Kayoko Obata

Kayoko Obata (小幡 佳代子, Obata Kayoko, born September 18, 1971) is a female long-distance runner from Japan. She set her personal best in the women's marathon on January 30, 2000 in Osaka, clocking 2:25:14.

Achievements

Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
Representing  Japan
1994 Hokkaido Marathon Sapporo, Japan 7th Marathon 2:53:18
1995 Nagoya Marathon Nagoya, Japan 5th Marathon 2:43:22
Hokkaido Marathon Sapporo, Japan 5th Marathon 2:42:53
1996 Tokyo Marathon Tokyo, Japan 9th Marathon 2:37:10
1997 Nagoya Marathon Nagoya, Japan 9th Marathon 2:32:01
Berlin Marathon Berlin, Germany 4th Marathon 2:27:27
1998 Osaka International Ladies Marathon Osaka, Japan 12th Marathon 2:33:09
Chicago Marathon Chicago, United States 4th Marathon 2:28:39
1999 Osaka International Ladies Marathon Osaka, Japan 4th Marathon 2:26:18
World Championships Seville, Spain 8th Marathon 2:25:46
2000 Osaka International Ladies Marathon Osaka, Japan 5th Marathon 2:25:14
Chicago Marathon Chicago, United States 5th Marathon 2:31:59
2001 Osaka International Ladies Marathon Osaka, Japan 5th Marathon 2:32:14
Chicago Marathon Chicago, United States 6th Marathon 2:32:19
Tsuchiyama Marathon Tsuchiyama, Japan 1st Marathon 2:54:44
2002 Osaka International Ladies Marathon Osaka, Japan 23rd Marathon 2:45:13
Chicago Marathon Chicago, United States 7th Marathon 2:28:15
2004 Paris Marathon Paris, France 12th Marathon 2:42:57
2006 Osaka International Ladies Marathon Osaka, Japan 2nd Marathon 2:25:52
Asian Games Doha, Qatar 3rd Marathon 2:30:38
2010 Osaka International Ladies Marathon Osaka, Japan 5th Marathon 2:40:28
Rome City Marathon Rome, Italy 13th Marathon 2:40:28
gollark: They're doing lots of stupid things while people are distracted. I don't think it's a conspiracy as much as just opportunism.
gollark: No.
gollark: Bluetooth Low Energy, apparently, which is still problematic but better than... not having data, I guess, or having it in a really bad for privacy way.
gollark: The privacy-respecting scheme involves using Bluetooth on individual phones to send anonymized tokens or something, and any privacy regulations around phone tower data (in the US) appear to basically be a joke.
gollark: There's been a proposal for privacy-friendly phone-based contact tracing, and it seems pretty good, so I'd accept that if the application is open-source, and doesn't send excessive data.

References



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