Skip to main content

Kanto Regionals Top Major Weekend of Track Meets

by Brett Larner

This weekend is one of the biggest of the year for Japanese distance runners, with no less than eight major track meets across the country. Six of the meets are regional championships for Japan's corporate teams and will feature many of the best Japanese and African athletes including Josephat Ndambiri (Kenya/Team Komori Corp.), Gideon Ngatuny (Kenya/Team Nissin Shokuhin), Yukiko Akaba (Team Hokuren), Kayoko Fukushi (Team Wacoal), Mari Ozaki (Team Noritz), Atsushi Sato (Team Chugoku Denryoku) and Yuichiro Ueno (Team S&B). Check the sidebar to the right for more information on these meets.

The Kansai Regional University Track and Field Championships offer an early-season look at the schools in Western central Japan, the site of the best university women's teams. The women's 5000 m in particular has a great matchup between 10000 m university national record holder Hikari Yoshimoto and 2009 World University Games 10000 m gold medalist Kasumi Nishihara, teammates at Bukkyo University. Nishihara spent most of last year overtaking rival Kazue Kojima, then of Ritsumeikan, to become the number one university woman in Japan. A month ago at the Kyoto University Track and Field Championships Yoshimoto broke Nishihara's 5000 m meet record from last spring by more than 20 seconds. 2008 university women's 10000 m national champion Michi Numata (Ritsumeikan Univ.) should be unchallenged for the win in the longer event.

But there's no escaping that the biggest meet of the weekend is the Kanto Regional University Track and Field Championships. In the absence of an established university system in Ethiopia or Kenya, the Tokyo-area Kanto Region, home of the Hakone Ekiden, is the world's most competitive university men's distance running circuit. Last year's results, reproduced below with the top 25 finishers in the 5000 m, 10000 m and half marathon, compared very favorably with those of the American NCAA Division I National Championships held a few weeks later. The Kanto results over 5000 m and 10000 m are particularly impressive compared to the NCAA results in light of the fact that the Kanto Regionals meet dilutes its talent pool by including a half marathon while the NCAA National meet does not.

Click for full-sized image.

Last year's runner-up in the 5000 m and 10000 m, Ryuji Kashiwabara (Toyo Univ.) comes to this year's Kanto Regionals with the fastest PB in the 10000 m A-heat, 28:20.99. He suffered some injury problems following his record-setting run in January's Hakone Ekiden, but if he is healthy look for Kashiwabara to set a new PB. His toughest challengers will be Kenyans Benjamin Gando (Nihon Univ.) and Cosmas Ondiba (Yamanashi Gakuin Univ.), but also look out for exceptional Waseda University first-year Fuminori Shikata, who started university last month with a PB of 28:38.46. Other men in the field with PBs under 29 minutes include Asuka Tanaka (Tokai Univ.), Yo Yazawa (Waseda Univ.), Masato Kikuchi (Meiji Univ.), Tetsuya Yoroizaka (Meiji Univ.), Masaki Ito (Kokushikan Univ.), Hirotaka Tamura (Nihon Univ.) and recent Saku Chosei H.S. graduate Suguru Osako (Waseda Univ.). The B-heat, made up of schools equivalent to those in the NCAA Div. II, also features six men with PBs under 29 minutes, led by one of Takushoku University's two new Kenyan recruits, Duncan Moze.

Click for full-sized image.

Kashiwabara is also lining up in the 5000 m A-heat, but his PB of 13:48.54 is only the sixth-fastest in the field. The favorite is easily Tokai University sophomore Akinobu Murasawa, who recently set a new PB of 13:38.68 just after his 19th birthday. Murasawa's main competition will come from Jobu University senior Yusuke Hasegawa, who returns from racing in California through April with a new PB of 13:40.83. Three men in the 5000 m B-heat also have PBs under Kashiwabara's best, with Takushoku University's other Kenyan first-year John Maina narrowly edging out Komazawa University first-year Ikuto Yufu for the fastest PB, 13:45.00 to 13:45.42.

Click for full-sized image.

The half marathon is held on a challenging, hilly 10-loop course on a winding through Tokyo's National Stadium and around the surrounding neighborhood. Times are usually two to three minutes slower than most runners' PBs, so expect a strategic race over a fast one. Last year's winner Cosmas Ondiba (Kenya/Yamanashi Gakuin Univ.) ran the second-fastest time ever on the course, 1:02:29. Look for him to win easily again. His biggest challenger is likely to be 2009 Ageo City Half Marathon winner Shota Hiraga (Waseda Univ.).

JRN will bring you video coverage of the Kanto Regional University Track and Field Championships as welll as results from all five meets over the course of the weekend. Check back often for updates.

(c) 2010 Brett Larner
all rights reserved

Comments

kevin said…
Any word on Yoko Shibui and Mizuki Noguchi? I've never hear them in action anymore.

Most-Read This Week

Morii Surprises With Second-Ever Japanese Sub-2:10 at Boston

With three sub-2:09 Japanese men in the race and good weather conditions by Boston standards the chances were decent that somebody was going to follow 1981 winner Toshihiko Seko 's 2:09:26 and score a sub-2:10 at the Boston Marathon . But nobody thought it was going to be by a 2:14 amateur. Paris Olympic team member Suguru Osako had taken 3rd in Boston in 2:10:28 in his debut seven years ago, and both he and 2:08 runners Kento Otsu and Ryoma Takeuchi were aiming for spots in the top 10, Otsu after having run a 1:01:43 half marathon PB in February and Takeuchi of a 2:08:40 marathon PB at Hofu last December. A high-level amateur with a 2:14:15 PB who scored a trip to Boston after winning a local race in Japan, Yuma Morii told JRN minutes before the start of the race, "I'm not thinking about time at all. I'm going to make top 10, whatever time it takes." Running Boston for the first time Morii took off with a 4:32 on the downhill opening mile, but after that  Sis

The Ivy League at the Izumo Ekiden in Review

Last week I was contacted by Will Geiken , who I'd met years ago when he was a part of the Ivy League Select Team at the Izumo Ekiden . He was looking for historical results from Izumo and lists of past team members, and I was able to put together a pretty much complete history, only missing the alternates from 1998 to 2010 and a little shaky on the reverse transliterations of some of the names from katakana back into the Western alphabet for the same years. Feel free to send corrections or additions to alternate lists. It's interesting to go back and see some names that went on to be familiar, to see the people who made an impact like Princeton's Paul Morrison , Cornell's Max King , Stanford's Brendan Gregg in one of the years the team opened up beyond the Ivy League, Cornell's Ben de Haan , Princeton's Matt McDonald , and Harvard's Hugo Milner last year, and some of the people who struggled with the format. 1998 Team: 15th of 21 overall, 2:14:10 (43

Hirabayashi Runs PB at Shanghai Half, WR Holder Nakata Dominates Fuji Five Lakes - Weekend Road Roundup

Returning to the roads after his 2:06:18 win at February's Osaka Marathon, Kiyoto Hirabayashi (Koku Gakuin University) took 5th at Sunday's Shanghai Half Marathon in a PB 1:01:23, just under a minute behind winner Roncer Kipkorir Konga (Kenya) who clocked a CR 1:00:29. After inexplicably running the equivalent of a sub-59 half marathon to win the Hakone Ekiden's Third Stage, Aoi Ota (Aoyama Gakuin Univ.) was back to running performances consistent with his other PBs with a 1:02:30 for 8th. His AGU teammate Kyosuke Hiramatsu was 10th in 1:04:00. Women's winner Magdalena Shauri (Tanzania) also set a new CR in 1:09:57. Aoyama Gakuin runners took the top four spots in the men's half marathon at the Aomori Sakura Marathon , with Hakone alternate Kosei Shiraishi getting the win in 1:04:32 and B-team members Shunto Hamakawa and Kei Kitamura 2nd and 3rd in 1:04:45 and 1:04:48. Club runners took the other division titles, Hina Shinozaki winning the women's half