FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Kelvin Kiptum Shatters World Record at 45th Running
of the Bank of America Chicago Marathon
Course records broken in
women's open, men's and women's wheelchair divisions
CHICAGO - Broken records were the theme of the day at the 45th running of
the Bank of America Chicago Marathon. Headlined by a stunning new men's
marathon world record, the largest finisher field in event history included
four course records and the race's millionth finisher. Kelvin Kiptum (KEN)
became the first man to run a sub-2:01 marathon in an officially sanctioned
competition, breaking the tape in a world-record time of 2:00:35*. Course
records fell in every professional division of the race, with Sifan Hassan
(NED) setting a new women's course record in 2:13:44, Marcel Hug (SUI)
breaking his own record set last year in the men's wheelchair race in
1:22:37 and Catherine Debrunner (SUI) writing her name in the race's
history books with a new women's wheelchair course record of 1:38:44.
Kiptum, who came into the race with the second and third fastest times in
history, broke away from the rest of the field just before the 10K mark,
taking only his pacers and countryman Daniel Mateiko with him. The pair
reached the half marathon behind world-record pace, but Kiptum lived up to
his reputation of finishing fast. He ran the 19th mile in a blistering
4:21, leaving Mateiko behind and setting off on a solo mission to make
history.
As he made the final turn onto Columbus Drive, Kiptum began to sprint as he
pumped up the already-roaring crowd. He then broke the tape and smashed
Eliud Kipchoge's record by 34 seconds.
"I knew I was in good shape to run a fast race," said Kiptum, who told
reporters he knew the record was possible by the time he approached 5K.
"Now I can go take a little rest and resume my training."
Kiptum's world record is the sixth set in Chicago, but the first in the
men's race since Khalid Khannouchi in 1999.
"It was time to bring it back to Chicago," said Executive Race Director
Carey Pinkowski. "This is a great sporting community. There is a great
energy and a great crowd, and the weather was pretty near perfect."
2022 Bank of America Chicago Marathon champion Benson Kipruto (KEN)
finished second in 2:04:02, while Bashir Abdi (BEL) took third in 2:04:32.
Training partners Conner Mantz and Clayton Young became the first two
American men to achieve the Paris 2024 qualifying standard by running under
2:08:10. Mantz finished sixth in 2:07:47. Young was seventh in 2:08:00.
"It was really a good run," said Mantz, who now is tied for the fourth
fastest man in American history. "I had a goal to run under 2:07, but it
was a B goal to run a personal record and run under 2:08:10."
The women's field chased the world record as well with two-time defending
champion Ruth Chepngetich (KEN) and Olympic gold medalist Sifan Hassan
running through the halfway point in 1:05:42. Hassan, just six weeks
removed from winning two medals on the track at the World Championships in
Budapest, broke away at 30K. While her pace slowed in the closing miles,
the move was too big for Chepngetich to overcome. Hassan crossed the line
in 2:13:44, the second fastest women's marathon time ever, two minutes
ahead of Chepngetich.
"It's just amazing. I am grateful that I won," said Hassan, the first
athlete from the Netherlands to win any division of the Bank of America
Chicago Marathon. "The last 5K was very hard. I said to myself, ‘I'm never
going to run a marathon again.' I can't describe how happy I am."
Seven American women ran under the Paris 2024 standard of 2:26:50. Leading
them was Emily Sisson who finished seventh in 2:22:09, after making an
early run at her American record of 2:18:29.
"I felt a side stitch come on and the last 8 miles were pretty rough," said
Sisson. "I was proud to be able to gut it out and still be able to finish
strong."
Olympic bronze medalist Molly Seidel was eighth in a new personal best of
2:23:07 and Sara Vaughn was tenth in 2:23:24. Gabriella Rooker (2:24:35),
Dakotah Lindwurm (2:24:40), Emma Bates (2:25:04) and Tristin Van Ord
(2:25:58) also all now have the Paris standard.
In her first Bank of America Chicago Marathon since 2010, two-time Olympian
Des Linden (USA) broke the U.S. masters record with her 17th place finish
in 2:27:35.
"That was the goal," said Linden. "Anytime you get to chase a Deena Kastor
record, it's something that is worth getting excited about."
The men's wheelchair race was a time-trial effort from Marcel Hug. Hug
pushed out to lead from the start and never had competition up front. He
shattered his own course record by nearly three minutes, winning his fourth
Bank of America Chicago Marathon in 1:22:37.
"It's unbelievable. I was feeling great this morning." said Hug, who is
undefeated through four races in 2023. "I tried to break the record, but to
break it by so much is crazy."
Three-time Chicago champion Daniel Romanchuk (USA) was second in 1:31:34.
Jetze Plat (NED) was third in 1:31:40.
The women's wheelchair competition was a battle from start to finish
between Susannah Scaroni (USA) and world record holder Catherine Debrunner.
The two traded the lead throughout the race with Debrunner taking over for
the last time in the final mile. After the turn onto Columbus Drive,
Debrunner was able to pull slightly ahead, winning in a new course record
of 1:38:44, two seconds ahead of Scaroni.
"It was an amazing race," said Debrunner, who was competing in the United
States for the first time. "I had a really great race together with
Susannah Scaroni. She attacked really hard at the last hill, but I could
fight and I made it. I am really proud of both of us."
Nine-time Chicago champion Tatyana McFadden, who previously held the course
record, finished third in 1:41:17.
Under ideal conditions for fall in the Midwest, more than 48,500 finished
the 45th running of the Bank of Chicago Marathon, the most in race history.
That includes the event's millionth finisher, Allison Naval of Evanston,
Ill.
Jake Caswell of New York, NY was the first non-binary participant to cross
the finish line with a time of 2:38:05.
The 46th running of the Bank of America Chicago Marathon will take place on
October 13, 2024. Applications for the event open on October 17.
Abbott Chicago 5K
The seventh running of the Abbott Chicago 5K took place on Saturday,
October 7. The race tours downtown Chicago, giving participants the
opportunity to experience the excitement of racing during Bank of America
Chicago Marathon weekend. The men's race saw a photo finish, with Juan Luis
Barrios narrowly defeating Johnny Binzak, both with a finish time of 15:15.
Meng-Tsung Chu rounded out the podium in 16:07. Kiera D'Amato, American
record holder in the women's half marathon, won the women's race and was
the third overall finisher, breaking the tape in 15:51. Argentina
Valdepeñas took second in the women's race in 17:06, and Joanna Stevens
finished third in 17:34. Nathan Goldthwaite took first in the non-binary
race with a time of 18:47, followed by Xavier Fustagueras in 23:27 and
Charlie Shaley in 25:55.
About the Bank of America Chicago Marathon
The Bank of America Chicago Marathon welcomes thousands of participants
from more than 100 countries and all 50 states, including a world-class
professional athlete field, top regional and Masters runners, race
veterans, debut marathoners and charity participants. The race's iconic
course takes participants through 29 vibrant neighborhoods on an
architectural and cultural tour of Chicago. For more information about the
event and how to get involved, go to chicagomarathon.com.
For more Bank of America news, including dividend announcements and other
important information, visit the Bank of America newsroom and register for
news email alerts.
*Unofficial as of October 8 at 5 p.m. Central Time
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