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Press Release - New York City Marathon - 8/28/17

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

  Shalane Flanagan to Lead Group of Six Past Podium Finishers in American 
  Professional Athlete Field at 2017 TCS New York City Marathon on Sunday, 
                               November 5

Joining Flanagan at the world’s largest marathon are Amanda McGrory, Abdi 
Abdirahman and Josh George in a group featuring four U.S. Olympians and 
seven Paralympians

American field to also feature previously announced NYRR Team for Kids 
Ambassadors Meb Keflezighi, who will race his 26th and final career 
marathon, and Tatyana McFadden, who will go for a record sixth title in 
wheelchair division


New York, August 28, 2017 — Two-time wheelchair division champion Amanda 
McGrory and former open division runner-up Shalane Flanagan, along with 
last year’s third-place men’s finishers, Abdi Abdirahman and Josh George, 
will headline the American field racing the 2017 TCS New York City Marathon 
on Sunday, November 5.

The four will join previously announced NYRR Team for Kids Ambassadors Meb 
Keflezighi and Tatyana McFadden in the American professional athlete field, 
which includes four Olympians and eight Paralympians.

"We are excited to welcome an extremely accomplished American field for the 
2017 TCS New York City Marathon, as Meb races his 26th and final career 
marathon, while Amanda and Tatyana battle for another five-borough title. 
Shalane, meanwhile, who owns the best New York City Marathon finish by an 
American woman in the last 27 years, returns in search of another podium 
finish," said Peter Ciaccia, president of events for New York Road Runners 
and race director of the TCS New York City Marathon. "This All-Star 
American lineup for 2017 will certainly raise the level of excitement 
around this year’s race, further elevating the support of professional 
distance running in our country and inspiring the millions of people around 
the world tuning in to watch these great athletes compete."

Flanagan, 36, of Portland, OR, is the second-fastest U.S. female marathoner 
of all-time behind Deena Kastor and a four-time Olympian, having won a 
bronze medal over 10,000 meters at the 2008 Olympics that was recently 
upgraded to a silver. In 2010, she finished as the runner-up at the New 
York City Marathon, the best finish by an American woman in 27 years. Also 
a 16-time national champion across various distances, Flanagan will race 
this year’s New York City Marathon as an NYRR Team for Kids Ambassador. 
Just last weekend, she took part the Percy Sutton Harlem 5K as a Race Buddy 
for NYRR’s Run for the Future program. The Run for the Future is a summer 
program that empowers young women entering their senior year of high school 
to learn about running while building self-esteem and confidence, 
developing leadership skills, and training to complete a 5K run.

"Seven years ago, I started my marathon career on the streets of New York 
City," Flanagan said. "It was one of the most thrilling experiences in my 

career, so I'm beyond excited to be returning this fall to where it all 
began. New York has always had an abundance of top competition. and I look 
forward to testing myself against the best in the world once again."

McGrory, 31, of Savoy, IL, won her New York City Marathon debut in 2006 and 
finished third at last year’s edition of the event. The seven-time 
Paralympic medalist won three medals at the Rio 2016 Games and three medals 
at this summer’s World Para Athletics Championships in London. She opened 
her 2017 with a photo-finish win at the Tokyo Marathon, breaking the tape 
in 1:43:27 in February, before finishing as the runner-up at the United 
Airlines NYC Half in March.

"There's no other city in the world quite like New York, so it makes sense 
that there's no other race quite like the TCS New York City Marathon," said 
McGrory. "As my first big marathon win, NYC holds a special place in my 
heart. I look forward to coming back every year to test myself against not 
only against the toughest athletes in the world, but also on one of the 
most difficult and technical courses I've encountered in my career." 

Keflezighi, 42, of San Diego, CA, is a four-time Olympian who will be 
racing the New York City Marathon for the 11th time. It will be the 26th 
and final professional career marathon for the NYRR Team for Kids 
Ambassador. In 2009, Keflezighi became the first American in 27 years to 
win the New York City Marathon, and five years later he was victorious at 
the Boston Marathon. Last November, he joined four other members of the 
U.S. Olympic Marathon Team as a Grand Marshal for the TCS New York City 
Marathon.

McFadden, 28, of Clarksville, Maryland, will race for a record-breaking 
sixth career title in the wheelchair division. The NYRR Team for Kids 
Ambassador is a 17-time Paralympic medalist, the first-ever winner of the 
Abbott World Marathon Majors wheelchair series, and won all four of her 
events as this summer’s World Para Athletics Championships. She has won 
five career New York City Marathons, including the last four consecutively. 
With another victory on the five-borough course, McFadden would surpass 
Edith Hunkeler and Kurt Fearnley for the most career wins – by a male or 
female – in the wheelchair division.

Additional Top Professional American Athlete Backgrounds and Notable 
Performances

· Abdi Abdirahman (Open Division): The 40-year-old from Tucson, AZ, was the 
top American finisher at the 2016 TCS New York City Marathon, finishing 
third in 2:11.23 to become the oldest male runner in event history to reach 
the podium. He is a four-time Olympian and was the runner-up at the 2007 
NYC Half.

· Shadrack Biwott (Open Division): The 32-year-old from Mammoth Lakes, CA, 
was fifth overall at last year’s TCS New York City Marathon and finished 
fourth at this year’s Boston Marathon.

· Jared Ward (Open Division): The 28-year-old from Kaysville, UT, finished 
sixth at the Rio 2016 Olympic Marathon and then served as a Grand Marshal 
of the TCS New York City Marathon last November. In 2015, he won U.S. 
titles in the 20K, 25K and marathon.

· Josh George (Wheelchair Division): The 33-year-old from Champaign, IL won 
the inaugural professional wheelchair race at the 2014 NYC Half and placed 
second the following year. The four-time Paralympian and five-time 
Paralympic medalist was the runner-up at the 2015 TCS New York City 
Marathon and was third at the 2016 edition of the event.

· Neely Gracey (Open Division): The 27-year-old from Boulder, CO, was the 
2016 NYRR Staten Island Half champion and finished eighth at the 2016 TCS 
New York City Marathon, just her second time racing 26.2 miles. Earlier in 
the year, she was the top American finisher in her marathon debut in 
Boston, where she placed ninth.

· Kellyn Taylor (Open Division): The 31-year-old from Flagstaff, AZ, ran a 
2:28:40 in her debut marathon in Houston in 2015 before finishing sixth in 
the marathon and fourth over 10,000 meters at the 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials. 
Earlier this year, she was the second American finisher at the Virgin Money 
London Marathon, placing 13th overall.

· Aliphine Tuliamuk (Open Division): The 28-year-old from Santa Fe, NM, 
will make her TCS New York City Marathon debut just five months after 
notching her second consecutive podium finish at the NYRR New York Mini 
10K. The Kenyan-born athlete has won six U.S. titles since becoming a U.S. 
citizen in 2016, and while she finished second at the 2015 Pittsburgh 
Marathon and ninth at the 2016 Houston Marathon, this will be her first 
marathon as a U.S. citizen.

· Susannah Scaroni (Wheelchair Division): The 26-year-old from Champaign, 
IL, took her first title at an NYRR event in March, taking the tape at the 
United Airlines NYC Half after finishing as the runner-up in 2014 and 2015. 
The two-time Paralympian was fourth at last year’s TCS New York City 
Marathon.
 
 
Top Professional American Men – Open Division 
         
Name                Personal Best Marathon     Twitter Handle          
Meb Keflezighi      2:08:37                    @runmeb 
Abdi Abdirahman     2:08:56                    @Abdi_Runs
Jared Ward          2:11:30                    @jwardy21
Shadrack Biwott     2:12:01                    @skiptoob
Christo Landry      2:14:30                    @runchristo
Brendan Martin      2:15:30                    @bmar89
Michael Wardian     2:17:49                    @mikewardian


Top Professional American Men – Wheelchair Division   
       
Name                Personal Best Marathon     Twitter Handle          
Josh George         1:21:47                    @jsgeorge
Aaron Pike          1:22:09                    @Pikester86 
Daniel Romanchuk    1:26:26                     
Brian Siemann       1:26:46                    @bsiemann


Top Professional Women – Open Division 
         
Name                Personal Best Marathon    Twitter Handle 
Shalane Flanagan    2:21:14                   @ShalaneFlanagan
Kellyn Taylor       2:28:40                   @kellyn_taylor
Stephanie Bruce     2:29:35                   @Steph_Rothstein
Esther Atkins       2:33:15                   @ErbyAtkins
Heather Lieberg     2:34:09                   @lieberg_heather
Aliphine Tuliamuk   2:34:44                   @aliphinetuliamu
Neely Gracey        2:34:55                   @neelysgracey
Laurie Knowles      2:36:01                   @lmsturgell
Allie Kieffer       2:55:30                     
Caroline Williams   Debut                     @cwilly
Tara Welling        Debut                     @Tara_Welling


Top Professional Women – Wheelchair Division          

Name                Personal Best Marathon    Twitter Handle          
Amanda McGrory      1:33:13                   @alittlechipped          
Susannah Scaroni    1:33:17                   @KenyanScaroni          
Tatyana McFadden    1:35:05                   @TatyanaMcFadden      

The 2017 TCS New York City Marathon will offer a total guaranteed prize 
purse of $825,000 – with potential time bonuses – with the wheelchair 
division prize purse increasing by 25 percent this year to become the 
largest wheelchair prize purse of any marathon in the world. The 
first-place finishers in the wheelchair division will now receive $20,000, 
with the second place receiving $15,000, third place receiving $12,000, 
fourth place receiving $8,000, fifth place receiving $5,000 and sixth place 
receiving $2,500. The men’s and women’s open division winners will once 
again receive $100,000 each.

The 2017 TCS New York City Marathon is part of the Abbott World Marathon 
Majors, a series made up of the world’s six largest and most renowned road 
races – the Tokyo, Boston, Virgin Money London, Bank of America Chicago and 
TCS New York City Marathons. This year’s series will also include the IAAF 
World Championship Marathon. Points are allocated to the top five finishers 
in each race. The Abbott World Marathon Majors prize structure was expanded 
for this year to reward the top three men’s and women’s finishers in both 
the open and wheelchair series, with a total prize purse of $1,100,000. A 
new charity program was introduced, which will give a total donation of 
$280,000 in the name of the winners of each of the races that make up 
Series XI. Each race winner in the open and wheelchair divisions will be 
honored with an Abbott World Marathon Majors $10,000 donation.

The 2017 TCS New York City Marathon will be televised live on Sunday, 
November 5, on WABC-TV, Channel 7 in the New York tristate area from 9:00 
a.m. to 2:00 p.m. ET, and for the rest of the nation on ESPN2 from 9:00 
a.m. to 12:30 p.m. ET.

About the TCS New York City Marathon

The TCS New York City Marathon is the premier event of New York Road 
Runners (NYRR) and the largest marathon in the world. Over 1,000,000 people 
have finished the race since its first running in 1970 with just 127 
entrants and 55 finishers running four laps around Central Park. The race 
expanded to all five boroughs in 1976 and just celebrated its 40th year as 
a five-borough affair. Held annually on the first Sunday of November, the 
race features over 50,000 runners including the world’s top professional 
athletes and a vast range of competitive, recreational, and charity 
runners. Participants from approximately 125 countries tour the city, 
starting on Staten Island at the foot of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge and 
running through the neighborhoods of Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx before 
ending in Manhattan. The NYRR Youth Invitational at the TCS New York City 
Marathon covered 1.8 miles of the race course in Central Park, beginning 
near mile 24 and finishing at the famed TCS New York City Marathon finish 
line. More than one million spectators and thousands of volunteers line the 
city streets in support of the runners, while millions more watch the 
television broadcast in 175 countries and territories, including viewers in 
the New York area on WABC-TV, Channel 7, nationally on ESPN2, and via 
various international broadcast partners. The race is part of the Abbott 
World Marathon Majors, which features the world’s top marathons—Tokyo, 
Boston, London, Berlin, Chicago, and New York—and crowns the top 
professional male and female marathoners each year. Tata Consultancy 
Services (TCS), a leading global IT services, consulting, and business 
solutions organization, is the premier partner of NYRR and the title 
sponsor of the TCS New York City Marathon. The 47th running of the TCS New 
York City Marathon is set for November 5, 2017. To learn more, visit 
www.tcsnycmarathon.org.

                                     ###

 

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