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The end-of-season party at Cyclocross Tokyo went down this past weekend as planned even though the field lacked the international star power it has seen in the past.

The race is a non-UCI event, and with the UCI enforcing a rule that prohibits riders in the top 50 of the UCI rankings from competing in non-UCI events outside their home country, Cyclocross Tokyo was unable to bring top talent such as Jeremy Powers, Tim Johnson, Kerry Werner and Katie Compton as it has in the past.

The field, was, however, not entirely devoid of top U.S. riders. Former pro and freshly-minted singlespeed national champion Meredith Miller (Rapha Cycling Club) made the trip to Japan to help put on a clinic and line up for the race.

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The translated race results reported her name as "Meredith Mirror," suggesting after her singlespeed success, she may be following in the footsteps of noted post-retirement singlespeed star Stan Nice in putting on good shows for fans across the globe.

"Meredith Mirror" was Meredith Miller's (translated) alter ego for the 2018 Cyclocross Tokyo, but even the winner was translated wrong. Seika = Kiyoka.

"Meredith Mirror" was Meredith Miller's (translated) alter ego for the 2018 Cyclocross Tokyo, but even the winner was translated wrong. Seika = Kiyoka.

With top international talent staying home, the fields were primarily Japanese. In the Women's field, Miho Imai (CO2 Bicycle) lined up after racing at Worlds in Valkenburg-Limburg, and for the men, Hiraku Kosaka (Utsunomiya Britzen) and Yu Takenouchi (Toyo Frame) also raced after also making the trip to the Netherlands.

Meredith Miller had an impressive ride in the Women's race and finished second behind Kiyoka Sakaguchi (S-Familia). Worlds racer Imai rounded out the podium in third.

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Takenouchi did an extended European campaign this season, and his experience at the sport's highest level paid off with a win in the Elite Men's race. Kosaka finished second and Kohei Maeda (Yowamushi Pedal Cycling Team) finished third.

Finding the ruts in the sand was important for success. 2018 Cyclocross Tokyo. © So Isobe / Cyclocross Magazine

Finding the ruts in the sand was important for success. 2018 Cyclocross Tokyo. © So Isobe / Cyclocross Magazine

Results for the top ten Women and Men are below.

A photo gallery from the sandy, urban racing provided by So Isobe and cyclowired.jp is also below.

For more from the racing, you can read translated race reports from cyclowired.jp for the Women's and Men's races.

Photo Gallery: 2018 Cyclocross Tokyo

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Women's Elite winner Sakaguchi Seika gets ready to race. 2018 Cyclocross Tokyo. © So Isobe / Cyclocross Magazine

Women’s Elite winner Kiyoka Sakaguchi gets ready to race. 2018 Cyclocross Tokyo. © So Isobe / Cyclocross Magazine

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