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Kirwa Wins Nagoya in 2:22:08 CR, Konovalova Gets 40+ WR, Maeda Hits All-Time Japanese #8 After Fall – by Brett Larner – Japan Running News
Kenyan-born 2014 Asian Games gold medalist Eunice Kirwa (Bahrain) and 40-year-old defending champion Mariya Konovalova (Russia) pushed the Kenyan pacer from the start, the first km going by in 3:17, well ahead of the planned 3:22-3:24 pace.
The jolt shook up the field, the extra energy upping the pace slightly and dropping four Japanese women from the lead group. The 20-year-old Iwade, whose 2:27:21 debut at age 19 came just 3 1/2 months ago in Yokohama, was the next to fade, left alone as the leaders went through 20 km in 1:07:29. With a halfway split of 1:11:08 the pace was remarkably even, keeping just below the Federation's sub-2:22:30 standard for auto selection to the Beijing World Championships Japanese women's marathon team. While Ohara and Maeda looked to have recovered from their fall Ito, the lone experienced marathoner among the three remaining Japanese women, seemed in danger of losing touch with Kirwa and Konovalova.
Without warning Ohara came apart, slowing rapidly and looking pained as the fall 20 minutes earlier caught up with her. Kirwa took advantage with a short surge to test Konovalova, Ito and Maeda, the Kenyan pacer going with her as Kirwa dropped a 3:17 km. Maeda initially responded before letting go and relaxing back to the other two chasers. Her assessment complete, by 25 km Kirwa had let them come back in time for a 1:24:15 split, 2:22:12 pace. Ito began to struggle to keep up, losing ground at a drink table and working her way back up only to slip away again at the next table.
And with that the finish order was set, the race becoming one against the clock. Kirwa tried to keep sub-2:22 together, never on track to break her 2:21:41 best but just skimming the line before coming into Nagoya Dome for a 2:22:08 finish, a new course record and one of the fastest times ever run in Japan. Konavalova was steady all the way to a 2:22:27 PB for 2nd, a massive new world record for the 40+ age group. Maeda whipped the home crowd, which had not seen a Japanese woman go sub-2:23 since 2007, into a frenzy when she hit 35 km on 2:22:45 pace. The blood still trickling down her left leg, her projection slowed by seconds at every stress-inducing km mark. 2:22:47. 2:22:51. 2:22:58 at 40 km. 2:23:00 with 2 km to go. It looked like she was going to miss it, but after passing the 2 km to go sign Maeda let go, kicking it under 3:20/km and coming in to ecstatic fanfare in 3rd in 2:22:48 to become the 8th-fastest Japanese woman of all time. And surely the fastest to do it after falling. This was the run Japan has been waiting for for a long time, all the greater in that Maeda toughed out a major setback to do it. Let's hope that there's more to come, and that the men her age were watching and took the right message home.
Although Maeda missed the Federation's sub-2:22:30 standard, justifiably nobody seemed to care. Like Masato Imai (Team Toyota Kyushu) in Tokyo two weeks ago, Maeda's historic result was far and above any of the other contenders and made her a lock for the Beijing team. Ito's time was 2 minutes faster than the top Japanese women in the other main selection races, 2:26:57 by Tomomi Tanaka (Team Daiichi Seimei) in Yokohama and 2:26:39 by Risa Shigetomo (Team Tenmaya) in Osaka, giving her a good shot at being picked over one of them especially given her status as a member of the National Team project. The criteria by which team lineups are decided are becoming less and less clear, but however it plays out the announcement of the men's and women's teams is due out this Wednesday.
Nagoya Women's Marathon
Nagoya, Aichi, 3/8/15
click here for complete results and splits
1. Eunice Kirwa (Bahrain) – 2:22:08 – CR
2. Mariya Konovalova (Russia) – 2:22:27 – PB – 40+ WR
3. Sairi Maeda (Japan/Daihatsu) – 2:22:48 – PB – all-time JPN #8
4. Mai Ito (Japan/Otsuka Seiyaku) – 2:24:42 – PB
5. Risa Takenaka (Japan/Shiseido) – 2:28:09 – debut
6. Keiko Nogami (Japan/Juhachi Ginko) – 2:28:19 – debut
7. Anna Incerti (Italy) – 2:29:10
8. Reia Iwade (Japan/Noritz) – 2:29:16
9. Olena Burkovska (Ukraine) – 2:29:45
10. Eri Hayakawa (Japan/Toto) – 2:30:21
11. Aki Odagiri (Japan/Tenmaya) – 2:30:24 – PB
12. Miho Ihara (Japan/Team Sekisui Kagaku) – 2:30:52 – debut
13. Yoko Shibui (Japan/Mitsui Sumitomo Kaijo) – 2:31:15
14. Shiho Takechi (Japan/Yamada Denki) – 2:31:18 – debut
15. Haruna Takada (Japan/Yamada Denki) – 2:31:23 – debut
16. Kikuyo Tsuzaki (Japan/Noritz) – 2:32:37 – PB
17. Yuka Yano (Japan/Canon AC Kyushu) – 2:32:52
18. Saki Tabata (Japan/Otsuka Seiyaku) – 2:34:35 – PB
19. Yuka Hakoyama (Japan/Wacoal) – 2:35:23
20. Adriana da Silva (Brazil) – 2:35:28
21. Yukari Abe (Japan/Shimamura) – 2:35:47 – debut
22. Risa Takemura (Japan/Kyudenko) – 2:36:10 – PB
23. Yoshiko Sakamoto (Japan/YWC) – 2:36:32
24. Mayumi Fujita (Japan/Juhachi Ginko) – 2:37:09
25. Kana Orino (Japan/Mitsui Sumitomo Kaijo) – 2:38:55
—–
124. Rei Ohara (Japan/Tenmaya) – 3:05:21 – debut
—–
DNF – Misato Horie (Japan/Noritz)
DNF – Aheza Kiros (Ethiopia)
text (c) 2015 Brett Larner, all rights reserved
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