News29 Aug 2019


Past champions Kosgei and Chumba lead international field at Chicago Marathon

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Brigid Kosgei winning the Chicago Marathon (© AFP/Getty Images)

Past champions Brigid Kosgei and Dickson Chumba of Kenya will headline the international field at the 42nd Bank of America Chicago Marathon, an IAAF Gold Label road race, on 13 October.

This year's elite field includes 10 men who have run 2:07 or faster -including defending champion Mo Farah, previously announced-- and six women who have run 2:25 or faster. Abbott World Marathon Majors Series XIII also kicks off in Chicago, offering athletes an opportunity to put their names on the leaderboard.

"It is always exciting to welcome our champions back, and with so many athletes competing in Doha at the IAAF World Championships marathon, we are proud of the field we have assembled," said Executive Race Director Carey Pinkowski. "This year is a critical year for athletes trying to punch their tickets to Tokyo so we anticipate inspiring races all around."

Kosgei, a two-time winner of the Honolulu Marathon, finished second in 2017 and then returned last fall, winning with the third fastest time in Chicago's history, 2:18:35. She continued her momentum this spring when she won the London Marathon in a personal best, 2:18:20, making her the seventh fastest woman in the history of marathon running. Her dominance in 2019 also extends to winning the Peachtree 10K and two half marathons. Kosgei has finished first or second in nine of her ten career marathons.

Betsy Saina, a 2016 Olympian in the 10,000m for Kenya, enjoyed a flash of brilliance in the marathon when she won the 2018 Paris Marathon in 2:22:56. After spending her career on the track, she experienced a rocky transition to the marathon in 2017, failing to finish both the Tokyo and New York City marathons. However, she delivered in Paris and a few months later, she finished eighth in Frankfurt in 2:24:35. She finished 10th in Boston this spring in 2:30:32. Earlier in the year, she defended her title at the Marugame Half Marathon in a PR, 1:07:49. Saina was an 11-time NCAA All-American at Iowa State.

Madai Perez of Mexico, a two-time Olympian and the 2011 Pan American Games marathon silver medallist, made her marathon debut in Chicago 16 years ago (2003), and she returned in 2006 to set her still-standing personal best, 2:22:59. Her performance in 2006 catapulted her into the national spotlight as she became the fastest female marathon runner ever from Mexico and still holds the national record. She had a noteworthy performance in Chicago in 2017, finishing fourth in 2:24:44 – her best time in more than a decade. She didn't finish the 2018 Boston Marathon, but she ran a 2:30:04 this spring at the Hamburg Marathon.

Lisa Weightman of Australia, a three-time Olympian, comes to Chicago on the heels of one of her best career performances to date. In her build up to this fall, she set the Australian all-comers record in the half marathon to win the Sunshine Coast Half Marathon in 1:08:48. She ran well in Chicago in 2017, finishing sixth overall in 2:28:45. One of the most significant highlights of her marathon career happened at the 2017 London Marathon where she ran her personal best, 2:25:15, making her the fourth fastest Australian woman in history. 

Fionnuala McCormack of Ireland is best known for her exploits on the grass: she is a two-time European Cross Country champion (2011, 2012), and she has finished in the top 16 of the IAAF World Cross Country Championships three times. An extremely versatile runner, she represented Ireland on the track in the steeplechase at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, in the 5000m and 10,000m at the 2012 London Olympics and in the marathon at the 2016 Rio Olympics. She competed in the 2015 Bank of America Chicago Marathon, finishing 13th in 2:33:15. She welcomed 2019 with an 11th place finish in Boston in a personal best, 2:30:38.

Men's international field

Chumba set his personal best of 2:04:32 in Chicago in 2014 when he finished third on a historic day that witnessed three of the top five times ever run in Chicago. He made a triumphant return in 2015 to take the crown in 2:09:25. He tried to defend his title in 2016, but he came up three seconds short, finishing second to Abel Kirui. He came into the Windy City with high hopes last year, but he did not finish the race – a rarity in Chumba's consistent career. Since he embarked on his marathon journey in 2010, he has finished 18 marathons and he boasts an impressive record: five wins, five runner-ups and five third place finishes. He lines up this fall after opening his 2019 season with a third place finish in Tokyo in 2:08:44.

 

 
Dickson Chumba wins the Chicago Marathon

 

Lawrence Cherono of Kenya enters this year's Bank of America Chicago Marathon as the reigning Boston Marathon champion, and as someone with a steady record, including seven victories over 14 career marathons. This spring he battled two-time Boston Marathon champion Lelisa Desisa down Boylston Street in an epic duel that produced one of Boston's closest finishes in history. Prior to gaining worldwide fame after seizing the laurel wreath, Cherono, a two-time champion of both the Honolulu and Amsterdam marathons, destroyed course records in both Hawaii and the Netherlands. He holds a personal best of 2:04:06.

Ethiopia's Getaneh Molla started 2019 by running the fastest marathon debut in history while smashing the course record in Dubai by 26 seconds. His time, 2:03:34, stands out as the first sub-2:04 time ever run in Dubai, and it makes him the eighth fastest man in history. Molla pulled away from compatriot Herpasa Negasa with 700 metres to go, beating him to the line by six seconds in an awe-inspiring finish.

Kenyan Kenneth Kipkemoi is the 22nd fastest man in history over the half marathon with a personal best of 59:01. In just his second marathon last fall, he finished fourth in Chicago in 2:05:57 (and just missed breaking his PR). He hung with Mo Farah, Mosinet Geremew and Suguru Osako until almost the 40-kilometre mark. He finished on the podium in third place this spring at the Boston Marathon in 2:08:07. Kipkemoi enjoyed a successful marathon debut in 2018, running 2:05:44 to win the Rotterdam Marathon.

Ethiopia's Herpasa Negasa followed Molla across the finish line in Dubai to finish second, clocking the second fastest time ever run on Dubai's notoriously fast and flat course, 2:03:40. Prior to the race, Negasa flew under the radar; with a 2:09:14 personal best and a marathon career compiled of 2:10-2:14 finishes, he seemed like an unlikely candidate to make history.

Organisers for the IAAF

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