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2024 Chicago Marathon: Ruth Chepngetich Chases History While New Faces Emerge in the Men’s Race

2024 Chicago Marathon: Ruth Chepngetich Chases History While New Faces Emerge in the Men’s Race

Well, RunBlogRun is covering the 46th Bank of America Chicago Marathon on-site and remotely. We will have the thoughtful eyes of David Monti (Race Results Weekly and photographer Jane Monti), Kevin Morris (photographer), plus myself, and, with this thoughtful preview, Deji Ogeyinginbo, who is covering the event from the great state of Georgia. 

The big elephant in the room is the late Kelvin Kiptum, who put the Chicago marathon back on the marathon driver’s seat with his world record of 2 hours, zero minutes, and 35 seconds (2:00:35). Kiptum and his coach were killed in an auto accident in February 2024. 

Kiptum’s legacy is that the top athletes will always be compared to his masterful race in the Windy City in 2023. 

2024 Chicago Marathon: Ruth Chepngetich Chases History While New Faces Emerge in the Men’s Race

This weekend, the 45th edition of the Chicago Marathon will bring together some of the world’s best marathoners on the fast streets of the Windy City. As the fifth Abbott World Marathon Major of the year, the race is set to deliver thrilling performances across both the men’s and women’s fields. With no clear favorites and much at stake, it promises to be a race filled with redemption, new beginnings, and a quest for history.

The Women’s Race: Chepngetich’s Shot at Glory

On the women’s side, Ruth Chepngetich enters as the favorite. The Kenyan star won this race in 2021 and 2022, and last year finished second, running an incredible 2:15:37—the fastest non-winning time in marathon history. Her personal best of 2:14:18, set on this course two years ago, remains the second-fastest time ever run by a woman. If Chepngetich can recapture that form and win on Sunday, she will join Khalid Khannouchi as one of the only athletes to claim three victories in Chicago.

Ruth Chepngetich wins Bank of America Chicago in 2:14.18, photo by Bank of America Chicago Marathon/Kevin Morris

However, questions remain about her fitness. Chepngetich has not raced since her disappointing 2:24:36 finish in London earlier this year. The field in Chicago is stacked with strong contenders, and Chepngetich will need to be at her best to come out on top.

One of her toughest challengers is Joyciline Jepkosgei, who finished third in the London Marathon earlier this year, setting a personal best of 2:16:24. Ethiopian stars Degitu Azemiraw, Ashete Bekere Dido, and Hiwot Gebrekidan also bring strong credentials, making the women’s race a tightly contested affair.

Emily…

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