Chicago Marathon





































Chicago Marathon

Bank of America Chicago Marathon Logo.svg
Logo for the Chicago Marathon

Date First/Second Sunday in October (before Columbus Day)
Location
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Event type Road
Distance Marathon
Established 1977
Course records
M: 2:03:45 (2013 – Dennis Kimetto)
F: 2:17:18 (2002 – Paula Radcliffe)
Official site chicagomarathon.com

The Chicago Marathon is a marathon held every October in Chicago, Illinois. Alongside the Boston, New York, London, Berlin, and Tokyo Marathons, it is one of the six World Marathon Majors.[1] Thus, it is also an IAAF Gold Label race. The Chicago Marathon is the fourth-largest race by number of finishers worldwide.[2]


The first race was held on September 25, 1977 under the original name the Mayor Daley Marathon, which drew a field of 4,200 runners. The race has been held every year since, except in 1987 when only a half-marathon was run.[3][4][5] It is among the fastest growing marathon road races in the world, due in part to its largely fast and flat course which facilitates the pursuit of personal records and world record performances.[6] The race has achieved its elite status among marathons by developing relationships with sponsors who provide prize money to lure elite runners who have produced American and world record performances. Since 2008, the race has been owned and organized by Bank of America, and is officially known as the Bank of America Chicago Marathon.


The race is limited to 45,000 runners and only runners who finish within 6½ hours are officially timed.[6] Those wishing to participate can register after either meeting a time qualifying standard or being selected through a general lottery.[7] Although the race has limited registration, exceptions include elite runners, legacy finishers, and charity representatives.[8] Increasingly, local, national and global charities as well as humanitarian organizations encourage sponsored participation in the event as a means of fund raising.[9][10]




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 Course


  • 3 Runner statistics


    • 3.1 Records




  • 4 Economic impact


    • 4.1 Charity program




  • 5 Deaths


  • 6 Gallery


  • 7 References


  • 8 Further reading


  • 9 External links





History





The former logo before the current sponsor


The first marathon at the 1896 Games of the I Olympiad generated interest in the sport which led to similar races throughout most western countries and across the United States. While marathons sporadically occurred in New York City and St. Louis,[11] the Boston Marathon had established an annual marathon in 1897, soon to be followed by Chicago.[12] Beginning in 1905,[13] the Chicago Marathon (organized first by the Illinois Athletic Club 1905 to 1909, then sponsored by the Chicago Daily News after 1910) was held annually, with significant community and spectator support, until the early 1920s.[14]




First Chicago Marathon September 23, 1905. Louis Marks in the lead.


The First Chicago Marathon was run on September 23, 1905.[12] That first race began in Evanston and finished in front of a standing-room-only paying crowd at Washington Park race track. In a stunning upset, a reported 100,000 or more spectators watched Rhud Metzner come from behind to steal a late-race victory from the favored Louis Marks.[13] With that first race, the Chicago Marathon began an annual run of epic races that continued until the early 1920s on a revised course that largely resembles today's marathon route.[14] Over the years elite fields included Olympic champions, world records were continually sought, and the marathon continued to inspire Chicago communities and spectators until challenges of the early 1920s sidelined the event.[15]


It was not until the health consciousness of the 1960s that marathon growth gained traction in the eyes of the nation. Frank Shorter's 1972 Games of the XX Olympiad marathon victory represented the convergence of many middle-class American ideals.[16] Then the 1976 New York City Marathon, which was the first New York City Marathon to embrace the five borough course, popularized the big city marathon. As the New York marathon began to grow exponentially in the 1970s, the Chicago Marathon was established as a rival to the New York City Marathon.[3] By the mid-1980s, the Chicago Marathon was ensconced as one of the big four marathons.[17] During the mid-1980s, it was named America's Marathon/Chicago and opened up the way for appearance payments. Joan Benoit Samuelson described the Chicago Marathons of the mid-1980s as "The World's Marathon".[18] The Bank of America Chicago Marathon is an open race with no qualifying time to participate.[6]




The founding location of the Chicago Marathon is at 214 West Erie in River North.


The Modern Era Chicago Marathon was founded over the objection of Ed Kelly, Chicago Parks Superintendent who refused permission to run in the parks or along the Lake Michigan lakefront. With the help of Lee Flaherty, the event's founder who operated out of Flair House in the Near North Side community area of Chicago,[19]Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley's support for the marathon was enlisted. Although Mayor Daley died, his successor Michael Anthony Bilandic approved the race and got Kelly on board. Michael Bilandic, a runner, and his wife actually passed out medals at the first marathon on September 25, 1977. This first edition of the modern Chicago Marathon was called the Mayor Daley Marathon.[20] Flaherty footed the bill for the first race, which had no sponsors. He again footed the bill in 1978 when the race was again called the Mayor Daley Marathon. In 1979, however, Beatrice Foods became the first race sponsor.





Evans Cheruiyot follows the course car (with clock) during his 2008 victory. The lead course car carries the current race time.


In the early years the Chicago Marathon was held in August.[21] It has from its inception with 4,200 runners and 2,128 finishers been one of the nation's largest marathons. The 2000 running was second only to New York.[22] The 1979 and 1980 events, however, continued to be gatherings of amateur runners. By 1982, the race finally had sufficient prize money to attract world class athletes. The 1982 was the first with world class times such as the 2:10:59 by Greg Meyer.[16] By 1983, the Chicago Marathon had achieved its status as one of America's most important marathons. In 1984, Beatrice raised the purse to $250,000 ($50,000 more than New York's).[16] The race had become a legitimate rival to New York and continues to vie for top runners. The 1985 race was spectacular with Steve Jones breaking his own course record (2 seconds short of the world record) and Joan Benoit Samuelson the 1984 Olympic Champion, two-time defending Chicago Marathon Champion and Olympic Bronze Medalist, Rosa Mota and the fourth place Olympic finisher and world record setting Ingrid Kristiansen. Benoit set a record that stood nearly a generation. At that time, it was considered the premier marathon in the United States, if not the world.[23] Although 1986 had 40 world-class runners among the 8,000 participants the times paled in comparison.[24] Beatrice dropped out as a sponsor in 1987. Because of this only a half-marathon race was held that year[5] and the marathon was moved to the spring of 1988[25] and attracted Heileman Brewing Company to sponsor the 1988 Old Style Chicago Marathon.[26] The race resulted in three women who had been passed over for the 1988 Games of the XXIV Olympiad placing in the top positions.[27] In 1991, Heileman discontinued its sponsorship and both the prize money and performances waned.[28] In 1992, the race again had no sponsorship, but 1993 brought new sponsor LaSalle Bank.[29] In 1994, the race became the LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon.[30] In 1996, LaSalle Bank purchased the Chicago Marathon from Major Events, Inc., who had purchased the race three years prior from Flaherty.[31][32] In 1998, the race began using transponder timing.[33] In 2001, when Catherine Ndereba broke the women's world record marathon time, both the men's and women's then-current world records had been set at the Chicago Marathon.[34] For 2008, the race was sponsored by Bank of America following the purchase of LaSalle Bank from ABN Amro to Bank of America, and the new title will be in use.[35]




2007 Chicago Marathon temperatures.


In 2007, Bank of America acquired LaSalle Bank's parent company ABN AMRO North America in 2007 and assumed the race's title sponsorship.[36][37] The 2007 race made history with the first ever CEO Marathon Challenge. The race featured a special competition among the CEOs, presidents, company owners and c-suite executives of companies with at least $5 million in annual gross revenue ($2.5 million for women).[38] The 2007 race also made history for having three (men's, women's & men's wheelchair) of its four races decided in the final 100 meters in a day of record setting heat.[39] The race was partially shut down early (after three and a half hours) as temperatures rose to an unseasonably hot 88 °F (31 °C), which surpassed both the temperature records for the Chicago Marathon and official Chicago records for October 7.[40] Over 10,000 registrants chose not to run in the record temperatures, while 10,934 people did not finish (many were called after the course closed early for safety).[4][39][41] One runner died, over 30 were hospitalized, and over 400 others sought medical attention. Marathon owner and sponsor Bank of America, which had just acquired LaSalle Bank, has denied culpability. Similar hot conditions have been experienced in other city center races. In 2003, London's The British 10K also had extremely hot weather that affected many runners.[41][42]




Course




Chicago Marathon start/finish in Grant Park, October 2006


The marathon course is a loop course, starting and ending at Grant Park. From here, the current course winds through 29 of the city's neighborhoods.[43] The course loop can be generally divided into three sections: North, West, and South. In each of these sections, three of the city's main stadiums are near the course's turning points: Wrigley Field to the north; the United Center to the west; and Guaranteed Rate Field to the south. The city's fourth professional stadium, Soldier Field, is located near the start/finish area.


For the first three miles, runners wind through Chicago's downtown area. Eventually, they head north along LaSalle Street.


Runners are supported by over 12,000 volunteers[44] spread throughout the course including at 20 aid stations[45] located approximate every 1–3 miles.[46] For runners in distress, aid station volunteers include medical staff and ambulatory services are scattered throughout the course.


Digital timers are positioned every 5 kilometers, as well as the halfway point.




Runner statistics












































































































































Chicago Marathon Finishers (2000–present)
Total finishers and by gender
Year
Finishers
Male
Female
Avg Finish Time
2000
27,870
16,802
11,068
4:21:46
2001
28,390
17,129
11,261
4:19:28
2002
31,093
18,111
12,982
4:19:51
2003
32,395
18,720
13,675
4:25:09
2004
33,033
19,073
13,960
4:26:53
2005
32,995
18,673
14,322
4:26:22
2006
33,618
18,904
14,714
4:25:02
2007
28,815
16,945
11,870
4:52:11
2008
31,343
17,675
13,668
4:46:30
2009
33,475
18,983
14,492
4:27:20

2010
36,159
19,973
16,186
4:43:48

2011
35,670
20,256
15,414
4:40:34

2012
37,455
20,688
16,767
4:32:02

2013
39,122
21,618
17,504
4:32:23

2014
40,801
22,299
18,502
4:33:03

2015
37,182
20,144
17,038
4:33:14

2016
40,608
22,045
18,563
4:34:48

2017
44,508
22,906
21,602
4:47:23

Source:[47]|[48]

The Bank of America Chicago Marathon has grown significantly from its beginnings. In 1905, 20 runners registered for the first Chicago Marathon, 15 actually started the race, and 7 finished.[15] For the first "modern" marathon race in 1977, 4,200 people took part.[49] In 1995, 9,000 people registered, and in 1999, over 29,000 people registered. The 2001 marathon run on October 7 reached its cap of 37,500, which was instituted after the 2000 race drew 33,171 runners,[50] just prior to the entry deadline on September 19.[51] In 2003, 2004, 2005, and 2006 it reached its cap of 40,000.[3][52] The October 10, 2004, October 9, 2005 and October 22, 2006 races reached their 40,000 entrant caps on August 16, July 14, and May 26 respectively.[52][53][54] On April 18, 2007, the 2007 race run on October 7 reached its cap of 45,000 entrants.[55] There was a late registration exemption whereby elite runners (marathon times of less than 2:31/3:01 or half marathon times of 1:11/1:21 for (men/women)) could register until September 1 even though the race had reached its registration cap in the spring.[56] The 40,000 registrants and 33,000 finishers in 2003 made the Chicago Marathon the third or fourth largest marathon depending on which metric (registrants or finishers) is used.[57]


The Chicago Marathon is entered by predominantly Caucasian entrants from middle- to upper-middle-class affluence with a wide range in age and near equality in the sexes.[6] The Chicago Marathon has never excluded women. Historically, however, the women's field has been smaller than the men's. This seems to be the result of older age categories having large multiples of men to women, but the women are beginning to outnumber the men in the 20s age group of the field.[58]



Records


World records have been broken at Chicago four times.[59] In 1984, Steve Jones broke the world record with 2:08:05. In 1999, Khalid Khannouchi was the first to surpass 2:06:00 with 2:05:42. The women's record was broken in two consecutive years. In 2001, Catherine Ndereba broke the record in 2:18:47, and Paula Radcliffe surpassed that mark with 2:17:18 the year after.


Radcliffe's world record is also the course record; while the men's record is 2:03:45, set in the 2013 race by Dennis Kimetto.[60]




Economic impact


Much of the marathon's impact is derived from the tourism industry. More than 10,000 of the runners in 2010 indicated that it was their first visit to Chicago. Of that, 6,000 came from 100 countries. Due to the travelers, the event increases hotel occupancy rates during the marathon. According to an independent study by the University of Illinois, the 2015 marathon contributed an estimated US$277 million worth of activity to the Chicago economy, equivalent to 1,948 jobs.[61]



Charity program


Since the charity program was officially established in 2002, more than 106,000 runners have raised over $167 million for local, national and global causes.[62]


Charity fundraising is now closely intertwined with the event as the runners now raise money for research, aid the suffering and heighten public awareness of different causes.[63] The marathon offers all registered entrants the opportunity to fundraise for a charity partner. The marathon recognizes four levels of charities based on the number of participants recruited, and fundraising levels.[64]


Runners can also opt out of the public lottery or obtain a guaranteed place after this has been drawn by choosing to run for an official charity. The 2016 event had over 170 charity partners, and raised more than US$16.9 million.[62]




The 2005 LaSalle Bank ABN Amro Chicago Marathon at Grand Avenue passing under Michigan Avenue (Chicago) along the Magnificent Mile.










































































































Year Charity
Count
Charity Runner
Count
Funds Raised
2001 7 NA NA
2002 14 1,674 $2,950,000
2003 19 2,527 $4,540,000
2004 29 2,449 $4,740,000
2005 43 3,000 $6,317,000
2006 60 4,500 $9,500,000
2007 85 6,600 $9,985,482
2008 110 6,745 $9,209,000
2009 123 8,768 $10,183,855
2010 150 9,842 $12,109,000
2011 162 10,192 $13,400,000
2012 170 10,693 $15,300,000
2013 140 10,712 $15,000,000
2014 195 10,000+ $17,700,000
2015 172 10,000+ $18,700,000[65]
2016 170+ 10,000+ $16,900,000[62]

Source: 2015 Chicago Marathon Media Guide[66]


Deaths



  • 2011 – William Caviness, 35, Greensboro, North Carolina – Believed to have died from cardiac arrest five hundred yards from finish line.[67][68]

  • 2007 – Chad Schieber, 35, Midland, Michigan[42] – Mitral valve prolapse[69]

  • 2003 – Rachael Townsend, 29, The Plains, Ohio – Mitral valve prolapse[70][71]

  • 2001 – Luke Roach, 22, Seattle, Washington – Collapsed near finish line. Body temperature reached 107 °F (42 °C) (heat stroke)[21][72]

  • 2000 – Danny Towns, 45, Edmond, Oklahoma – Cardiac arrest[21][73]

  • 1998 – Kelly Barrett, 43, Littleton, Colorado – Believed to be caused by hyponatremia[21][74]



Gallery








References





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  12. ^ ab Britt, pp. 7–9.


  13. ^ ab Britt, pp. 9–14.


  14. ^ ab Britt, pp. 15–22.


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  16. ^ abc Suozzo, p. 22.


  17. ^ Treadwell, p. 188


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  22. ^ Suozzo. pp. 19–21.


  23. ^ Coat, Tom (October 23, 1985). "New York City Marathon feels chill of Windy City times". Evening Tribune. Newsbank. Retrieved February 21, 2009.


  24. ^ Suozzo, p. 23.


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  31. ^ Suozzo, p. 31.


  32. ^ Suozzo, p. 90.


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  35. ^ [1] Archived October 25, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.


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  37. ^ "Bank of America Agrees to Acquire LaSalle Bank". Bank of America. April 23, 2007. Archived from the original on November 4, 2014. Retrieved November 4, 2014.


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  39. ^ ab "Ivuti, Adere win LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon". LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon. October 7, 2007. Archived from the original on October 11, 2007. Retrieved October 7, 2007.


  40. ^ "Deadly Heat at Chicago Marathon, 300 Injured". AccuWeather.com Community Blog. October 7, 2007. Retrieved October 7, 2007.


  41. ^ ab Sylvan, Benjamin (October 7, 2007). "Runner Dies in Hot Chicago Marathon". AP Sports/AOL.com. Archived from the original on October 11, 2007. Retrieved October 8, 2007.


  42. ^ ab Wang, Andrew; Josh Noel; Shannon Ryan & Neil Milbert (October 7, 2007). "One dead in heat-shortened marathon". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 7, 2007.
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  57. ^ Suozzo, p. 14.


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  59. ^ "World Best Progressions : Road". Arrs.net. Retrieved October 23, 2015.


  60. ^ "Kimetto wins Chicago Marathon | Sport". 3 News. October 14, 2013. Retrieved October 23, 2015.


  61. ^ "Study Finds Bank of America Chicago Marathon Brings More Than $277 Million to Chicago Economy, published September 27 2016". newsroom.bankofamerica.com. Bank of America. Retrieved September 26, 2017.


  62. ^ abc "2016 Bank of America Chicago Marathon Charity Runners Raised $16.9 Million, Press Release Jan 11, 2017" (PDF). chicagomarathon.com. Chicago Marathon Press Center. Retrieved September 26, 2017.


  63. ^ Suozzo, p. 12.


  64. ^ Suozzo, p. 126.


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  66. ^ "Chicago Marathon Media Guide" (PDF). Chicago Marathon. October 2015. Retrieved February 2, 2016.


  67. ^ Schlikerman, Becky (October 10, 2011). "Marathoner's death still a mystery after autopsy: North Carolina firefighter was 'in great shape,' father says". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 12, 2011.


  68. ^ Schilken, Chuck (October 10, 2011). "Chicago Marathon: One runner dies, another gives birth (Updated)". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 12, 2011.


  69. ^ "Autopsy: Man who died in Chicago marathon had heart condition". Midland Daily News. October 8, 2007. Archived from the original on October 13, 2007.


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Further reading



  • Britt, Raymond, "Chicago Marathon: Images of Sport", Arcadia Publishing, 2009,
    ISBN 978-0-7385-7718-0.

  • Cooper, Pamela, "The American Marathon", Syracuse University Press, 1998,
    ISBN 0-8156-0520-X.

  • Suozzo, Andrew, "The Chicago Marathon", University of Illinois Press, 2006,
    ISBN 0-252-07421-1.

  • Treadwell, Sandy, "The World of Marathons", Stewart, Tabori & Chang, 1987,
    ISBN 0-941434-98-2.



External links







  • Official website

  • Chicago Marathon Elevation Profile

  • Chicago Marathon Weather History

  • Chicago Marathon Charities

  • Marathon Info


  • "Chicago Marathon". MarathonGuide.com.


  • Chicago Marathon at MarathonQuest.com


  • archive at Chicago Tribune


  • Chicago Marathon at Runner's World
















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