“My life is getting shorter,” says Naomasa Kimura over a fried pork cutlet rice bowl drizzled in a sweet and savoury sauce. “It’s too much. I promised my wife this is the last time I’ll try… it’s a touchy subject.” The 41-year-old inventory manager at a tractor company in Osaka is sitting at a cramped restaurant table with five other men eating the same dish, in the lush, wooded town of Komagane in the valley splitting Japan’s Southern and Central Alps.
It’s a cool, damp June evening, and cheery garden gnomes are perched on a windowsill holding tools and politely observing the conversation. Most of the men are rail-thin with muscular legs, and several are wearing T-shirts from 100-miler races. They’ve each run a sub-3:20 marathon in the past year (most sub-3:00), a feat that satisfies one of the many prerequisites to even be invited to tomorrow’s Athlete Selection Event, a two-day qualifier for the biennial Trans Japan Alps Race (TJAR) in August. The encyclopaedic rabbit hole of entry requirements and necessary physical achievements is so demanding and convoluted that qualifying for one of the 30 spots in the actual race might be more impressive, and dangerous, than finishing it.
Roughly 70 applicants submitted documentation of their attempts to meet the requirements, which among many other things, included camping at least 10 nights above 2 000 metres and completing a race with an event time cut-off of 25 hours or more in less than 60 percent of that time. With 60 available spots, 59 runners gained entry to the two-day trial, and were informed one month in advance.
This story is from the July/August 2023 edition of Runner's World SA.
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This story is from the July/August 2023 edition of Runner's World SA.
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