Anyone who follows Japanese Runners or the Abbott World Marathon Majors already knows the name Yuki Kawauchi.
The man who used to line up at world-class marathons carrying his own bottles, running in basic kit, and racing full-time professionals, while holding a full-time job as a civil servant in Japan.
(He’s now retired from that job, but that chapter built the legend.)
No big sponsors.
No high-performance training camps.
No entourage.
Just consistency, stubbornness, an unreasonable love for the grind.
Yuki has run 100 marathons under 2:20. A record in the Guinness Books!
He won the 2018 Boston Marathon in brutal conditions when everyone else folded.
At the London Marathon, he wasn’t even given an elite bib.
He started behind the elites, no bottle stations, no pacers and still ran his way through the field to 11th place.
What makes his story insane isn’t just the performances.
It’s the philosophy.
While the world chases optimization, Yuki chased volume, repetition and mental durability.
While others protected their schedules, he raced a lot.
While the system tried to mold him into something standard, he stayed… Yuki.
His career is a reminder that the sport isn’t owned by contracts, hype or perfect planning.
It’s owned by people who keep showing up.