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Britain laces up for a Japan-style 116km relay as Emperor Naruhito visits

Starting in Oxford and following a 116km route along the Thames Path, the route of the race on June 24 will pass through Abingdon, Reading, Henley-on-Thames and Maidenhead before ending in Windsor.

Teams of 10 runners will complete individual legs of the course, passing with traditional tasuki sash – rather than a baton – from each athlete to the next. The sash is considered a symbol of team unity.

“In the UK, we have elite university rowing races – the annual Boat Race between Oxford and Cambridge universities – but we do not have university running events like the ekiden format in Japan, along iconic routes,” said Anna Dingley, founder of Britain’s ekiden.

Elite university runners were aware of the “strength and depth” of long-distance running in Japan, and an ekiden race was a good opportunity to test themselves, she said.

Other teams competing in the event will represent Japanese companies with a presence in Britain, British firms with links to Japan, and those representing running clubs and community organisations.

Many had been drawn by the sport’s long history and its strong fan base in Japan, Dingley said.

Before it became a sport, ekiden, which roughly translates to “station to station”, referred to the system of horse couriers that carried letters in stages between Japan’s major urban centres, primarily the ancient capital of Kyoto and Edo, the city that would become Tokyo.

The first ever ekiden took place in 1917 as a three-day race over 23 stages from Kyoto to Tokyo. The 507km event was meant to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the transfer of the nation’s capital to Tokyo and was quickly adopted as a competition by universities and companies that emphasised unity, resilience and shared goals.

Tokyo resident

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