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The Japan Cup is an invitational event. During a relatively short history, the race has established itself as an international contest with winners from Japan, North America, Britain, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, France, Germany and Italy. The Japan Cup has produced some of the most memorable finishes seen in Japanese racing.
The Japan Cup is a premier race over 2400m for champion thoroughbred horses. These horses are invited from many countries. These horses are invited from many countries. The race is held in late November.
The 2023 Japan Cup was the 30th edition of the Japan Cup single-day cycling race. It was held on 15 October 2023, over a distance of 133.9 km, starting and finishing in Utsunomiya. It was shortened from the planned 164.8 km due to the bad weather condition. [1] The race was won by Rui Costa of Intermarché–Circus–Wanty. [2]
The 2022 Japan Cup was the 29th edition of the Japan Cup single-day cycling race. It was held on 16 October 2022, over a distance of 144.2 km, starting and finishing in Utsunomiya . The race was won by Neilson Powless of EF Education–EasyPost .
The Champions Cup (JPN G-1, formerly the Japan Cup Dirt until 2013) is a thoroughbred horse race contested in Japan in early December. It is run for three-year-olds and older at a distance of 1,800 meters. In recent years, the race has followed the Japan Cup on the Japanese racing calendar.
On 25 November, in front of a crowd of 112,000 at Tokyo, Katsuragi Ace was one of fourteen horses to contest the fourth running of the Japan Cup and started a 40/1 outsider. [4] The three previous editions of the race had been won by two horses from North America (Mairzy Doates and Half Iced) and one from Europe . [5]
This page was last edited on 18 October 2022, at 17:32 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
There was a chute for 3200m races (used for the Tenno Sho Autumn races), but when the race was shortened to 2000m, the 3200m chute was useless and is not in use as of today. The course was renovated in 2007 (started in 2000), adding the world's largest video screen and upgrading a grandstand, named the "Fuji View Stand", which in today is the ...