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Press Release - New York City Marathon - 8/30/17

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Defending Champions Ghirmay Ghebreslassie, Marcel Hug, and Mary Keitany to 
 Lead International Professional Athlete Field at 2017 TCS New York City 
                      Marathon on Sunday, November 5

World-class field representing 27 countries to include 22 Olympians and 11 
                               Paralympians

Previously announced Mary Keitany of Kenya, a two-time winner of the Abbott 
        World Marathon Majors, will go for fourth consecutive title


New York, August 30, 2017 — The defending men’s open champion, Ghirmay 
Ghebreslassie of Eritrea and the defending wheelchair champion, Marcel Hug 
of Switzerland, along with previously announced three-time defending 
women’s open champion Mary Keitany of Kenya, will lead the international 
field racing the 2017 TCS New York City Marathon on Sunday, November 5.

The world-class field representing 27 countries will include 22 Olympians, 
11 Paralympians and 16 athletes – 10 in the open division and seven in the 
wheelchair division – who have previously finished on the New York City 
Marathon podium.

"Having Ghirmay, Marcel, and Mary return to the streets of New York to 
defend their titles among a group of athletes from 27 countries around the 
world is a true testament to the TCS New York City Marathon being one of 
the most world-class and universally diverse sporting events," said Peter 
Ciaccia, president of events for New York Road Runners and race director of 
the TCS New York City Marathon. "The talented group of international 
athletes joining us this year, will be looking to push the sport even 
further by chasing after records, personal bests and an increased prize 
purse for the wheelchair division. These athletes will be sure to excite 
the more than one million fans who line the streets, and close to one 
billion TV viewers worldwide."

Ghebreslassie, 21, became the youngest men’s winner in the history of the 
New York City Marathon last year, breaking the tape in 2:07:51. He posted 
the third-fastest winning time in history, and was the first Eritrean 
winner in race history. In 2015, he became the youngest winner in IAAF 
World Championships Marathon history, and his gold medal was Eritrea’s 
first ever at the event. He was fourth at the Rio 2016 Olympic Marathon and 
owns a personal-best of 2:07:46 from the 2016 Virgin Money London Marathon, 
where he also finished fourth.

"I’m proud to return to New York to defend my title as the TCS New York 
City Marathon champion," Ghebreslassie said. "The crowds along the course 
are fresh in my memory, and I will work hard to do well again this year."

Hug, 31, held off Australia’s Kurt Fearnley in a sprint finish last year to 
win his second New York City Marathon title by a whisker. Both men were 
given the same time – 1:35:49 – with Hug winning by a mere sixth hundredths 
of a second. It was Hug’s sixth consecutive victory in a major marathon, 
which is believed to be an unprecedented feat for a men’s wheelchair racer, 
and he went on to become the first-ever Abbott World Marathon Majors 
Wheelchair Series champion. An eight-time Paralympic medalist, Hug added to 
his already stacked international resume this summer with three gold medals 
at the World Para Athletics Championships in London.

"I'm excited to be coming back to New York City in search of my third 
title," Hug said. "Last year was such a thrilling sprint to the finish. 
Year after year, the TCS New York City Marathon draws the top wheelchair 
athletes in the world, so it promises to be a battle to the finish once 
again."

Keitany, 35, has won the TCS New York City Marathon each of the last three 
years, including a dominating performance last year in which she surged 
ahead at Mile 14 to finish the course on a solo run in 2:24:26. Her 3:34 
margin of victory was the greatest in the women’s race since 1980, and she 
became the first able-bodied runner since Grete Waitz to win the event 
three years in a row. Keitany is a two-time winner of the Abbott World 
Marathon Majors, taking the series titles in 2012 and 2016. This year, she 
won her third career Virgin Money London Marathon in April, breaking the 
women’s only marathon record in a blistering time of 2:17:01.

Additional Top Professional International Athlete Backgrounds and Notable 
Performances

· Lemi Berhanu (Open Division): The 22-year-old from Ethiopia won the 
Boston Marathon in 2016, and has a personal best of 2:04:33 from the 2016 
Dubai Marathon, the fastest personal-best time of any professional athlete 
racing the TCS New York City Marathon this year. He also won the 2017 
Xiamen Marathon, 2015 Dubai Marathon, and the 2014 Zurich Marathon.

· Lelisa Desisa (Open Division): The 27-year-old from Ethiopia finished 
second at the TCS New York City Marathon in 2014 and third in 2015 before 
failing to finish last year. The two-time Boston Marathon champion owns a 
personal-best time of 2:04:45 from the 2013 Dubai Marathon.

· Geoffrey Kamworor (Open Division): The 24-year-old from Kenya was the 
2015 TCS New York City Marathon runner-up and is a four-time world 
champion, twice in cross-country and twice in the half-marathon. His 
personal-best time of 2:06:12 came from his marathon debut in 2012, when he 
finished third at the Berlin Marathon.

· Ernst van Dyk (Wheelchair Division): The 44-year-old from South Africa 
has won the New York City Marathon twice and finished as the runner-up four 
times; he’s also won the Boston Marathon a record 10 times. He has 
represented his country at every Paralympics since 1992, and earlier this 
year won his third consecutive United Airlines NYC Half.

· Kurt Fearnley (Wheelchair Division): The 36-year-old from Australia is a 
five-time winner and the event-record holder of the New York City Marathon; 
he finished second at last year’s race, his 10th podium appearance. He has 
captured 13 individual medals across five Paralympics, including a 
silver-medal finish at the Rio 2016 Paralympic Marathon.

· Edna Kiplagat (Open Division): The 37-year old from Kenya owns titles 
from the 2010 New York City Marathon, 2014 London Marathon and 2017 Boston 
Marathon. She is a three-time World Championship medalist, most recently 
taking silver at the IAAF World Championships Marathon in London.

· Betsy Saina (Open Division): The 29-year-old from Kenya finished fifth 
over 10,000 meters at the Rio 2016 Olympics after winning the NYRR Millrose 
Games 5,000 meters earlier that year.

· Tigist Tufa (Open Division): The 30-year-old from Ethiopia, who has lived 
in the Bronx, finished third and eighth in her two previous New York City 
Marathon appearances in 2015 and 2013, respectively. She won the London 
Marathon in 2015 and was the runner-up in 2016.

· Manuela Schär (Wheelchair Division): The 32-year-old from Switzerland, a 
three-time Paralympic medalist, has finished as runner-up at the last three 
TCS New York City Marathons. In April, she won her first Boston Marathon 
title, clocking a world-best time of 1:28:17, and then one week later won 
the Virgin Money London Marathon.


Top Professional International Men – Open Division
        
Name                        Personal Best Marathon    Twitter Handle
Lemi Berhanu (ETH)          2:04:33
Lelisa Desisa (ETH)         2:04:45
Geoffrey Kamworor (KEN)     2:06:12                   @GKamworor
Tadesse Abraham (SUI)       2:06:40                   @run_tade
Lucas Rotich (KEN)          2:07:17
Ghirmay Ghebreslassie (ERI) 2:07:46
Hiroyuki Yamamoto (JPN)     2:09:12 
Michael Butter (NED)        2:09:58                   @michelbutter
Koen Naert (BEL)            2:10:16                   @KoenNaert
Bayron Piedra (ECU)         2:14:12                   @ByronPiedra_20
Francesco Puppi (ITA)       Debut                     @fra_puppinho


Top Professional International Men – Wheelchair Division
        
Name                        Personal Best Marathon    Twitter Handle
Marcel Hug (SUI)            1:18:04                   @MarcelEricHug
Ernst van Dyk (RSA)         1:18:04                   @ernstvandyk
Josh Cassidy (CAN)          1:18:25                   @JoshCassidy84
Kurt Fearnley (AUS)         1:20:28                   @KurtFearnley
Kota Hokinoue (JPN)         1:23:07                   @KotaHokinoue
Tomoki Suzuki (JPN)         1:26:03
Sho Watanabe (JPN)          1:26:22
Zhang Yong (CHN)            1:33:28


Top Professional International Women – Open Division

Name                        Personal Best Marathon   Twitter Handle
Mary Keitany (KEN)          2:17:01                  @MaryKeitany
Edna Kiplagat (KEN)         2:19:50                  @KiplagatEdna
Mare Dibaba (ETH)           2:19:52
Tigist Tufa (ETH)           2:21:52
Mamitu Daska (ETH)          2:21:59                  @Mamitu_Daska
Christelle Daunay (FRA)     2:24:22
Jessica Augusto (POR)       2:24:33
Kaoru Nagao (JPN)           2:26:58
Miranda Boonstra (NED)      2:27:32                  @mirandaboonstra
Diane Nukuri (BDI)          2:27:50                  @dnjbdi
Emma Quaglia (ITA)          2:28:15                  @emmaquaglia
Adriana Da Silva (BRA)      2:29:17
Eva Vrabcova (CZE)          2:30:10                  @evavrabcova
Askale Merachi (ETH)        2:32:25
Beverly Ramos (PUR)         2:36:31                  @Beverly_Ramos
Manuela Soccol (BEL)        2:37:09                  @ManuelaSoccol
Dailin Belmonte (CUB)       2:38:08
Charlotte Karlsson (SWE)    2:42:29 
Marie-Ange Brumelot (FRA)   2:48:46                  @Marie11201
Gloria Giudici (ITA)        2:48:55
Sara Dossena (ITA)          Debut                    @sarydossy
Betsy Saina (KEN)           Debut                    @bcsaina


Top Professional International Women – Wheelchair Division  
        
Name                        Personal Best Marathon   Twitter Handle
Manuela Schär (SUI)         1:28:17                  @manuelaschaer
Wakako Tsuchida (JPN)       1:34:06
Zou Lihong (CHN)            1:38:44
Jade Jones (GBR)            1:41:44                  @JadeJones11
Madison DeRozario (AUS)     1:49:34                  @madiderozario
Annika Zeyen (GER)          Debut


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 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 also includes 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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