Males’s wheelchair marathon world report holder and double Paralympic gold medalist Marcel Hug of Switzerland soloed a 1:22:16 to beat Japanese nationwide report holder Tomoki Suzuki by virtually 7 minutes. Males’s marathon world report holder Eliud Kipchoge delivered among the finest performances of his profession, taking command earlier than all of the pacers had dropped and pushing by means of headwinds over the ultimate kilometers to win in 2:02:40, the Third-fastest record-legal time ever, quickest on Japanese soil, and quickest thus far this yr. And that regardless of a mistaken activate a brand new part in fact close to 10 km that in all probability price not less than 10 seconds.
Ladies’s marathon world report holder Brigid Kosgei ran an virtually equivalent race to Kipchoge’s, placing away her final competitor on the journey all the way down to the ultimate turnaround level and coming in with a 2:16:02, once more the Third-fastest record-legal time ever, quickest on Japanese soil, and quickest on the planet thus far this yr. The lone division with out its world report holder on the beginning line, the ladies’s wheelchair race, noticed Japanese nationwide report holder Tsubasa Kina simply off her personal occasion report for the win in 1:40:21 by an virtually 5-minute margin.
There’s much more to be stated about all these races, and a number of it has already been stated elsewhere. As an alternative of repeating it, listed below are a couple of observations, in no specific order.
The London Marathon being held this fall opened the door for Kosgei and Kipchoge to run Tokyo, and in that respect it is not going we’ll see their JPN all-comers data go down anytime quickly.
One different world report holder, girls’s 60+ report holder Mariko Yugeta, did it once more, working 3:04:10, the fastest-ever by a 63-year-old by 3 minutes. Yugeta had harm issues over the winter and ran Tokyo as a health check run for April’s Boston Marathon, the place she hopes to fulfill her lifelong inspiration Joan Benoit Samuelson.
Each the highest Japanese athletes within the marathon, husband and spouse duo Kengo Suzuki and Mao Ichiyama, made severe efforts to go after the nationwide data, and whereas each fell quick they every impressed. Suzuki held again within the second males’s pack as a substitute of going with Kipchoge, and when the pacers have been unable to stand up to hurry to maintain him in vary of his 2:04:56 NR he went after it himself. When he ran the two:04:56 he waited till after 35 km to maneuver, however this time he went into motion simply previous midway. He was nonetheless on NR tempo at 35 km, however whereas he pale within the headwind on the finish his 2:05:28 was nonetheless the second-best ever by a Japanese man, bettering Suguru Osako‘s finest by 1 second. The sooner transfer represented a development in Suzuki’s vary, and a capability to carry out below the strain of coming into a serious race because the NR holder.
Ichiyama ran a lot of the race on NR tempo in a quartet together with American half marathon NR holder Sara Corridor, each pursuing equivalent data of two:19:12. Neither she nor Corridor was in a position to go house with the NR, however Ichiyama confirmed excellent tenacity within the late phases of the race, significantly by outlasting half marathon NR holder Hitomi Niiya to take high JPN honors in 2:21:02 for sixth. Each she and Suzuki failed to realize large targets, however neither was afraid to take dangers to go after them, and in that regard this was no failure. Each confirmed that they are on the high of the home sport. In addition they scored the fastest-ever mixed time for a married couple in the identical race, 4:26:30.
That stated, it hasn’t actually gotten simpler for lots of the individuals who’ve run below 2:07, or near it, to duplicate it. Performances right this moment of the ten quickest Japanese males on the entry record (and pre-race finest):
Kengo Suzuki – 2:05:28 (2:04:56)
Hidekazu Hijikata – 2:08:02 (2:06:26)
Ryu Takaku – 2:11:01 (2:06:45)
Hiroto Inoue – 2:08:33 (2:06:47)
Daisuke Uekado – 2:10:57 (2:06:54)
Toshiki Sadakata – 2:08:33 (2:07:05)
Yuya Yoshida – 2:09:20 (2:07:05)
Masato Kikuchi – 2:14:58 (2:07:20)
Kento Kikutani – 2:07:55 (2:07:26)
Yuta Shimoda – 2:08:35 (2:07:27)
For males, Suzuki is a lock, with Kyohei Hosoya, 2:06:35 for Third in Lake Biwa final yr and a pair of:08:16 for 2nd general and high Japanese in Fukuoka final yr, the possible decide for the 2nd spot. The third spot is a more durable alternative, with Osaka winner Gaku Hoshi, 2:07:31 in his debut, the more than likely alternative however Beppu-Oita winner Yusuke Nishiyama, 2:07:47 in his debut, right this moment’s 2nd Japanese man Kenya Sonota, 2:07:23, and one or two others additionally potential.
For girls, Ichiyama ought to change Osaka Ladies’s winner Mizuki Matsuda on the high of the JMC and decide up the assured spot, however Matsuda will virtually positively get one of many others. The Third spot relies upon utterly on what occurs in Nagoya subsequent week, however with favourite Yuka Ando having run one of many fastest-ever Japanese half marathons final month likelihood is good it’s going to be her. If she falters, the highest lady there, Niiya, and Mao Uesugi, runner-up in Osaka Ladies’s in 2:22:29, are the more than likely candidates. Any manner you line them up, they’re each going to be good groups, if they do not get run into the bottom between now and Worlds.
And that is it about it. For mass-participation runners who’ve had races canceled for over two years now with no finish but in sight to the bureaucratic timidity behind the choices to cancel, Tokyo going forward was concerning the greatest hit of optimism they may have requested for. And attending to see among the all-time greats working a few of their all-time finest proper there on the streets of Tokyo, whether or not as they ran in the other way, from alongside the sidewalks, or from at house on TV, made it that a lot brighter. There are a number of issues to fret about proper now past simply the pandemic, however for these few hours not less than there was motive to be completely happy.
Tokyo Marathon 2021
Tokyo, 6 Mar. 2022
Ladies’s Wheelchair
1. Tsubasa Kina (Ryukyu Sports activities Assist) – 1:40:21
2. Wakako Tsuchida (Will Increase) – 1:44:58
Males’s Wheelchair
1. Marcel Hug (Switzerland) – 1:22:16
2. Tomoki Suzuki (Toyota) – 1:29:12
3. Hiroki Nishida (Baccarat Pacific) – 1:29:55
4. Masayuki Higuchi (Japan) – 1:29:55
5. Ryota Yoshida (SUS) – 1:30:07
6. Johnboy Smith (Nice Britain) – 1:31:05
7. Kota Hokinoue (Yahoo) – 1:32:08
8. Sho Watanabe (Toppan) – 1:33:14
9. Masazumi Soejima (Socio Soejima) – 1:33:27
10. Ryuichi Kawamuro (Honda AC) – 1:36:43
Ladies’s Marathon
1. Brigid Kosgei (Kenya) – 2:16:02 – ACR, WL
2. Ashete Bekere (Ethiopia) – 2:17:58 – PB
3. Gotytom Gebreslase (Ethiopia) – 2:18:18 – PB
4. Angela Tanui (Kenya) – 2:18:42
5. Hiwot Gebrekidan (Ethiopia) – 2:19:10 – PB
6. Mao Ichiyama (Wacoal) – 2:21:02
7. Hitomi Niiya (Sekisui Kagaku) – 2:21:17 – PB
8. Sara Corridor (U.S.A.) – 2:22:56
9. Helen Bekele (Ethiopia) – 2:24:33
10. Kaori Morita (Panasonic) – 2:27:38 – debut
11. Rika Kaseda (Daihatsu) – 2:28:29 – debut
12. Miharu Shimokado (SID Group) – 2:29:20
13. Shiho Kaneshige (GRlab Kanto) – 2:29:26
14. Yui Okada (Otsuka Seiyaku) – 2:30:03 – PB
15. Hitomi Mizuguchi (Uniqlo) – 2:32:47
—–
Mariko Yugeta (age 63) – 3:04:10
Males’s Marathon
1. Eliud Kipchoge (Kenya) – 2:02:40 – ACR, WL
2. Amos Kipruto (Kenya) – 2:03:13 – PB
3. Tamirat Tola (Ethiopia) – 2:04:14
4. Kengo Suzuki (Fujitsu) – 2:05:28
5. Shura Kitata (Ethiopia) – 2:06:12
6. Laban Korir (Kenya) – 2:06:37
7. Kenya Sonota (JR Higashi Nihon) – 2:07:23 – PB
8. Shun Yuzawa (SG Holdings) – 2:07:31 – PB
9. Kento Kikutani (Toyota Boshoku) – 2:07:55
10. Michael Githae (Kenya/Suzuki) – 2:07:55
11. Hidekazu Hijikata (Honda) – 2:08:02
12. Jonathan Korir (Kenya) – 2:08:04
13. Yuki Sato (SG Holdings) – 2:08:17 – PB
14. Keisuke Hayashi (GMO) – 2:08:21 – PB
15. Kensuke Horio (Toyota) – 2:08:25 – PB
16. Daiji Kawai (Toenec) – 2:08:31 – PB
17. Hiroto Inoue (Mitsubishi Juko) – 2:08:33
18. Toshiki Sadakata (Mitsubishi Juko) – 2:08:33
19. Yuta Shimoda (GMO) – 2:08:35
20. Kazuma Kubo (Nishitetsu) – 2:08:48 – PB
21. Akira Tomiyasu (Tokyo T&F Assoc.) – 2:08:55 – PB
22. Naoki Koyama (Honda) – 2:08:59 – debut
23. Shoma Hosoya (Teikyo Univ.) – 2:09:18 – debut
24. Yuya Yoshida (GMO) – 2:09:20
25. Masaya Taguchi (Honda) – 2:09:27 – PB
26. Atsumi Ashiwa (Honda) – 2:09:41
27. Junnosuke Matsuo (NTT Nishi Nihon) – 2:09:48 – PB
28. Toshihiro Kenmotsu (NTT Nishi Nihon) – 2:10:29 – PB
29. Naoya Sakuda (JR Higashi Nihon) – 2:10:43
30. Kento Otsu (Toyota Kyushu) – 2:10:45
—–
32. Daisuke Uekado (Otsuka Seiyaku) – 2:10:57
34. Ryu Takaku (Yakult) – 2:11:01
44. Masaki Sakuda (JR Higashi Nihon) – 2:13:34
50. Masato Kikuchi (Konica Minolta) – 2:14:58
52. Daniel Muiva Kitonyi (Kenya/Monitor Tokyo) – 2:15:19
98. Taku Fujimoto (Toyota) – 2:23:10
—–
DNF – Mosinet Geremew (Ethiopia)
© 2022 Brett Larner, all rights reserved