Defending Champion and Runner-Up to Face Off Again
Chicago (July 11, 2001) After a memorable duel in 2000,
defending champion
Catherine Ndereba and runner-up Lornah Kiplagat are
returning to compete in
The 2001 LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon, it was
announced Wednesday, July 11 by Carey
Pinkowski, executive race director. The 2001 LaSalle Bank
Chicago Marathon
starts at 7:30 a.m. on Sunday, Oct. 7. Athletes will be
competing for
$450,000 in prize money, plus time bonuses.
"We are thrilled to have Catherine and Lornah return to
Chicago this fall," Pinkowski said. "They are two of the very
best
athletes in the world right now. Catherine is coming off a
victory in
Boston and Lornah just won the Peachtree Road Race in
Atlanta. If last year
is any indication, the rematch may produce historic results."
The 2000 LaSalle Bank Marathon was a two-woman race
from the beginning as
Kiplagat led the first 22 miles and held as much as a
15-second advantage
over Ndereba. The two Kenyans ran together for most of the
second half of
the race until Ndereba pulled away in the last two miles for
the victory.
Ndereba's winning time of 2:21:33 was the world's fastest in
2000, the
fifth-fastest marathon of all-time and only 12 seconds shy of
Chicago's event record of 2:21:21 set by Joan Benoit
Samuelson in 1985. Kiplagat's
second-place performance of 2:22:36 was a personal
record and the fastest
runner-up time ever. The averaged times of the first two
women's finishers
(2:22:04) was the fastest ever, beating the previous average
(2:22:13) set
in Chicago in 1985. The current women's World Record is
held by Tegla
Loroupe (2:20:43 at Berlin in 1999).
Ndereba, 28-years old from Nairobi, Kenya, has continued
to excel in 2001
with her second consecutive victory at the Boston Marathon.
In a dominant
performance, she ran away from the field with the seventh-
fastest time in
Boston history (2:23:53), nearly three minutes ahead of the
second-place
finisher. Last Sunday (July 8) Ndereba smashed a 10-year
old event
record with a victory at the Boilermaker 15K in Utica, New
York. Her
performance (48:06) was a Kenyan national record. She is
currently ranked
#1 by Runners World for the third consecutive year. This will
be Ndereba's
second appearance in The LaSalle Bank Chicago
Marathon.
Kiplagat, 27-years old from Kipkabus, Kenya, has three
career marathon
victories - Los Angeles in 1997 (2:33:50) and 1998
(2:34:03), and Amsterdam
in 1999 (2:25:29). This year, she ran a World Record in the
20K (63:54) at
the 2001 Twentig of Hans Verkerk in the Netherlands.
Earlier this week
(July 4) she won the very competitive Peachtree Road Race
10K (30:58)
for the second consecutive year. In 2000, she ran the
world's fastest half
marathon and 10K. This will be Kiplagat's second
appearance in The LaSalle
Bank Chicago Marathon. In 1997 she finished 10th with a
time of 2:39:13.
Pinkowski also announced that two-time champion Marian
Sutton and Kerryn
McCann will be competing in Chicago this fall. Sutton, who
turns 38 on race
day, won The LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon in 1996
(2:30:41) and 1997
(2:29:03). In 2000, she ran the Sydney Olympic Marathon for
Great Britain.
This will be Sutton's seventh appearance in Chicago.
McCann, 34-years old
from Australia, is a two-time Olympic marathoner. At the
2000 Sydney
Olympics, she finished an impressive seventh (2:28:37).
McCann
also ran a personal best (2:25:59) at the 2000 London
Marathon, finishing
fifth. This will be her first appearance in The LaSalle Bank
Chicago
Marathon.
The race will be
televised live on NBC5 and broadcast on Chicago's ESPN
Radio 1000 from 7:30
a.m. to 10:30 a.m. The 2001 race is expected to draw up to
the registration
cap of 37,500 participants who will compete for $450,000 in
prize money,
plus time bonuses. The Marathon is open to all runners
who can complete the
course in less than six hours.
For information call toll-free 1-888-243-3344 (U.S. and
Canada) or (312)
904-9800. Registration is $70 ($80 for international
participants) and can
be completed online by visiting www.chicagomarathon.com.
Mail-in entries
will be accepted until September 12, 2001. Runners
registering online earn
a $5 discount and have a Sept.19, 2001 deadline or until the
registration cap is reached, whichever comes first. There
will be no race
weekend registration.