Skip to main content

Uzawa Breaks 200 m Championships Record, Yamamoto and Endo Double 5000 m Gold on Final Day of Asian Athletics Championships


The final day of the Bangkok Asian Athletics Championships kicked off with a gold medal in the men's 20 km race walk from Yutaro Murayama in a close race with China's Kaihua Wang that saw Murayama win by 49 seconds. Bronze medalist Vikash Singh was over 4 minutes behind Wang, while Murayama's teammate Hiroto Jusho dropped out mid-race. Yukiko Umeno took bronze in the women's race in 1:36:18, almost 4 minutes behind winner Liujing Yang. Miyu Naito finished just out of the medals in 4th in 1:37:35.

In the evening session, Yuma Yamamoto and Hyuga Endo made it a Japanese women's and men's double in the 5000 m. In the women's race, Yamamoto stayed behind Mongolia's Munkhzaya Bayartsogt and Kazakhstan's Caroline Chepkoech Kipkirui through the early phases, then India's Parul Chaudhary before going to the front. After hitting 4000 m in 12:57.19 Yamamoto went faster and faster to burn Chaudhary off, officially clocking a 2:53.97 last 1000 m to win in 15:51.16 with Chaudhary just over a second behind. Indian Ankita moved up from further back over the last 1000 m to take bronze in 16:03.33. With a decent time and the bonus points for winning an area championship Yamamoto's position in the Budapest World Championships qualification quota looks a lot more secure than her pre-race 39th of 42.

In the men's race, Kazuya Shiojiri and Hyuga Endo needed to do the same to boost their Budapest standings after Shiojiri was bumped down to 40th and Endo out of the quota to 43rd by the results in Heusden the day before. Shiojiri took control from the start and led almost the whole way, splitting 2:45.74 - 2:45.38 - 2:43.17 - 2:44.43 - 2:45.20. Endo stayed right behind him as the rest of the field dropped off, then went to the front in the last 1000 m. With a sub-60 last lap Endo took gold in 13:34.94, just 0.47 off the championships record. Shiojiri cruised in for silver in 13:43.92, India's Gulveer Singh taking bronze in 13:48.33. With the win Endo was back in the quota around 32nd, with Shiojiri moving back up to 36th, almost definitely enough to survive there until the Budapest deadline at the end of the month.

Following Hiroki Yanagita's 100 m gold, 20-year-old Towa Uzawa added more new hope to Japan's aging men's sprinting scene with a championships record 20.23 -0.4 m/s/ gold medal in the 200 m final, enough to move him up to all-time Japanese #8 and collegiate #3. Taiwan's Chun Han Yang won silver in 20.48, Koki Ueyama scoring bronze in 20.53.

Japan ran in medal position almost the entire way in the women's 4x400 m, but in the home straight anchor Ami Yamamoto was run down by Sri Lanka and India, dropping from silver to 4th in 3:35.26. A very impressive team from Vietnam won the gold in 3:32.36, Sri Lanka just edging India for silver 3:33.27 to 3:33.73.

Roderick Genki Dean continued his early-30s comeback with a gold in the men's javelin, throwing a season best 83.15 m on his 4th attempt after already being in the top spot with a 81.27 m throw on the previous attempt. Silver and bronze medalists Manu Devarakeshavi Prakasha of India and Muhammad Yasir of Pakistan came up with big final throws to secure their medal positions, but at 81.01 m and 79.93 m neither came close to overtaking Dean. Ryohei Arai took 5th with a final throw of 72.43 m.

In the men's pole vault, Tomoya Karasawa was just out of the medals at 4th, clearing the same 5.51 m height as bronze medalist Bokai Huang of China but taking one more attempt to get over 5.41 m. Gold medalist Ernest John Obiena of the Philippines set a championships record 5.91 m for the win but came up short in his shot at a new Asian record of 6.02 m.

Airi Ikezaki and Ayano Shiomi went 4-5 in the women's 800 m in 2:04.21 and 2:04.25, gold medalist M.T.D.K. Dissanayaka of Sri Lanka setting a championships record 2:00.68 that broke the 90s-era Chinese mark of 2:01.16 that stood as the previous record for 25 years. NR holder Sho Kawamoto was last in the men's 800 m, his 1:49.59 over 4 seconds off winner Abubaker Haydar Abdalla of Qatar.

Remi Tsuruta was 5th in the women's 200 m final in 23.48 +0.1 m/s, with the gold medal going in yet another championships record time to Pereira Veronica Shanti of Singapore in 22.70. Arisa Kimishima was last in 28.00 after pulling up just before the home straight.

All told Japan's medal count came to 16 gold, 11 silver and 10 bronze, about the same as the combined final counts for China and India. Complete results available here.

© 2023 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Most-Read This Week

Nagoya Asian Games Test Event Canceled After Insulation Falls From Venue Ceiling

A section of insulation material fell from the ceiling of Nagoya Kinjo Futo Arena, the official venue for squash competition at September's Nagoya Asian Games. There were no injuries, but the city suspended use of the arena until its safety could be guaranteed, resulting in the cancelation of the Asian Games squash test event which was scheduled to have begun on May 14. It is not yet clear whether the arena will be usable for the Asian Games as planned. According to city officials, arena staff found that the insulation material had fallen onto a work walkway 13 m above the ground on the night of May 11. The fallen material was 3.6 m long, 50 cm wide and 2.5 km thick, and was found to be waterlogged. The cause of the accident is unknown, but it is possible that it was caused by rainwater leaking in from the roof. The same insulation material is installed across the entire ceiling, and the city plans to check for the extent of the possible flooding. Asked whether the arena will be re...

Australian Male Arrested on Drug Smuggling Charges After Entering Japan for Osaka Marathon

On Apr. 9 the Kinki Region Bureau of Health, Labor and Welfare's Drug Control Division arrested Matthew Inglis Fox , 38, an Australian business owner of no known fixed address, on charges of violating the importation regulations of the Narcotics Control Act by smuggling tablets containing marijuana elements from the United States. The suspect had entered Japan in February to run in the Osaka Marathon . The suspect was arrested on suspicion of smuggling approximately 12 pills containing marijuana by sending them from a U.S. airport to Osaka's Kansai Airport using an international courier service on Feb. 19. The Osaka branch of the Customs Service discovered the tablets in arriving cargo and suspected them to be narcotics. Customs contacted the Narcotics Control Division, which then began its investigation of the case. According to the Narcotics Control Division, the suspect denies the charges.  Translator's note: Fox, who received a lifetime ban from the Ageo City Half Mara...

Long Time Coming - Akira Akasaki and Haruka Onodera's Road to the 2022 United Airlines NYC Half

Back in pre-pandemic days Akira Akasaki and Haruka Onodera  were still in college, Akasaki at Takushoku University and Onodera at Teikyo University . At the 2019 Ageo City Half Marathon they frontran most of the race together, dead set on finishing in the top two Japanese collegiate spots to win invitations to the 2020 United Airlines NYC Half. For Akasaki it had already been a year and a half wait. Inspired by Kenta Murayama 's 1:00:57 5th place in finish in New York in 2017 and Kei Katanishi 's 7th-place in 2018, Akasaki went for it his junior year in his debut at the 2018 Ageo Half . "Coming up to 10 km I was in the lead pack and feeling good, so I knew I had a shot at going to New York and got pretty excited," he said. But right after the 10 km turnaround point he tripped and fell, and by the time he was back up the lead group was out of range. He finished 20th in 1:03:07, over a minute and a half behind top Japanese university man Ken Nakayama . "I was f...