Kanto Region is a region of Japan, and the south and western portions includes Tokyo, Saitama, Chiba and Kanagawa prefectures. The winter months provide a full schedule of community races. The races below are listed in calendar order, starting in October. The listing is not exhaustive for the region and does not include the exclusively secondary and tertiary school and professional ekidens which are linked to the prefecture and national championships (see above). Many other regions of Japan would have similar calendars.
Tamagawa Ekiden Carnival The first Saturday in October (October 5, 2011) is the date set for the
Tamagawa Ekiden Carnival. The race is an out-and-back relay along the
Tama River. Each runner goes out and returns to the central meet site. The long course version is 23 kilometers (10 km~5 km~3 km~5 km), and the short course version is 12 kilometers (5 km~3 km~1 km~3 km). The race is held at Furuichi track and field facility (古市場陸上競技場). This ekiden strives to be inclusive of all ages and abilities.
East Japan International (Sagamihara) Ekiden The first Sunday in October is when the East Japan International Ekiden (東日本国際駅伝) is held in (
Sagamihara, Kanagawa). The meet proclaims itself to be for teams from "my pace" to "elite". It is held in
Sagamihara's
Sagami General Depot (); entrance via Gate 5. The proximity of American and Japanese culture lends the international flavor to the event. A post-race American lunch picnic is a special feature. There are entry categories for all ages and speeds. Relay distances are 25k, 20k, and 15k, all divided into 4 stages. Registration is usually closed by mid August. The meet website proclaims that 2,645 teams were entered in 2011.
Shounan (Hiratsuka Kanagawa) Ekiden The third Sunday in November (November 20, 2011) is the date for the Shounan Hiratsuka Ekiden (湘南ひらつか駅伝) in
Hiratsuka (Kanagawa). The format is 4 stage race, but the distance per stage varies from 1 km (lower elementary) to 5 km (open). Male, female and mixed teams are welcomed, limited to 70 teams; individuals who come can be linked up with a team on day of meet.
Okutama (Tokyo) Ekiden On the first Sunday of December, the Okutama Ekiden has been run in the mountain valleys of
Ōme of Western Tokyo annually since 1936. It is a mixture of local university teams, serious running clubs and high school teams. In the December 4, 2011 race, 111 open teams, 29 college teams, 4 high school teams, and 50 women's teams participated. One of the hallmarks of this ekiden is that it literally parallels a train line and races from station to station to station. Based on the 2011 race, men's teams run 6 stages totaling 47 kilometers (7.4 km – 8.4 km – 6.5 km – 6.3 km – 8.4 km – 7.4 km). This race begins 10:00 at the Ome City Hall. The women's ekiden is 3 stages over 11.1 kilometers (3.6 km – 3.6 km – 3.9 km). It begins at Mitake Station (御嶽駅前) at 11:30. Slow teams are subject to a time limit.
Saitama Elementary Ekiden The first Saturday of December marks the
Saitama Elementary Ekiden, held at
Kumagaya Sports Park. In 2011, 44 mixed club teams competed in the following pattern: girl boy girl boy girl boy. Each runner ran 1.5 kilometers.
Saitama Ekiden The second Sunday of January (January 15, 2012) is the annual
Saitama Ekiden. The 2012 race was the 79th annual. The open men's race is 6 stages covering 50.9 kilometers. High school boys cover 41.7 km in 6 stages. Open women and high school girls cover 22.8 km in 5 stages. Application for participation closed November 11, 2011. The race begins in
Fukaya City and ends in
Ageo, with the shorter races starting at way points in between. Forty open boys and men's teams, 40 high school boys teams, and almost 20 high school girls teams typify recent participation levels. A junior high race is conducted at the same time, the recent meets involving 60 junior high girls teams and 60 junior high boys. Girls run (3.2 km~2 km~2 km~2 km~3 km), and boys run (3.2 km~3 km~3 ~3 ~3 ~3 ). The junior high race is conducted within
Kumagaya Sports Park.
Shibuya (Tokyo) New Ekiden On the third Sunday of January, a four-stage 11.6 km ekiden is held annually in
Yoyogi Park of
Shibuya (Tokyo). The race is called Shibuya New Ekiden (しぶやニュー駅伝確定結果). The 58th annual running was January 20, 2008 and was attended by over 204 teams. The January 15, 2012 race was the 62nd annual race. 35 girls junior high teams, 72 boys junior high teams, 27 open women's teams, 152 open men's teams, and 26 over-40 teams participated, a significant growth in recent years. Additionally 25 other 7-member teams of mixed age (which must have male and female from upper elementary and from junior high, plus an over 40 contestant and an open male and female contest over high school) competed, by adding on two 1,350 meter stages for the elementary runners and an additional 2,900 meter stage for a total of 7 stages. The ekiden is run in heats, so that each category has its own start time. Preregistration for this annual event is open during the second and third week of November, at the Shibuya Sports Center and the Ward Central Office.
Sagamihara (Kanagawa) Ekiden The third Sunday in January is the traditional date for the
Sagamihara (Kanagawa) Ekiden, sponsored by the Sagamihara Amateur Sports Association. The race is held at
Asamizo-Stadium park. The 2012 competition was the 72nd annual event. Competition is categorized into junior high, high school, collegiate and open. Collegiate and open teams (10 in 2012) start the 6 stage race at 9:00 and run a 6-stage course around the outside of the park. The 2012 winning time was 1:53:12. The high school teams (20 in 2012, gender unspecified), starting at 9:10, do the same. Winning time in 2012 was 1:56:30. Open teams (69 teams in 2012, gender unspecified) start a 5-stage race at 9:20, using the same inside-the-park course that the junior high teams run later. The junior high 5-stage race begins at 10:30. In 2012, nearly 20 teams for each gender participated, the boys winner was 44:24 (1 minute slower than the open winner) and the girls winner was 51:06.
Tokyo German Village (Chiba) Ekiden The fourth Saturday in January has been designated for the Tokyo German Village Ekiden, which began in 2011. January 28, 2012 was the second. The race is conducted in the park of Tokyo German Village, Chiba. The 4-member teams complete 20 km, with each stage running two 2.5 km laps within the park. Pair runs and "chibiko" children's runs are also held. The event is limited to 600 teams. There is a post-race BBQ and beer garden.
OkuMusashi (Saitama) Ekiden On the last Sunday of January, the OkuMusashi Ekiden (see ) has been held in
Hannō City,
Saitama Prefecture, since 2002. A similar competition had been held for 48 years, but was ended in 1999. The current race is an ekiden, with participating teams being a mixture of local university teams, serious running clubs and high school teams; the vast majority are male teams. In 2012 (the tenth annual), 59 high school teams representing 52 high schools entered, along with 161 teams from universities and running clubs. Most university squads use this race to give younger runners a chance for competition, giving the high school teams a chance to finish near the top. The race is 38.792 kilometers (net vertical gain of 120 meters but with many gentle ups and downs), starting at
Higashi Hanno station. The course winds through the city of Hanno, then up the long, narrow valley toward Chichibu, with a turn-around at
Nishi Agano station. There are 6 legs or stages, the first three being up hill to Nishi Agano and the returning 3 descending back to Hanno City. The first and last leg are just over 9 kilometers, and the middle stages are between 4.2 and 5.4 k and the exchange points are situated near rail stations along the valley. The race uses highway 299 (which is blocked off for the race) up the narrow, winding valley and parallels the Koma River and the
Seibu rail line. A special train is timed to take spectators up the valley, departing Higashi Hanno station just after the start and arriving at the race turn-around, at Nishi Agano station, in time to catch the action. Along the way, glimpses of the race can be seen from the rail cars. A timely return train brings spectators back to the finish.
Odaiba Ekiden Sunday January 29, 2012, was the 4th annual
Odaiba Ekiden, held at Shiokaze Park (). The race is conducted within the park and is divided into 5 stages of 5.0k for high school and above, 3.0k for elementary school and above. Registration closes in mid-December. Odaiba is a popular waterfront park and shopping area, in the bay in front of the city of Tokyo. . |alt=
Hachioji (Tokyo) All-Kanto Yume Kaido Ekiden On the first Sunday of February, from in front of
Hachioji JR Station, the city of
Hachiōji-sponsored All-Kanto Hachioji Yume Kaido (Dream Street) Ekiden (全関東八王子夢街道駅伝競走大会) begins. The course proceeds past
Nishi Hachioji Station and loops around Keio
Hazama and
Meijirodai stations. The 2012 edition of the race is the 62nd annual. Since 2001 the meet has expanded its categories, with increased emphasis on junior high and on separating men's open and collegiate. For the February 5, 2012 meet, 203 men's open teams, 78 men's collegiate teams, 68 women's open (including a few collegiate) teams, 72 boys' high school teams, 23 girls' high school teams, 25 boys' junior high teams and 16 girls' junior high teams were entered, nearly 500 relay teams. (Registration for the meet is open from first of November to first of December.) The printed meet program names approximately 1000 volunteers, not including innumerable police and traffic regulators along the 10 kilometers of city streets. Hachioji is home to a large number of colleges. What is notable is that so few colleges and universities fielded a women's team for this race. The race starts in two waves, at 10:00 (high school boys and collegiate and open men) and 10:10 (junior high boys and all women's teams). Teams in the first wave run 20.7 kilometers, divided into 4 stages (4.7k – 6.2k – 5.4k – 4.4k). The teams in the second wave run 14.9 kilometers; the high school and open women divide the distance into 4 stages (4.7k – 2.3k – 3.4k – 4.4k) and the junior high teams divide the distance into 5 stages.
Tokyo International Exchange Ekiden The Tokyo International Exchange Ekiden () is held on the second Saturday of February. The race is limited to contestants 18 and older. Teams of three members link to relay the tasuki in three 5 km stages. The course begins and ends at
Takebashi, encompassing one loop around the
Tokyo Imperial Palace for each stage. State Park for speeches and awards. Cooperative compliance with such ceremony is a hallmark of Japanese events.
Kanagawa Ekiden The
Kanagawa Ekiden, held on the second Sunday of February, is an inter-city competition. Teams represent cites or towns, and are composed of a mixture of junior high, high school and open/collegiate runners. Junior high The 2012 competition is the 66th annual meet. Since 2003, the course has been a 51.5 kilometer race (in seven stages) from
Hadano City's Chuo Sports Park (秦野市中央運動公園) to
Lake Sagami State Park (県立相模湖公園). Hadano city is not far from the US
Atsugi Naval Air Facility. Lake Sagami is west of Hachioji and
Takao.
Sagamiko Station is one stop beyond Takao, with 2 or 3 local trains per hour connecting. The Sagamiko State Park is a ten-minute walk from the station. The race starts at 9:00 and runners will start appearing at Sagamiko State Park shortly after 11:30. The teams for this race are mostly, but not entirely, students. Though it is a competition between communities, participation is not open to the general running public. The race format places junior high boys in the first leg (3.0 km) and junior high or high school girls in the 4th leg (2.7 km). The other 5 legs are longer, usually run by males, and with no age restrictions.
Nissan Stadium (Kanagawa) Ekiden On the third Saturday of February (February 18, 2012 – the 5th annual race)
Nissan Stadium is the host of an ekiden. A 22.2 km 4 stage relay (8.2~4.7~4.7~4.6) for junior high age and up, and a 14.3 km 4 stage "Enjoy" relay (5.1~3.1~3.1~3.0) for elementary and up. Registration closes early-mid January; limit 500 teams each category.
Tamagawa Riverside Ekiden Kawasaki City hosts the Tamagawa Riverside Ekiden in Kawasaki on the third Sunday of March (March 18, 2012). It runs along the Tamagawa, or the
Tama River. The competition is limited to 1350 teams, and registration is closed by the first of February. Competition is divided into three categories: family/kids (2 km~1 km~1 km~2 km), short for junior high and above (3 km~3 km~2 km~1 km), and long for high school and above (10 km~5 km~3 km~3 km~5 km). Mixed teams are permitted and masters (40+) teams can run the long course.
Tama-ko (Tokyo) Ekiden and partially within
Higashi Yamato City. |alt= The
Tama-ko Ekiden near Lake Tama on the Lake Tama Bicycle Trail is an example of a citizen's ekiden, hosted by the city of
Higashi Yamato in western Tokyo, south of the lake. The Tama-ko Ekiden has two versions. The men's open and high school boys' (may include girl members) teams run a combined 4-stage relay of 28.968 km around Lake Tama. The remaining contestants of a wide assortment of categories run a 4-stage race of 9.628 km within the confines of Sayama Koen park. The race is held on
Vernal Equinox – 春分の日, which in 2012 is on Tuesday, March 20. It is a national holiday in Japan. Registration typically ends January 31; there is a limit of 300 teams. In 2009, over 240 4-person teams competed, representing all ages. The race of 2012 is the 22nd annual event. For many of the first 20 years, the reconstruction of the dam forming Lake Tama forced the event organizers to eliminate the round-the-lake format and use local streets instead of the park.
Tokyo Ekiden Carnival The Ekiden Carnival, held in early May (May 8, 2011 – registration closed April 11), is conducted along the
Arakawa River Cycling Road. There are 3 courses: (10 km~5 km~3 km~5 km)(5 km~5 km~5 km~5 km) and (5 km~3 km~1 km~3 km).
Yokota (Tokyo) Ekiden This ekiden is hosted by the American forces at their facilities on the western side of Tokyo. The race is open to everyone but is limited to 1000 teams; 4 members each run 5k. The event on June 6, 2009 is the 25th annual ekiden. The host organization is Yokota Striders. ==In other regions==