low-1:01 range, wearing down the lead group to around 10 including his CGU teammate Taisei Ichikawa , a quartet from Izumo and National University Ekiden runner-up Komazawa University , 2 runners from local Daito Bunka University , 2:07:54 marathoner Atsumi Ashiwa (Honda), and Australian Ed Goddard . Right after 15 km Komazawa went into action, Yudai Kiyama , Hibiki Murakami and Haru Tanin

Ageo City Half Marathon Preview and Streaming

This weekend's big race is the Ageo City Half Marathon , the next stop on the collegiate men's circuit. Most of the universities bound for the Jan. 2-3 Hakone Ekiden use Ageo to thin down the list of contenders for their final Hakone rosters, and with JRN's development program that sends the first two Japanese collegiate finishers in Ageo to the United Airlines NYC Half every year a lot of coaches put in some of their A-listers too. That gives Ageo legendary depth and fast front-end speed, with a 1:00:47 course record last year from Kenyan corporate leaguer Paul Kuira (JR Higashi Nihon) and the top 26 all clearing 63 minutes. Since a lot of programs just enter everybody on their rosters you never really know who on the entry list is actually going to show up, but if even a quarter of the people at the top end of this year's list run it'll be a great race, even if conditions are looking likely to be a bit warmer than ideal. Chuo Gakuin University 's Reishi Yoshi

10000 m NR Attempt In the Works Saturday at Hachioji Long Distance - Streaming and Preview

There are a bunch of other time trial meets this weekend and next, but Saturday's Hachioji Long Distance is the last big meet for Japanese men, 8 heats of Wavelight-paced 10000 m finely graded from target times of 28:50 down to 26:59 for the fastest heat. Heat 6 at 17:55 local time is effectively the B-race, with 35 Japan-based Kenyans targeting 27:10 at the front end, and in a lot of cases a spot on their teams at the New Year Ekiden national championship on Jan. 1. Corporate teams are only allowed to field one non-Japanese athlete in the New Year Ekiden, and only on its shortest stage, and getting to that has a big impact on African athletes' contracts and renewal prospects. Toyota Boshoku , Yasukawa Denki , Chugoku Denryoku , Aisan Kogyo , JR Higashi Nihon , Subaru and 2024 national champion Toyota are all fielding two Kenyans, and Aichi Seiko three. For people like Toyota's Felix Korir and Samuel Kibathi , getting as close to the 27:10 target time as they can and