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Press Release - Chicago Marathon - 8/9/18

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

               Past Champions Abel Kirui and Dickson Chumba 
    and 2017 Runner Up Brigid Kosgei Headline International Elite Field 
        to Kick Off the 41st Annual Bank of America Chicago Marathon 

CHICAGO - The Bank of America Chicago Marathon announced today that several 
international running stars are joining the 41st annual Bank of America 
Chicago Marathon elite athlete competition. Past champions Abel Kirui (KEN) 
and Dickson Chumba (KEN) lead the charge on the men's side, and 2017 
runner-up Brigid Kosgei (KEN) and two-time podium finisher Birhane Dibaba 
(ETH) stand out among the women. They will join previously announced global 
sensations Mo Farah (GBR), Yuki Kawauchi (JPN) and Suguru Osako (JPN). 

This year's elite field includes 11 men who have run 2:07 or faster and 
nine women (including three Americans) who have run 2:25 or faster. 
Moreover, it features five of the top eight men who placed on top of the 
Abbott World Marathon Majors (AbbottWMM) Series XI leaderboard and two of 
the top seven women. 

"We have put together an exciting elite field, and it should be a fast race 
to the top of the podium," said Bank of America Chicago Marathon Executive 
Race Director Carey Pinkowski. "This year's elite field is a collection of 
some of the best international and American athletes running on the global 
stage today. We are confident that they will continue the great tradition 
of memorable and record setting performances in Chicago."

Men's International Field

Dickson Chumba set his personal best, 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 (Chumba is the fifth fastest runner in Chicago's 
history). He came back to win in 2015 and while he tried to defend his 
title in 2016, he came up three seconds short, finishing second to Abel 
Kirui. Since he embarked on his marathon career in 2010, he has finished 17 
marathons and he boasts an impressive record: five wins, five runner-ups 
and four third place finishes. He lines up this fall after opening his 2018 
season with his second win at the Tokyo Marathon. His time, 2:05:30, was 
the second fastest winning time in Tokyo's history. Chumba finished in 
fifth place on the AbbottWMM Series XI leaderboard. 

Abel Kirui literally danced across the finish line when he won his first 
AbbottWMM in Chicago in 2016, defeating a strong field in a tactical race 
that saw erratic pace swings from 4:33 per mile to 5:24. He returned in 
2017 to defend his title, but he failed to match Galen Rupp's kick at the 
end. Kirui consistently performs well in both tactical and paced races; he 
finished fourth in London to commence his 2018 season, and he owns a 
personal best of 2:05:04. Kirui also stands out as one of the most 
decorated athletes in the field - he took home a silver medal in the 
marathon at the 2012 London Olympics and he won both the 2009 and 2011 IAAF 
World Marathon Championships.

Mosinet Geremew (ETH) and Birhanu Legese (ETH) bring both youth and speed 
to a competitive international field. Geremew started 2018 with a bang, 
breaking the course record in Dubai and posting a fresh personal best, 
2:04:00. He has run south of the hour mark four times in the half marathon, 
and he is a four-time winner of the Yangzhou Jianzhen International Half 
Marathon. Chicago marks his second shot at competing in an AbbottWMM (and 
just his fourth go at 42K). He lined up last fall in Berlin and ran away 
with an impressive third place finish. Legese, the youngest athlete in this 
year's elite field, opened the year by making his marathon debut in Dubai, 
finishing sixth in a swift 2:04:15. Prior to moving up in distance, he 
specialized in the half marathon, winning titles in New Delhi (twice), 
Berlin and the United Arab Emirates. He holds a personal best in the half 
of 59:20. 

Kenneth Kipkemoi (KEN), Paul Lonyangata (KEN), Geoffrey Kirui (KEN), Bedan 
Karoki (KEN), Stephen Sambu (KEN) and Augustine Choge (KEN) continue the 
marathon's tradition of welcoming strong athletes from Kenya to the windy 
city. Kipkemoi boasts the 25th fastest time in history over the half 
marathon distance, 59:01, and he started 2018 with a successful marathon 
debut, running 2:05:44 to win the Rotterdam Marathon. He has represented 
Kenya in both the half marathon and the 10,000m at the IAAF World 
Championships.

Lonyangata just missed a spot in the top three in Chicago in 2016, coming 
home in fourth after enduring uneven pace swings. He set his personal best, 
2:06:10, while winning the 2017 Paris Marathon, and he welcomed 2018 by 
becoming the first back-to-back winner of the Paris Marathon in nearly two 
decades. Geoffrey Kirui experienced a significant career breakthrough when 
he won the laurel wreath at the 2017 Boston Marathon, shaking off American 
Galen Rupp in the 24th mile to cruise home to victory. That win set him up 
for what happened next: he took the crown at the 2017 IAAF World Marathon 
Championships. Kirui returned to Boston this spring to defend his title, 
but he failed to match the strides of a hard charging Yuki Kawauchi and he 
was forced to settle for second. October marks Kirui's second attempt in 
Chicago - he made his marathon debut here in 2014, but he dropped out of 
the race. 

Karoki, a two-time Olympian in the 10,000m, is an exciting athlete who made 
his marathon debut in 2017. Prior to jumping to the marathon, he spent 
nearly a decade polishing his speed on the track, representing Kenya three 
times in the 10,000m at the IAAF World Championships. He made a splash this 
winter when he won the Ras Al Khaimah International Half Marathon in a 
blistering 58:42, making him the fourth fastest man in history in the half 
(with the fifth fastest time). He finished second at the 2016 IAAF World 
Half Marathon Championships, and he has finished third and fifth at the 
London Marathon in 2017 and 2018, respectively. 

As a four-time winner of the Bank of America Shamrock Shuffle 8K (with 
three of the 14 fastest times in course history), Sambu returns to Chicago 
as a fan favorite. He made his marathon debut here in 2016 with a fifth 
place finish, and he returned in 2017 to accrue another fifth place. 
Sambu's speed over shorter distances predicts a faster marathon PR. With 
the reintroduction of pacers into this year's field, Sambu could finally 
land in the top three.

Choge, a 2008 Olympian in the 1500m, has been a factor on the global stage 
for nearly half his life. He competed as a junior and, as a senior 
competitor, he has amassed an impressive resume: a world record as part of 
the 4x1500m Kenyan relay team, a Commonwealth Games 5000m win, a silver and 
bronze at the indoor IAAF World Championships, five Diamond League titles 
and eight Gold League wins. Choge started his transition to the roads in 
2013 and he holds a personal best of 59:26 in the half. He will be making 
his marathon debut on October 7.

Ryo Kiname (JPN) joins previously announced Kawauchi as strong contender 
from Japan. Kiname, racing in North America for the first time, enters 
Chicago with a fresh personal best and a seventh place finish from the 2018 
Tokyo Marathon, 2:08:08. He has one marathon career win to his name - the 
Sapporo Hokkaido Marathon in 2016. 

International men’s elite field                    
Name             Country      Personal best
Mosinet Geremew  ETH          2:04:00
Birhanu Legese   ETH          2:04:15
Dickson Chumba   KEN          2:04:32
Abel Kirui       KEN          2:05:04
Kenneth Kipkemoi KEN          2:05:44
Paul Lonyangata  KEN          2:06:10
Mo Farah         GBR          2:06:21
Geoffrey Kirui   KEN          2:06:27
Suguru Osako     JPN          2:07:19
Bedan Karoki     KEN          2:07:41
Ryo Kiname       JPN          2:08:08
Yuki Kawauchi    JPN          2:08:14
Mohamed Reda     MAR          2:09:18
Stephen Sambu    KEN          2:11:07
Tsukasa Koyama   JPN          2:11:20
Yohei Suzuki     JPN          2:14:53
Taku Fujimoto    JPN          2:15:30
Pardon Ndhlovu   ZIM          2:16:22
Daniel Wallis    NZL          2:19:24
Augustine Choge  KEN          Debut
Hugh Williams    AUS          Debut


Women's International Field

Brigid Kosgei (KEN) ran spectacularly in Chicago last fall, finishing 
second to Tirunesh Dibaba, arguably one of the greatest runners in history. 
En route to her second place finish in Chicago, she smashed her personal 
best, running 2:20:22. Nine weeks later, she won the Honolulu Marathon in 
2:22:15, a course record by over five minutes. Kosgei recorded her first 
marathon finish in 2015, and she has been making waves ever since. Most 
recently, she finished second in London in a new PR, 2:20:13. She finished 
in third place on the AbbottWMM leaderboard. 

Roza Dereje (ETH) impressed fans in Dubai to start her 2018 season, taking 
down the course record and setting a three-minute PR, 2:19:17, to become 
the eighth fastest woman in history. She followed Dubai with another 
personal best, 1:07:00, and a second place finish in April at the Istanbul 
Half Marathon. Prior to gaining global recognition this winter, she started 
making a name for herself after she won the Shanghai Marathon twice in 2016 
and 2017; in 2017, she posted the second fastest time, 2:22:43, in the 
history of the Shanghai Marathon. Dereje made her global debut in 2015 with 
a 2:34:02 marathon. Since then, she has run nine marathons. The Bank of 
America Chicago Marathon marks her first time running in an AbbottWMM.

Birhane Dibaba (ETH) took home a pair of third place finishes in Chicago in 
2014 and 2015, and she arrives this fall with something only 27 women have 
accomplished in history: a sub 2:20 PR. Dibaba joined this exclusive club 
after winning the Tokyo Marathon this winter in 2:19:51. She primarily 
races the marathon distance, and she has finished in the top five of 13 of 
the 14 marathons she has run. Her compatriot, Shure Demise (ETH), is 
running her first Bank of America Chicago Marathon, but she has fared well 
on the global stage since she picked up back-to-back wins in Toronto in 
2015 and 2016. She set her personal best, 2:20:59, at the 2015 Dubai 
Marathon. She performed well at the 2017 IAAF World Marathon Championships, 
finishing fifth. She opened her 2018 season with a fourth place at the 
Tokyo Marathon. 

Yuka Ando (JPN) made headlines in 2017 (just shy of her 23rd birthday) when 
she clocked the fastest ever debut marathon by a Japanese woman, 2:21:36, 
at the Nagoya Marathon. Her debut performance also made her the fourth 
fastest woman in Japan's history, and it was the fastest time by a Japanese 
woman since 2005. As a result, she punched her ticket to the 2017 IAAF 
World Marathon Championships where she finished 17th. She kicked off her 
2018 season with a third place finish at the Osaka Marathon, but most of 
her energy this summer has been focused on the track sharpening her speed 
over 5000m and 10,000m. 

Madai Perez (MEX) is back after a successful run in 2017. A two-time 
Olympian in the marathon, announced her comeback last fall with a 2:24:44 
fourth place finish in Chicago. She logged this time fourteen years after 
she made her marathon debut in Chicago, and 11 years after she ran her 
still-standing personal best in Chicago, 2:22:59. She is a national 
champion in the 10,000m (2003, 2010) and a silver medalist in the Pan 
American Games Marathon, (2011); she has also represented Mexico at the 
IAAF World Championships in both the marathon and half marathon. Alexi 
Pappas (GRE) announced her debut on Instagram, writing "I've broken tape in 
Chicago * paced the 26.2 * I'm coming back this October * to chase what I 
dream to do: my MARATHON DEBUT!" Pappas, a 2016 Olympian (she holds dual 
Greek and American citizenship), is familiar with the energy and enthusiasm 
of Chicago's running community. She won the 2015 and 2016 Bank of America 
Shamrock Shuffle 8K, but her first experience in Chicago was the 2014 Bank 
of America Chicago Marathon where she led a group of U.S. Olympic Trials 
hopefuls as a pacer. Pappas experienced an impressive Olympic debut 
performance in the 10,000m. She set the Greek national record and a new PR 
to finish 17th in 31:36.16.

Other notable athletes include Jessica Draskau Petersson (DEN) with a 
personal best of 2:30:07; Vianey De la Rosa (MEX) with a personal best of 
2:32:01; Dayna Pidhoresky (CAN) with a personal best of 2:36:08; and Hiruni 
Wijayaratne (SRI) with a personal best of 2:36:35. 

International women's elite field
Name                        Country  Personal best
Roza Dereje                 ETH      2:19:17
Birhane Dibaba              ETH      2:19:51
Brigid Kosgei               KEN      2:20:13
Shure Demise                ETH      2:20:59
Yuka Ando                   JPN      2:21:36
Madai Perez                 MEX      2:22:59
Jessica Draskau Petersson   DEN      2:30:07
Vianey De la Rosa           MEX      2:32:01
Dayna Pidhoresky            CAN      2:36:08
Hiruni Wijayaratne          SRI      2:36:35
Melanie Myrand              CAN      2:39:07
Chirine Njeim               LBN      2:39:21
Alexi Pappas                GRE      Debut

Journalist interested in covering the 2018 Bank of America Chicago Marathon 
can apply for media credentials now at 
chicagomarathon.com/mediacredentials.

About the Bank of America Chicago Marathon 

In its 41st year on Sunday, October 7, 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. Annually, an estimated 1.7 
million spectators line the streets cheering on more than 40,000 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 $282 million in annual economic impact to its host city. The 
2018 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 7. In advance of the race, a two-day Abbott Health & 
Fitness Expo will be held at McCormick Place Convention Center on Friday, 
October 5, and Saturday, October 6. 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. Click here to 
register for news email alerts.

                                    ###

 

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