FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Five Past Champions Including World Record-Holders Headline
2016 Bank of America Chicago Marathon Elite Field
Dickson Chumba, Dennis Kimetto and Tsegaye Kebede Lead the Men’s Field;
Florence Kiplagat and Atsede Baysa Highlight the Women’s Field
CHICAGO - Today, the Bank of America Chicago Marathon announced that
current marathon world record-holder and 2013 Chicago Marathon champion and
course record-holder Dennis Kimetto (KEN) and half-marathon world
record-holder and 2015 Chicago Marathon champion Florence Kiplagat (KEN)
will return to compete for the crown at the 39th annual event.
Kimetto and Kiplagat stand out in an historic field that includes five past
champions - the most returning champions to toe the line in the same race
in event history, setting the stage for October 9 to be a thrilling contest
of experience, endurance and speed.
"Dickson, Tsegaye and Atsede have run their fastest career marathons in
Chicago, and both Tsegaye and Dennis have experienced the thrill of
breaking our course record," said Carey Pinkowski, Bank of America Chicago
Marathon executive race director. "To have so many past champions in one
competition is thrilling. And there is depth on the American side as well;
without pacesetters, we could see a new champion emerge from this talented
field."
Chicago marks the site of Kimetto's North American and Bank of America
Chicago Marathon course record of 2:03:45. He became the first runner in
history to cover each 5K segment in under 14:50. He stunned in his
26.2-mile debut at the 2012 Berlin Marathon, finishing second in a debut
record, 2:04:16. He then made history at the 2014 Berlin Marathon; he
became the first person to run under two hours and three minutes, crossing
the finish line in 2:02:57 to set a new world record.
Florence Kiplagat, the current world record-holder in the half-marathon
(1:05:09), returns to Chicago to defend her 2015 title. Kiplagat showed
poise last year as the women's lead pack started aggressively on a 2:19
pace. She tucked herself in with the group and then made her final move
with less than two miles to go, capturing her first Chicago Marathon
victory in 2:23:33. Kiplagat is the 2010 IAAF World Half Marathon champion
and the 2011 and 2013 Berlin Marathon champion. She set her personal record
(PR) of 2:19:44 in Berlin in 2011.
Men's field
Kimetto's run from the start line in Grant Park to the finish line down
Columbus Drive will be contested by 2015 defending champion Dickson Chumba
(KEN), 2012 champion Tsegaye Kebede (ETH), 2008 Olympic 10,000m bronze
medalist Micah Kogo (KEN), and debut marathoner and 8K world record-holder
Stephen Sambu (KEN). In spite of his world record in 2014, Kimetto has
struggled to get back on top of the podium, making the 2016 Bank of America
Chicago Marathon anything but a one-man show.
Chumba took home his third career victory at the 2015 Bank of America
Chicago Marathon, breaking the lead pack with three miles to go after a
slow and tactical race (the first race in more than two decades without
pacesetters). By mile 24, Chumba had opened a 20-second gap on the chase
pack, a gap that proved insurmountable in the end. Chumba started his
marathon career in 2010, but he gained global recognition in 2014 with a
win and course record at the Tokyo Marathon. He followed that performance
with a third-place showing at the 2014 Chicago Marathon in his current PR
(2:04:32).
Kebede's last run in Chicago four years ago resulted in a PR and a course
record (later broken by Kimetto) of 2:04:38, but he is also remembered for
his 2010 runner-up finish in an epic, head-to-head battle against the late
Sammy Wanjiru (KEN). Kebede and Wanjiru jockeyed back and forth over the
final miles of the race in what is considered one of the most courageous
marathon duels of all time. Kebede, a 2008 Olympic Marathon bronze medalist
and the 2012?2013 Abbott World Marathon Majors (AWMM) series winner, is one
of the most accomplished marathon runners of the last decade. He has
finished in the top 10 of 15 AWMM races since 2009, including three
victories, three runner-up finishes and five third-place finishes.
Kogo might not have a marathon victory on his resume, but he does have an
Olympic bronze medal in the 10,000m and a track PR of 26:35:63, making him
the sixth-fastest man in history at the distance. Kogo set his PR in
Chicago in the same race that Kimetto ran away from the field, clocking
2:06:56 for fourth place. While Kogo has a well-established career on the
track, a major marathon championship continues to elude him. He arrives in
Chicago eager to rewrite that storyline.
Sambu adds some mystery to a lead pack full of marathon credentials. While
he has raced exceptionally well in Chicago - netting a pair of victories at
the 2015 and 2016 Bank of America Shamrock Shuffle 8K - his potential in
the marathon remains unknown. Sambu brings world record 8K speed (22:01:1),
10,000m speed (26:54:61) and half-marathon endurance (1:00:41) into his
marathon debut.
Kenya's Gideon Kipketer and America's Luke Puskedra (Eugene, Ore.) plan to
be in the hunt for a podium finish. Kipketer started 2016 by grabbing the
headlines at the Mumbai Marathon. Initially signed on to pace the race, he
felt good at 30K and kept going – a decision that resulted in his first
career victory. Kipketer ran his PR (2:08:14) at the 2012 Amsterdam
Marathon. Puskedra stole the show at last year's Chicago Marathon,
subtracting five minutes from his PR to run 2:10:24, becoming just the
sixth American over the last two decades to score a top-five finish in
Chicago. The 6'4" Puskedra clocked the fastest U.S. marathon time in 2015.
Koji Gokaya leads a strong contingent of Japanese runners with a personal
best of 2:09:21. Takuya Fukatsu (2:09:31), Kazuya Ishida (2:11:57), and
Ryoichi Matsuo (2:12:11) join Gokaya in a quest for a top finish.
Nick Arciniaga (Flagstaff, Ariz.), Tim Young (Fredericksburg, Va.), and
Diego Estrada (Flagstaff, Ariz.) round out a strong American presence. From
2008 through 2014, Arciniaga ranked in the top 10 of the U.S. marathon
runners, and he won the 2013 U.S. Marathon Championships. He enters with a
2:11:30 PR. Young set his PR at the 2014 Chicago Marathon( 2:14:40), and
Estrada, one of the fastest half-marathon runners in U.S. history
(1:00:51), toes the line, seeking redemption from a tough debut and DNF at
the 2016 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials.
Women's field
Atsede Baysa (ETH), Valentine Kipketer (KEN), and AWMM newcomer Gulume
Chala (KEN) plan to make it difficult for Kiplagat to defend her title.
Baysa - lining up in Chicago for the fourth time – stands out as Florence
Kiplagat's main challenger. Baysa has more Chicago victories on her resume
than her Kenyan rival (2010 and 2012), and she is the reigning Boston
Marathon champion. She is one of the most prolific and consistent runners
in the world of elite distance running, finishing in the top four of six
AWMM and taking the crown at the Paris (twice), Istanbul, Xiamen and
Saitama Marathons. Baysa made a statement in Chicago in 2012 when she beat
her opponent to the line by one second in an all-out sprint finish down
Columbus Drive, running a PR in 2:22:03. With the momentum of Boston still
in her stride and the AWMM championship in view (she is in second place),
she enters Chicago with the opportunity to make history if she wins a third
time, becoming the only woman on record in Chicago Marathon history to
complete the triple.
Kipketer, making her Bank of America Chicago Marathon debut, looked ripe
for a podium finish with four miles to go at the 2016 Boston Marathon. She
was part of the leading trio that crested the infamous Newton Hills late in
the race; without a contender in sight, she seemed like a lock for a
top-three finish. But a hard-charging Baysa, in one of the most dominant
come-from-behind victories in history, took down the trio at mile 24 to
capture the laurel wreath. Kipketer faded to fifth, but it was a strong
showing for the 23-year-old. Kipketer, who started her career in 2008 as a
junior competitor, took a maternity break and just recently returned to the
roads in 2015. With a marathon PR of 2:23:02 and two previous victories in
Amsterdam and Mumbai, she should be a factor for a top finish.
Chala, making her first appearance in an AWMM event, has only been
competing at the 42K distance for four years, but she has run 12 marathons
within that timeframe. She recorded her personal best and her second career
victory in 2015 at the Frankfurt Marathon, stopping the clock in 2:23:12.
Her time in Frankfurt was a six-minute PR and a bold statement that she is
ready to compete among the best athletes on the global stage.
Hoping to prevent an East African sweep, American Serena Burla (Stafford,
Va.) is a two-time U.S. Olympic Marathon trials qualifier (2012, 2016) with
a personal best of 2:28:01. Burla has dipped under 2:30 twice in her
career, and she was the 2014 U.S. Half Marathon champion. Burla turned in
one of the most impressive U.S. marathon performances in 2015 when she
finished 10th at the IAAF World Championships Marathon in Beijing.
Joining Burla on the U.S. side is six-time Chicago Marathon veteran Tera
Moody (Chicago, Ill.). Moody made a comeback at the 2015 Chicago Marathon
after struggling with injuries for two years. She ran her PR in the windy
city in 2010 (2:30:53). Alongside Moody, Sarah Crouch (Blowing Rock, N.C.)
returns for the third time. She experienced a huge breakthrough in Chicago
in 2014, subtracting 12 minutes from her PR to finish in the top 10 in
2:32:44.
Highlighting an internationally diverse field is two-time Danish Olympian
Jessica Draskau Petersson, 2016 Polish national champion Agnieszka
Mierzejewska (2:30:55), and 2012 British Olympian Freya Ross (2:28:10).
Petersson set her personal best in Chicago last year with a ninth-place
finish in 2:30:07. She returns this year hoping to break the Danish
national record (2:29:34). Mierzejewska will be making her AWMM debut after
finishing in the top three of all six marathons she has run. Ross, coached
by 1984 and1985 Chicago Marathon champion Steve Jones, is returning to
elite competition after a broken hip derailed her running plans in 2014 and
2015.
For more information on the 2016 Bank of America Chicago Marathon elite
field, visit chicagomarathon.com/2016elites.
About the Bank of America Chicago Marathon
In its 39th year, the Bank of America Chicago Marathon welcomes thousands
of runners from more than 100 countries and all 50 states, including a
world-class elite field, top regional and Masters runners, race veterans,
debut marathoners and charity runners. The race's iconic course takes
runners through 29 vibrant neighborhoods on an architectural and cultural
tour of Chicago. In 2015, an estimated 1.7 million spectators lined the
streets cheering on 37,459 runners from the start line to the final stretch
down Columbus Drive. As a result of the race's national and international
draw, the Chicago Marathon assists in raising millions of dollars for a
variety of charitable causes while generating $254 million in annual
economic impact to its host city. The 2016 Bank of America Chicago
Marathon, a member of the Abbott World Marathon Majors, will start and
finish in Grant Park beginning at 7:30 a.m. on Sunday, October 9. In
advance of the race, a two-day Abbott Health & Fitness Expo will be held at
McCormick Place Convention Center on Friday, October 7, and Saturday,
October 8. For more information about the event and how to get involved, go
to chicagomarathon.com.
Visit the Bank of America newsroom for more Bank of America news.
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