Skip to main content

Ido Breaks 200 m NR, Kiryu Sub-10 for 2nd Time in Career at Fuji Hokuroku World Trial


There was something in the air Sunday at Yamanashi's Fujisan no Meisui Stadium as the 7th edition of the Fuji Hokuroku World Trials meet tuned into a festival of records that changed the situation for Japan's home team at next month's Tokyo World Championships.

At the top of the list, Abigail Fuuka Ido (Toho Ginko) ran 22.79 (+1.0) to take 0.09 off Chisato Fukushima's almost decade-old women's 200 m national record. Both she and 2nd-place Ami Takahashi (Tsukuba Univ.) were under the old meet record, Takahashi in 23.20. Ido still has a way to go to hit the 22.57 Tokyo standard, but having gone from a 23.59 (+0.6) PB last year to a 23.18 (+0.2) PB at Nationals last month to this 22.79 NR, it doesn't seem out of range.

Injured since last year before coming back at Nationals with a 45.81 for 4th in the final, Yuki Joseph Nakajima (Fujitsu) came out of nowhere with a 44.84 PB and MR for the men's 400 m win, just clearing the 44.85 Tokyo standard. Fuga Sato (Mizuno) was 2nd in 45.16 and also clearing the old MR, but it wasn't enough to improve on his precarious 47th of 48 position in the Tokyo rankings. With NR holder Kentaro Sato dealing with injuries since his silver medal at the Asian Championships, Nakajima's sudden return means Japan will have at least one man in the 400 m at Worlds. Now if they can just put together a good 4x400 m team.


The men's 100 m had big results that seriously impacted the potential lineup for the Tokyo team. For just the second time in his career and first since his 9.98 NR way back in 2017, Yoshihide Kiryu (Nihon Seimei) broke 10 with a 9.99 (+1.5) meet record in Heat 2. Having cleared the 10.00 Tokyo standard here, as the winner at Nationals in July Kiryu is a lock for the team. The situation got more complicated in Heat 3, where Yuhi Mori (Daito Bunka Univ.), winner of May's Kanto Regionals D2 race in a massively wind-aided 9.97 (+3.9) and holding a 10.13 (+1.1) PB from the Golden Grand Prix meet a week later, dropped a 10.00 (+1.3) PB to hit the Tokyo standard too. Mori was 7th at Nationals, meaning he's now sure to be named to the team along with Kiryu.

Who will the third man be? Abdul Hakim Sani Brown was the standard with a 9.96 (+0.5) in the Olympics last summer but has only run 10.31 (+1.1) this year and ran Nationals injured, eliminated in his heat when he ran 10.45 (-0.7). 16-year-old Sorato Shimizu (Seiryo H.S.) hit the standard last week with a 10.00 (+1.7) U18 and U20 NR. He made the semi-finals at Nationals. Hiroki Yanagita (Toyo Univ.) won the Kanto Regionals D1 race in 9.95 (+4.5), ran a 10.06 (+1.1) to win the Golden Grand Prix, took gold at the Asian Championships and bronze at the World University Games, but false started his heat at Nationals and was DQd. The Japanese media seems to think that based on the JAAF's published criteria it'll be Sani Brown and that Yanagita isn't even in the conversation. However it turns out, there's a tough decision ahead for the JAAF, and another one for the 4x100 m relay team where Towa Uzawa is also in the mix with a Tokyo-standard 20.12 (+0.8) for 200 m gold at the Asian Championships.

At any rate, Kiryu, Mori and Heat 1 winner Shuhei Tada (Sumitomo Denko), 10.22 (+1.0) all passed on the final, where qualifiers included NR holder Ryota Yamagata (Seiko) with a 10.18 (+1.5) season best, sub-10 man Yuki Koike (Sumitomo Denko), 10.22 (+1.0), and Rikuto Higuchi (Suzuki) with a meet record-breaking 10.12 (+1.3). But when heavy rain rolled in the final was cancelled, robbing Yamagata and the others of the chance to get closer to complicating the situation even more.


2010 world U20 men's 200 m gold medalist, Olympic relay silver medalist and World Championships bronze medalist Shota Iizuka (Mizuno) pulled off the improbable in the men's 200 m final with a 20.45 (+1.2) SB for the win, making it 13 years in a row that he's gone under 20.50. As the 3rd placer at Nationals and current 3rd Japanese man in the Tokyo quota Iizuka stands to make the Worlds team if he can better, or at least survive, his current ranking of 42nd of 48.

In other results:
  • Mako Fukube (NKK), 3rd in the women's 100 mH at Nationals and currently sitting outside the Tokyo quota, ran a meet record 12.80 (+0.9) to win her heat but passed on the final.
  • Haruna Kuboyama (Imamura Byoin) set a women's 400 m MR of 53.08.
  • Ami Yamamoto (Fujitsu) and Aisha Ibrahim (Seiyo) both broke the women's 400 mH MR, Yamamoto winning in 56.87 and Ibrahim 2nd in 57.10.
  • Five people broke the men's 400 mH MR, with Hiromu Yamauchi (Toho Ginko) getting the win in 48.79.
  • Sheriai Tsuda (Tsukiji Gindako) tied the MR in the women's high jump at 1.81 m.
  • Akari Funada (Niconiconori) set a new MR in the women's triple jump with a 13.87 m (+0.4) PB on her final attempt.
© 2025 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Anonymous said…
That was interesting. I wonder if there any particularly favorable conditions at this meeting given the results attained by a few of these athletes.

The 100/4x100 situation for men is definitely a challenge for the JAAF and a tough decision to make.
That said, Sani Brown said that now he feels healthy but personally I'd say that he either proves it in the coming 2-3 weeks by running a proper time or there is absolutely zero reason to give him a place in the 100. Bring him as an alternate for the relay is one thing but making him a lock would be wrong.

The thing is that other than Kiryu the others are all young guys that would benefit from the experience of going to the World Championships but to make a proper selection it would take more than one single very good time to choose one over the other.

In that respect Yanagita is the one who has repetead low 10s more times but I don't know what the criteria ends up being.

I would hope/think that these guys are going to run at some othrer meetings sometimes soon and back their good recent form with another good time to give more indications to the team.

Not to forget Inoue and Nishioka also ran well at the 4x100 last may...It's a good problem to have all these athletes in the mix but I think the Japanese selection team should think carefully about adding someone with pedigree but on a bad year rather than someone younger and on fire. The difference will likely make it a medal or not.

Most-Read This Week

Rui Aoki and Shunsuke Kuwata Making U.S. Debut at United Airlines NYC Half

When the National University Half Marathon was canceled in 2011 after the massive earthquake and tsunami struck northeastern Japan 2 days before the race, JRN talked to the New York Road Runners about bringing 2 collegiate runners to the United Airlines NYC Half Marathon the next weekend as a show of support. It wasn't possible to pull it together in the immediate aftermath of the disasters, but a year later we brought 2 young 2nd-years from Hakone Ekiden CR breaker Toyo University , Kento Otsu and Yuta Shitara , who had been the top 2 Japanese collegiate finishers at the Ageo City Half Marathon in November before Hakone. Shitara ran 1:01:48, at the time the fastest-ever by a Japanese man on U.S. soil, with Otsu running a solid 1:03:15. Thanks to that great start the Ageo-NYC partnership became a regular thing, and except for the pandemic it's continued every year since, expanding this year to June's New York Mini 10 km when 2 runners from Mt. Fuji Women's Ekiden runne...

Chepkirui Over Sato Again to Win 2nd-Straight Nagoya Women's Marathon, Chen Breaks Malaysian NR (updated)

This year's Nagoya Women's Marathon felt like a changing of the guard, with some the bigger domestic names over the last few years fading early and a lot of newer faces stepping up with quality debuts or second marathons. The front group was set to be paced for 2:20 flat with the 2nd group at 2:23:30 to hit the auto-qualifying time for the 2027 MGC Race, Japan's L.A. Olympics marathon trials race in Nagoya. Up front things went out OK, but after a 33:10 split at 10 km Ayuko Suzuki , 2:21:22 here 2 years ago, lost touch, ultimately finishing 23rd in 2:33:28. Windy conditions started to play with pacers' ability to keep things steady and the pace slowed majorly over the next 10 km, but even with a 34:05 second 10 km there were big-name casualties. 2024 Nagoya winner Yuka Ando was next to drop, ending up 17th in 2:30:32. NR holder Honami Maeda was next, followed quickly by Bahraini Kenyan Eunice Chumba and debuting Wakana Kabasawa . Maeda faded to 21st in 2:31:21, whil...

How it Happened

Ancient History I went to Wesleyan University, where the legend of four-time Boston Marathon champ and Wes alum Bill Rodgers hung heavy over the cross-country team. Inspired by Koichi Morishita and Young-Cho Hwang’s duel at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics I ran my first marathon in 1993, qualifying for Boston ’94 where Bill was kind enough to sign a star-struck 20-year-old me’s bib number at the expo. Three years later I moved to Japan for grad school, and through a long string of coincidences I came across a teenaged kid named Yuki Kawauchi down at my neighborhood track. I never imagined he’d become what he is, but right from the start there was just something different about him. After his 2:08:37 breakthrough at the 2011 Tokyo Marathon he called me up and asked me to help him get into races abroad. He’d finished 3rd on the brutal downhill Sixth Stage at the Hakone Ekiden, and given how he’d run the hills in the last 6 km at Tokyo ’11 I thought he’d do well at Boston or New York. “I...