Skip to main content

Asian Cross Country Championships Results


Hosts Japan swept the team titles and won 3 of the 4 individual titles at the 18th Asian Cross Country Championships Saturday in Fukuoka. With the Asian XC races integrated into the National Cross Country Championships the winners of 3 of the main races saw Japanese winners who weren't part of Asian XC scoring, starting off with the U20 Women's 6 km.

China's Jinhua Hu did a lot of the work up front to pull the lead quartet along and was rewarded with the only individual Asian XC title not won by Japan. But in the last km she fell victim to Nami Kawakami, winner of the 1st leg for 2025 National High School Ekiden champion Nagano Higashi H.S., who outkicked Hu for the overall win and national title in 19:51. Nodoka Ashida was 3rd overall in 19:55, with Yui Onotora and Mona Utsunomiya taking 2nd and 3rd in the Asian XC placing. Japan took the team title over China, with India winning bronze.

Yudai Fujii finished strong to win the U20 men's 8 km national title, out kicking Koki Niizuma and top-placing Asian XC finisher Shinta Igarashi by 1 second for the win in 24:08. Kain Inagaki and Rikuto Ikeya were the next 2 Asian XC placers, giving Japan a perfect score of 6 for the overall team title. The top non-Japanese finisher in the Asian XC race was China's Boyang Li, back around 77th in 25:32 to lead China to team silver by 2 points over India.

Japan had another perfect team score in the Senior Women's 10 km. 3000 mSC NR holder Miu Saito crushed the lead group for the overall win and national champ status in 33:38, with Wakana Kabasawa, Momoka Kawaguchi and Amisa Murayama going 2nd, 4th and 7th overall to sweep the Asian XC medals and take the team title. China's Xia Luo was 13th overall in 35:10 for 4th in the Asian XC scoring, China taking another silver and India bronze again.

Japan's strongest team was in the Senior Men's 10 km, but that ended up being the race that came the closest to having a non-Japanese winner. 3000 mSC NR holder Ryuji Miura narrowly held off India's Harmon Jot Singh, winning 29:20 to 29:21. Yuma Nishizawa was 3rd overall for Asian XC bronze in 29:24, a couple of steps up on Japan's 3rd scorer Hiromichi Nonaka who was 4th overall in 29:26. Singh was the only Indian athlete in the race, and an unexpectedly strong team run from Kyrgyzstan gave them the team silver over China, Kyrgyzstan's only medal of the Championships and China's only squad not to take silver.

18th Asian Cross Country Championships Results

National Cross Country Championships
Fukuoka, 21 Feb. 2026

U20 Women's 6 km
1. Nami Kawakami (Nagano Higashi H.S.) - 19:51
2. Jinhua Hu (China) - 19:53 - 1st, Asian CC
3. Nodoka Ashida (Ritsumeikan Uji H.S.) - 19:55
4. Yui Onotora (Japan/Tohoku H,S.) - 19:55 - 2nd, Asian CC
5. Kaho Honda (Nagasaki Shogyo H.S.) - 20:01
6. Mona Utsunomiya (Japan/Sapporo Yamanote H.S.) - 20:16 - 3rd, Asian CC
7. Rena Imai (Nagano Higashi H.S.) - 20:25
8. Hinaki Nomura (Saikyo H.S.) - 20:32
9. Wakana Fukuyama (Saitama Sakae H.S.) - 20:35
10. Anna Svrcek (Ushiku H.S.) - 20:36

Team Results
1. Japan - 9
2. China - 20
3. India - 22

U20 Men's 8 km
1. Yudai Fujii (Miyazaki Nichidai H.S.) - 24:08
2. Koki Niizuma (Nishiwaki Kogyo H.S.) - 24:09
3. Shinta Igarashi (Japan/Suijo H.S.) - 24:09 - 1st, Asian CC
4. Kain Inagaki (Japan/Rakunan H.S.) - 24:15 - 2nd, Asian CC
5. Kotaro Fujioka (Suma Gakuen H.S.) - 24:17
6. Sodai Monma (Kyushu Gakuin H.S.) - 24:18
7. Rikuto Ikeya (Japan/Komazawa H.S.) - 24:21 - 3rd, Asian CC
8. Sosuke Uesugi (Yachiyo Shoin H.S.) - 24:22
9. Yua Hayashi (Sapporo Yamanote H.S.) - 24:24
10. Ado Takenoshita (Tottori Johoku H.S.) - 24:25

Team Results
1. Japan - 6
2. China - 19
3. India - 25
4. Kazakhstan - 42

Senior Women's 10 km
1. Miu Saito (Panasonic) - 33:38
2. Wakana Kabasawa (Japan/Mitsui Sumitomo Kaijo) - 33:44 - 1st, Asian CC
3. Anna Suzuki (Shimamura) - 33:49
4. Momoka Kawaguchi (Uniqlo) - 33:55 - 2nd, Asian CC
5. Yuzu Nishide (Daihatsu) - 33:55
6. Mitsu Ozaki (Sysmex) - 34:01
7. Amisa Murayama (Japan/Tohoku Fukushi Univ.) - 34:05 - 3rd, Asian CC
8. Yumi Yamada (Osaka Gakuin Univ.) - 34:10
9. Airi Tajima (Juntendo Univ.) - 34:16
10. Yuka Takashima (Shiseido) - 34:25

Team Results
1. Japan - 6
2. China - 17
3. India - 22

Senior Men's 10 km
1. Ryuji Miura (Japan/Subaru) - 29:20 - 1st, Asian CC
2. Harman Jot Singh (India) - 29:21 - 2nd, Asian CC
3. Yuma Nishizawa (Japan/Toyota Boshoku) - 29:24 - 3rd, Asian CC
4. Hiromichi Nonaka (Japan/Koku Gakuin Univ.) - 29:26 - 4th, Asian CC
5. Ryuto Igawa (Asahi Kasei) - 29:30
6. Katsuhiko Suzuki (Subaru) - 29:32
7. Haruka Yamamoto (Juntendo Univ.) - 29:34
8. Kaisei Okada (Japan/Chuo Univ.) - 29:42 - 5th, Asian CC
9. Hiroki Matsueda (Fujitsu) - 29:50
10. Riito Ikema (Juntendo Univ.) - 29:53

Team Results
1. Japan - 8
2. Kyrgyzstan - 23
3. China - 34
4. Thailand - 40
5. Bangladesh - 67
6. Singapore - 68

© 2026 Brett Larner, all rights reserved

Buy Me A Coffee

Comments

Anonymous said…
Another classic XC championship Miura win: all his 3 wins at this event have come the same way, by 1 second or less with him just waiting for the final 200 to kick and bring the win home.

With the race this year being 1 minute slower than last year it was likely easier for him this time. Good showing by his former Juntendo teammate Nishizawa which turned out a very good corporate runner. Solid showing by other Juntendo guys showing consistency after their surprise performance at Hakone. Igawa showed up again too, Good win team Japan!

Most-Read This Week

2026 Tokyo Marathon Elite Field

The Mar. 1 Tokyo Marathon has great fields this year, so let's get right to it. The women's field has 3 of last year's top 10, winner for the 2nd year in a row and Tokyo CR holder Sutume Asefa Kebede , 3rd-placer and 2025 Chicago winner Hawi Feysa , and 5th-placer and 2025 Berlin winner Rosemary Wanjiru , plus 2024 Valencia winner Megertu Alemu , 2025 Prague winner Bertukan Welde , 2024 Paris winner Mestawut Fikir , 2024 Osaka winner Waganesh Mekasha , former WR holder Brigid Kosgei , and a lot more. Japanese hopes pretty much go to all-time #7 Ai Hosoda , 2:20:31 in Berlin 2024 but who announced this month that she is retiring after Tokyo despite having qualified for the 2028 Olympic marathon trials with her 2:23:27 for 6th in Sydney last year. Other internationals include Canadian Malindi Elmore , American Sara Hall , a big Chinese group led by Yuyu Xia , Poland's Aleksandra Brzezińska and Australian Vanessa Wilson . The men's race has 5 of last year's top 1...

Measuring Marathon Courses by Bicycle

http://news.searchina.ne.jp/disp.cgi?y=2013&d=0110&f=column_0110_034.shtml translated by Brett Larner The full marathon is a sport where you compete over 42.195 km, but how do they go about measuring that distance?  Today we're going to look a little bit at how they go about certifying the distance of a marathon. The reality is that major international marathons use a bicycle to measure the distance.  This rule is an international standard, and the same method of measurement is used everywhere.  It was put into place in 1986.  In order to ensure that the same method is used everywhere, a bicycle that meets IAAF specifications must be used for measurement. In the case of Japan's major marathons, to be certain that the distance is correct a provisional measurement is first made.  Before the course is certified using a bicycle the course is measured using a 50 m-long length of wire to determine that it is in fact 42.195 km.  When a bicycle is u...

Ai Hosoda Announces Retirement

photo © 2025 Victah Sailer/Photo Run, all rights reserved On Jan. 8 the Edion women's corporate team announced that Ai Hosoda , 30, will retire at the end of March this year. The Tokyo Marathon will be her last race. At Nagano Higashi H.S. Hosoda ran in the National High School Ekiden her 2nd and 3rd years. During her 3rd year at Nittai University she won both the 5000 m and 10000 m at the Kanto Region University Track and Field Championships, going on to win the bronze medal in the 10000 m at the World University Games in her 4th year at Nittai. After graduating she joined the Daihatsu corporate team, debuting at the 2019 Nagoya Women's Marathon in 2:29:27. 2 years later she transferred to Edion. She qualified for the Paris Olympics marathon trials at the 2022 Nagoya Women's Marathon and finished 3rd in the trials in the fall of 2023, but was later bumped down to Olympic alternate after another athlete ran a faster time. Instead of the Olympics, Hosoda ran the 2024 Ber...