2017 Chicago Marathon

The 2017 Chicago Marathon was the 40th annual edition of the Chicago Marathon held in Chicago, Illinois, United States. The race had 44,508 finishers, and the number of spectators was estimated at over 1.5 million.[1][2]

40th Chicago Marathon
VenueChicago, United States
DateOctober 8, 2017
Champions
MenGalen Rupp (2:09:20) (Elite)
Marcel Hug (Wheelchair)
WomenTirunesh Dibaba (2:18:30) (Elite)
Tatyana McFadden (Wheelchair)

Summary

American Galen Rupp won the men's race, holding off defending champion Abel Kirui. Rupp is the first American man to win this event since Khalid Khannouchi in 2002 and the first American-born man to win it since Greg Meyer in 1982. This was his first career win at a World Marathon Majors event. In a relatively tactical race, over 20 runners remained in the lead pack by the halfway point, which was reached in 1:05:49 hours. Kirui's quickening of the pace left only five men in contention at the 35 kilometres (22 mi) mark. Rupp then took the lead for good, finishing in a personal best of 2:09:20 hours. Kirui finished in second place around 30 seconds behind Rupp, while Bernard Kipyego finished in third around one minute behind Rupp.[3]

Tirunesh Dibaba of Ethiopia won the women's race in 2:18:30 hours, which was the second fastest in Chicago Marathon history. Brigid Kosgei of Kenya placed second in 2:20:22 hours, which was her first top-three finish at a World Marathon Major. American Jordan Hasay finished third in 2:20:57, which was the second fastest time ever by an American woman in this race.[4] Dibaba dominated the race. She led the race early on, with only Dibaba, Kosgei, Florence Kiplagat, Valentine Kipketer, and Hasay in the lead group at the 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) mark. Dibaba gradually pulled away from the other runners after the halfway point to win by almost two minutes. She stated that her goal in the future is to challenge the marathon world record.[3]

The women's wheelchair marathon was won for a sixth consecutive time by American Tatyana McFadden in a course record of 1:39:15 hours – the same time recorded by runner-up Amanda McGrory who was a fraction of a second behind.[2] Swiss athlete Marcel Hug took the men's wheelchair race in 1:29:23 hours, defending his title from the previous year and beating six-time champion Kurt Fearnley by over a minute.[5]

Results

The results were as follows.[6]

Men

Position Athlete Nationality Time
Galen Rupp United States2:09:20
Abel Kirui Kenya2:09:48
Bernard Kipyego Kenya2:10:23
4Sisay Lemma Ethiopia2:11:01
5Stephen Sambu Kenya2:11:07
6Kohei Matsumura Japan2:11:46
7Ezekiel Kiptoo Chebii Kenya2:12:12
8Zersenay Tadese Eritrea2:12:19
9Chris Derrick United States2:12:50
10Michael Shelley Australia2:12:52

Women

Position Athlete Nationality Time
Tirunesh Dibaba Ethiopia2:18:30
Brigid Kosgei Kenya2:20:22
Jordan Hasay United States2:20:57
4Madaí Pérez Mexico2:24:44
5Valentine Kipketer Kenya2:28:05
6Lisa Weightman Australia2:28:45
7Maegan Krifchin United States2:33:46
8Alia Gray United States2:34:25
9Taylor Ward United States2:35:27
10Becky Wade United States2:35:46

Wheelchair men

PositionAthleteNationalityTime
Marcel Hug  Switzerland1:29:23
Kurt Fearnley Australia1:30:24
Jordi Madera Jiménez Spain1:30:25

Wheelchair women

PositionAthleteNationalityTime
Tatyana McFadden United States1:39:15
Amanda McGrory United States1:39:15
Manuela Schär  Switzerland1:39:17

References

  1. "Chicago Marathon Race Results 2017". www.marathonguide.com. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  2. Paralympian Tatyana McFadden wins seventh straight Chicago Marathon in record time. Baltimore Sun (October 8, 2017). Retrieved on October 8, 2017.
  3. Dennehy, Cathal (October 8, 2017). Dibaba dominates and Rupp times it right to win in Chicago. IAAF. Retrieved on October 8, 2017.
  4. "Galen Rupp and Tirunesh Dibaba win Chicago Marathon". Athletics Weekly. October 8, 2017. Retrieved October 8, 2017.
  5. Athletics - Rupp, Dibaba claim Chicago Marathon victories. Reuters (October 8, 2017). Retrieved on October 8, 2017.
  6. Chicago Marathon 2017 Results. Chicago Marathon (October 8, 2017). Retrieved on October 8, 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.