Former Champions Rutto and Limo Top ListSeptember 12, 2007, CHICAGO - The LaSalle Bank
Chicago Marathon today
announced the first installment of its elite field of runners
that will
contend for the championship on Sunday, Oct. 7. Among
the men's roster are
former Chicago champions Evans Rutto (KEN; 2003 and
2004) and Felix Limo
(KEN; 2005). Set to challenge the former victors are
Korean Bong-ju Lee,
Moroccan Jaouad Gharib and Kenyan Daniel Njenga Muturi
who has finished in
the top three in Chicago the last five years.
"The LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon's tradition of
attracting the greatest
athletes in the sport continues in 2007," remarked
Executive Race Director
Carey Pinkowski. "The men's field is anchored by
athletes who have had
great success in Chicago, including former champions
Felix Limo and Evans
Rutto and top finishers Ben Maiyo and Daniel Njenga. The
athletic abilities
of Bong-ju Lee and Jaouad Gharib add to that
excitement and further
indicate that the eventual champion times will have to
be fast.
Collectively, this field means exciting things for our 30th
year and
perhaps our best race yet."
Limo is an established champion with four victories
under his belt,
including three World Marathon Major races. After two
consecutive wins in
The 2005 LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon and the 2006
Flora London Marathon,
he withdrew from the 2006 Chicago race with a lingering
back injury. After
taking third in London this spring, Limo has his sights set
on Chicago and
the opportunity to reclaim his crown.
Rutto made history in his first Chicago appearance in 2003,
also his debut
at the marathon distance. By breaking the tape in 2:05:50,
The 2003 LaSalle
Bank Chicago Marathon champion also set a new world
record for a debut
performance that remains today. The win marked his
first of three
consecutive major victories with a championship in the
2004 Flora London
Marathon and a repeat in Chicago that fall.
In only his second marathon appearance, Gharib
shocked the world by
smashing a 20-year-old IAAF World Championships record
at the 2003 marathon
(2:08:31). He returned to the championships in 2005 to
reiterate his
status, becoming only the second man in history to win two
consecutive IAAF
World Championships Marathons. With four sub-2:08
performances to his
credit, Gharib will be a solid contender in Chicago.
Lee arrives in Chicago fresh off winning the Seoul
International Marathon
championship in March, his seventh career victory.
Highlighting his career
is his 1996 Atlanta Olympic silver medal performance
and wins at the
Boston, Asian Games and Fukuoka marathons. An
established winner, Lee is
likely to challenge the leaders in his Chicago debut.
Daniel Njenga Muturi is well-known in Chicago as a top
three finisher over
the past five years, including his personal best in 2002
(2:06:16). Hungry
to break the tape on Columbus Drive, Njenga Muturi
followed last year's
runner-up Chicago finish with a win in the Tokyo Marathon,
the second of
his career.
Ben Maiyo and Jimmy Muindi are also no strangers to the
Windy City. Maiyo
finished second in 2005 behind Limo with his personal
record (2:07:09) and
Muindi will make his fifth Chicago appearance to follow-up
his third-place
finish in 2006.
The complete list of male athletes set to compete as of
today is as
follows:
Name Country Personal Record
Bong-ju Lee KOR 2:07:20
Jaouad Gharib MAR 2:07:02
Tariku Jufar ETH 2:12:49
James Koskei KEN 2:14:02
Felix Limo KEN 2:06:14
Benjamin Maiyo KEN 2:07:09
Jimmy Muindi KEN 2:07:50
Daniel Njenga Muturi KEN 2:06:16
Evans Rutto KEN 2:05:50
Daniel Yego KEN 2:08:16
The LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon has produced
some of the greatest
performances in marathon history with its fast, flat course
and reputation
for recruiting the world's top talent. Over its 29-year
history, The
LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon has hosted four world
records, six American
records and numerous other national records. In 2006
alone, four women
posted new records for their countries (Australia, Russia,
Ethiopia and
Mexico).
For more information on athletes and the race, visit
chicagomarathon.com.
About The LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon
The LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon will celebrate its 30th
anniversary on
Sunday, October 7, 2007 as 45,000 participants advance to
the start line,
embarking on the culmination of 45,000 personal
journeys. Along with the
massive field of recreational runners, the 26.2-mile course
will welcome a
full field of world renowned professional athletes drawn to
the flat, fast,
urban setting and the potential to break world and national
records. The
professionals will compete for prize money and points in the
World Marathon
Majors series which will crown its first male and female
champions with
$500,000 each at the close of 2007. Since the inception
of its charity
program in 2002, The LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon has
generated more than
$27.5 million for a variety of charitable causes including
$9.5 million in
the 2006 event alone. Registration for the race opened on
January 1, 2007
and closed when it reached capacity on April 18.
www.chicagomarathon.com