Skip to main content

Osaka Kunei H.S. Breaks Kitakyushu Women's Ekiden CR


The last big women's race of championship ekiden season, the Kitakyushu Women's Invitational Ekiden saw 8 corporate teams square off against 19 of the top high school teams in the country over a 27.2 km race. For corporate leaguers that was divided into 5 legs, with the final leg, 10.4 km, split into two legs for the high school teams.

Kairi Ikeno put National High School Ekiden 8th-placer Suma Gakuen H.S. out front on the 5.3 km First Stage, missing the CR by 2 seconds in 16:51. Only 17th at the Queens Ekiden corporate national championships, Kyocera was 5 seconds out front by the end of the 3.8 km Second Stage, but that didn't last long when Yume Yabutani ran a 12:35 CR on the 3.9 km Third Stage to put National High School Ekiden runner-up Osaka Kunei Joshi Gakuin H.S. in the overall lead by 23 seconds.

That lead stayed exactly the same over the 3.8 km Fourth Stage, while from behind Denso, which had failed to qualify for the Queens Ekiden, closed to 15 seconds back from Kyocera thanks to a good run from Ayaka Hori. It was up to Kyocera anchor Momoko Shimada to try to catch Osaka Kunei's last 2 runners and hold off Denso's Saeko Nakazawa for the win, but a stage-winning run from Nakazawa knocked Kyocera back to 2nd in the open division.

Even that wasn't enough for the win, though, as Osaka Kunei's last 2 runners Rio Kawamura and Yuika Tsuzurahara turned in stage wins, Tsuzurahara running a 14:22 CR to give Osaka Kunei the H.S. division CR in 1:27:13, a solid 41 seconds under the old CR set 2 years ago by Kamimura Gakuen H.S. with a lineup that included a brilliant 11:04 CR for the 3.8 km Second Stage by Kenyan Caroline Kariba. It said a lot about how good Osaka Kunei's team was this time that it did it with an all-Japanese lineup.

Denso ended up almost a minute and a half behind Osaka Kunei in 1:28:41 for the top spot in the open division, Kyocera 6 seconds back in 1:28:47 for 2nd open and 3rd across the line and Iwatani Sangyo 3rd in the open division in 1:28:58. Early leader Suma Gakuen ended up 2nd in the H.S. division and 6th overall in 1:29:42, Ritsumeikan Uji H.S. 3rd in 1:29:50.

37th Kitakyushu Women's Invitational Ekiden

Kitakyushu, Fukuoka, 18 Jan. 2026
open: 8 teams, 5 stages, 27.2 km
H.S.: 19 teams, 5 stages, 27.2 km

Top H.S. Division Results
1. Osaka Kunei Joshi Gakuin H.S. - 1:27:13 - CR
2. Suma Gakuen H.S. - 1:29:42
3. Ritsumeikan Uji H.S. - 1:29:50
4. Saikyo H.S. - 1:30:27
5. Chikushi Joshi Gakuen H.S. - 1:30:29
6. Kitakyushu Shiritsu H.S. - 1:30:38
7. Kamimura Gakuen H.S. - 1:30:46
8. Ginga Gakuin H.S. - 1:32:26

Open Division Team Results
1. Denso - 1:28:41
2. Kyocera - 1:28:47
3. Iwatani Sangyo - 1:28:58
4. Higo Ginko - 1:29:41
5. Kraftia - 1:31:15
6. Toto - 1:32:00
7. Canon - 1:32:32
8. Kitakyushu Select Team - 1:35:34

Top Individual Stage Results
First Stage (5.3 km)
1. Kairi Ikeno (Suma Gakuen H.S.) - 16:51
2. Yuiri Ogata (Kyocera) - 16:59
3. Mao Fukumoto (Osaka Kunei H.S.) - 17:06

Second Stage (3.8 km)
1. Jecinta Nyokabi (Denso) - 11:35
2. Chia Wakuri (Saikyo H.S.) - 11:52
3. Florence Chepkoech (Toto) - 11:57

Third Stage (3.9 km)
1. Yume Yabutani (Osaka Kunei H.S.) - 12:35 - CR
2. Sakura Nishio (Iwatani Sangyo) - 12:36
3. Wakana Itsuki (Kraftia) - 12:46

Fourth Stage (3.8 km)
1. Nodoka Ashida (Ritsumeikan Uji H.S.) - 11:29 - CR
2. Ayaka Hori (Denso) - 11:47
3. Ayu Koyama (Iwatani Sangyo) - 11:50

Fifth Stage (10.4 km, open)
1. Saeko Nakazawa (Denso) - 34:13
2. Momoko Shimada (Kyocera) - 34:34
3. Chihiro Sato (Iwatani Sangyo) - 34:42

Fifth Stage (5.9 km, H.S.) 
1. Rio Kawamura (Osaka Kunei H.S.) - 19:01
2. Rin Setoguchi (Kamimura Gakuen H.S.) - 19:32
3. Aoi Yoshihara (Chiharadai H.S.) - 19:42

Sixth Stage (4.5 km, H.S.)
1. Yuika Tsuzurahara (Osaka Kunei H.S.) - 14:22 - CR
2. Sena Kaneko (Suma Gakuen H.S.) - 14:40
3. Hanano Shimamoto (Chikushi Joshi H.S.) - 14:52

© 2026 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

 

Comments

Anonymous said…
Brilliant running by the Osaka Kun-ei girls again after they dominated 3 of the legs at last week's National Women's Ekiden.

Yume Yabutani has been a bit over-shadowed by her some of her team-mates in the last year but that was a big statement run by her.

There's so much talent on that team and I find it quite incredible that they're not the national HS Ekiden champions. I think if the national HS Ekiden was a bit longer and 7 legs rather than 5, they probably would be the champions.

Most-Read This Week

Osaka Marathon Elite Field

With 3 weeks to go the elite fields for the Feb. 22 Osaka Marathon are out. Given Osaka's history as the elite men-only Lake Biwa Mainichi Marathon the women's field is small, with only one entrant, Sinhala Kureshi , having broken 2:21 with her 2:19:53 in Hamburg last spring. Afera Godfay , Mare Dibaba and Rose Chelimo have all run 2:21 to 2:22 in recent races, and Esther Chemtai is an interesting debut off a 1:08:09 at last fall's Cardiff Half. Kaede Kawamura is the highest-level Japanese woman in the field with a 2:25:44 in Osaka 2 years ago. Last year's men's champ and CR breaker Yihunilign Adane is back, his main competition being fellow Ethiopians Bute Gemechu , Mulugeta Asefa Uma and South Africa's Elroy Gelant . 4th last year in 2:05:58, Kyohei Hosoya leads the front of the super deep Japanese field along with Ichitaka Yamashita , Kenta Sonota , Kiyoto Hirabayashi , Yuhei Urano , Yusuke Nishiyama and Daisuke Doi . But where Osaka excels is in deb...

'Kobe 2024: Aitchison, Athmani Lead Record-Breaking Thursday'

  https://www.paralympic.org/news/kobe-2024-para-athletics-world-championships-aitchison-athmani-lead-record-breaking-thursday Complete results and daily schedule from the Kobe World Para Athletics Championships are here .

Etir Breaks Marugame CR, Catrofe Sets Uruguay NR, Omare 3rd-Straight Win

On the one hand it was too windy for really fast times at the Marugame Half , but on the other it wasn't, apparently. It was pretty much a strong tailwind over the first 10 km and just a strong a headwind over the last 10, so it wasn't a surprise that the lead group of men went through 5 km in 13:59 and 10 km in 27:51. Up front in it were 59:30 collegiate record co-holders Richard Etir and Kotaro Shinohara , and sub-59:30 guy Emmanuel Maru . But with the National University Half Marathon having moved to Marugame last year there were a million fast Hakone kids up in it to, Hiromichi Nonaka from Koku Gakuin University leading the way but lots more right behind. Etir and Maru opened up on the field after the turnaround, and by 15 km Etir was alone, 9 seconds ahead of Maru and on sub-59 pace running into the wind. Like everyone else he struggled to keep pace in the wind, sub-59 slipping away but easily taking the win in 59:07, a CR and new collegiate record by 23 seconds. Maru e...