Conner Mantz To Debut / Defending Champs Ruth Chepngetich & Seifu Tura Set to Return to the 2022 Bank of America Chicago Marathon

August 11, 2022 

Press Release excerpts with quick take added by LetsRun.com

CHICAGO –The Bank of America Chicago Marathon announced today the return of its defending champions as the event continues to build on its comeback to global racing. Ruth Chepngetich (KEN) and Seifu Tura (ETH) will be at the helm of this year’s elite field with a strong contingency of the world’s best athletes vying to dethrone them. The stage will be set for a fierce competition up front, highlighting Chicago’s long tradition of record chases, fast times, and gripping finishes.

“We’re thrilled to welcome our defending champions back to Grant Park this fall,” said Carey Pinkowski, Executive Race Director of the Bank of America Chicago Marathon. “Chicago has a storied history of head-to-head competitions, world records and some of the best elite racing in marathon running. This year’s competition, which also includes American half marathon record holder Emily Sisson and American half marathon champion Conner Mantz making his debut, is going to bring much energy and enthusiasm to fans and spectators. We are ready for October 9.”

Conner Mantz celebrating his spring 2021 NCAA xc title

Defending Champions Return
Chepngetich, the 2019 World Marathon champion and the fourth fastest woman in the history of marathon running, started on a world record pace at the 2021 Bank of America Chicago Marathon, dropping her pacer eight miles in while racing against the clock. She decelerated over the second half of the course but had enough to take the crown in 2:22:31. Chepngetich, who is self-coached, kicked off her 2022 season with a win and a course record at the Nagoya Marathon (2:17:18). She recently dropped out the of the World Championships Women’s Marathon due to health issues but is ready to take to the streets of Chicago and defend her title.

Unlike the fast pace set by Chepngetich, Tura ran a controlled strategic race last fall in the elite men’s race, waiting until 38K to pull ahead and win the biggest race of his career so far. Tura, who holds a 2:04:29 personal best, clocked 2:06:12 to win last year. His 2022 season includes a personal best in the half marathon, 58:36, and a second place finish in the Paris Marathon. Following last year’s victory, Tura noted that he was not prepared for warm weather, but that he was “determined to fight to the very end.” Tura’s determination may make him just the fifth man in Chicago’s history to win twice in a row.

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Sisson and Mantz Headline Strong American Field
The Bank of America Chicago Marathon has a long history of welcoming America’s best runners across its finish line, stretching back to Joan Benoit Samuelson setting the American record en route to her victory in 1985. Khalid Khannouchi dominated at the turn of the century with four victories, including both world and American records, Deena Kastor clutched the win in 2005, and Galen Rupp stole the show in 2017. Last October saw five American men and seven American women finish in the top 10, a feat that highlights the strength of U.S. distance running. This year’s field includes several top American runners, including Emily Sisson and Conner Mantz.

Sisson, a six-time national champion and the American half marathon record holder (1:07:11), could put the American Marathon record (2:19:12) in jeopardy as she races to break the tape in Chicago. Sisson stands out as one of the most dominant American women on the track and the roads, making her Olympic debut in the 10,000m at the Tokyo Olympics and her marathon debut in 2019 in London. Sisson ran the fastest ever marathon debut by an American on a record eligible course (2:23:08), and she set an Olympic trials record in the 10,000m on the track (31:09) in 2021, breaking a record that stood for 17 years. This October marks Sisson’s first appearance in the Bank of America Chicago Marathon.

Mantz, known for his front-running style and capacity to handle pain (referred to as the “Mantz pain chamber”), made a splash on the collegiate level, winning the NCAA Division I Cross Country championships in 2020 and 2021, and earning his first U.S. title in the half marathon in 2021. Mantz’s time in the half marathon, 1:00:55, ranks him ninth on the all-time American list of half marathon performances. Mantz, an exciting newcomer to welcome to the marathon distance, could conquer the American marathon debut record, 2:07:56, set in 2019. Mantz is coached by 1994 Chicago Marathon runner-up, Ed Eyestone.

The Elite Fields
In addition to Sisson, Celestine Chepchirchir (KEN), Vivian Kiplagat (KEN) and Haven Hailu (ETH) are among some of this year’s elite women hoping to prevent a repeat victory from Chepngetich. Chepchirchir, winner of the 2019 Sanlam Cape Town Marathon, enters this year’s race fresh off a personal best, 2:20:10, set at the Seoul International Marathon. The Bank of America Chicago Marathon marks her Abbott World Marathon Major (AbbottWMM) debut. Kiplagat, winner of the 2022 Milan Marathon in a personal best, 2:20:18, ran valiantly in Chicago last year, attempting to stay on Chepngetich’s heels before fading to fifth place. Like Chepchirchir, Hailu will be making her first appearance in an AbbottWMM. Hailu made her marathon debut in 2020, set a personal best, 2:20:19, in 2021 to take third in Amsterdam, and claimed her first marathon victory in Rotterdam this past April.

Laura Thweatt (USA), Sarah Sellers (USA) and Sara Vaughn (USA) lead a strong delegation of American women. Thweatt holds a marathon personal best of 2:25:38, and finished eighth in both Chicago (2019) and New York (2021). Sellers initially turned heads in 2018 when she finished second in the Boston Marathon while running from the open field. Sellers smashed her PR to finish second at this spring’s Grandma’s Marathon in 2:25:43. Vaughn, a versatile runner who started her career on the track as a 1500m runner, made her marathon debut in 2021, winning the California International Marathon in 2:26:53. Vaughn’s time stands out as the fifth fastest debut ever by an American woman.

The women’s field also includes Diane Nukuri (USA), Ursula Sanchez (MEX), Carrie Verdon (USA) and local favorite Kristen Heckert (USA).

In the men’s competition, Tura will be chased to the line by compatriots Herpasa Negasa (ETH), Dawit Wolde (ETH), Asrar Abderehman (ETH), Ugandan Olympian Stephen Kissa and Kenyan Benson Kipruto.

Negasa had a career breakthrough in 2019 when he subtracted nearly six minutes from his marathon PR in Dubai to run 2:03:40. He comes to Chicago after a strong second place performance in Seoul, clocking 2:04:49. Wolde initially made a name for himself as a junior competitor on the track. His transition to the roads started in 2014, and he boasts a marathon personal best of 2:04:27, set in 2021 to finish third in Rotterdam. Abderehman made headlines in February when he broke the course record at the Zurich Seville Marathon, taking three minutes off his PR to run 2:04:43. Chicago marks his first appearance in an AbbottWMM.

Kissa, a 2020 Olympian in the 10,000m, stands out as an exciting athlete to watch. He brings years of track speed to the road, recently debuting in the marathon in 2:04:48. In addition to the Olympic Games, he also represented Uganda at the World Championships Half Marathon. The Chicago Marathon marks his first time racing in the United States and his first time racing in an AbbottWMM. Kipruto’s 2:05:13 personal best may not be the fastest in the field, but he has performed well at the marathon distance, winning the Boston and Prague Marathons in 2021 and finishing third in Boston this April. He also finished seventh in London in 2020 and won the Toronto Marathon in 2018.

The men’s field also includes sixth place finisher in 2021 and local elite Colin Mickow, Hiroto Fujimagari (JPN), John Korir (KEN), Frank Lara (USA) and making his debut, Patrick Tiernan (AUS).

Full Elite Men’s Field
Herpasa Negasa 2:03:40 (Dubai, 2019) ETH
Dawit Wolde 2:04:27 (Rotterdam, 2021) ETH
Seifu Tura 2:04:29 (Milan, 2021) ETH
Asrar Abderehman 2:04:43 (Seville, 2022) ETH
Stephen Kissa 2:04:48 (Hamburg, 2022) UGA
Benson Kipruto 2:05:13 (Toronto, 2019) KEN
Eric Kiptanui 2:05:47 (Siena, 2021) KEN
Kyohei Hosoya 2:06:35 (Otsu, 2021) JPN
Hamza Sahli 2:07:15 (Seoul, 2022) MAR
Ichitaka Yamashita 2:07:42 (Otsu, 2022) JPN
Hiroto Fujimagari 2:08:20 (Oita, 2022) JPN
Kiyoshi Koga 2:08:30 (Oita, 2022) JPN
Riki Nakanishi 2:08:51 (Oita, 2022) JPN
John Korir 2:09:08 (Los Angeles, 2022) KEN
Matt McDonald 2:10:35 (Boston, 2022) USA
Jerrell Mock 2:10:37 (Chicago, 2019) USA
Jeisson Suarez 2:10:51 (Enschede, 2021) COL
Colin Mickow 2:11:22 (Chandler, 2020) USA
Frank Lara 2:11:32 (Houston, 2022) USA
Reid Buchanan 2:11:38 (Chandler, 2020) USA
Wilkerson Given 2:11:44 (Chicago, 2019) USA
Tyler McCandless 2:12:28 (Sacramento, 2017) USA
Turner Wiley 2:13:40 (Duluth, 2022) USA
Nico Montanez 2:13:55 (Chicago, 2021) USA
Alan Peterson 2:14:45 (Chandler, 2020) USA
Dan Kremske 2:14:53 (Chicago, 2019) USA
Zach Panning 2:15:04 (Chicago, 2021) USA
Paul Hogan 2:15:08 (Boston, 2022) USA
Clayton Young 2:16:07 (Chicago, 2021) USA
Garret Lee 2:18:21 (Duluth, 2021) USA
Abdulmuhsen Alali 2:19:17 (Mesa, 2022) KUW
Chase Weaverling 2:20:58 (Atlanta, 2020) USA
John Dressel Debut USA
JP Flavin Debut USA
Conner Mantz Debut USA
Patrick Tiernan Debut AUS

Full Elite Women’s Field
Ruth Chepngetich 2:17:08 (Dubai, 2019) KEN
Celestine Chepchirchir 2:20:10 (Seoul, 2022) KEN
Vivian Kiplagat 2:20:18 (Milan, 2022) KEN
Haven Hailu Desse 2:20:19 (Amsterdam, 2021) ETH
Emily Sisson 2:23:08 (London, 2019) USA
Laura Thweatt 2:25:38 (London, 2017) USA
Sarah Sellers 2:25:43 (Duluth, 2022) USA
Sara Vaughn 2:26:53 (Sacramento, 2021) USA
Susanna Sullivan 2:26:56 (Duluth, 2022) USA
Diane Nukuri 2:27:50 (London, 2015) USA
Krista Duchene 2:28:32 (Toronto, 2013) CAN
Maggie Montoya 2:29:08 (Houston, 2022) USA
Ursula Sanchez 2:29:11 (Chandler, 2020) MEX
Carrie Verdon 2:31:51 (Chicago, 2021) USA
Rachel Hannah 2:32:09 (Houston, 2016) CAN
Brittney Feivor 2:32:41 (Houston, 2022) USA
Meriah Earle 2:34:19 (Duluth, 2022) USA
Marie-Ange Brumelot 2:35:41 (Duluth, 2022) FRA
Kristen Heckert 2:38:54 (Chicago, 2017) USA
Olivia Pratt 2:40:42 (Chicago, 2021) USA
Jessie Cardin Debut USA
Makena Morley Debut USA

Quick Take By LetsRun.com: The fields are similar in quality to last year.

Last year, with all of the Abbott World Marathon majors taking place in the fall due to Covid, some of the fields were quite thin as there are only so many elite marathoners to go around. This year, London is still in the fall but Boston went back to the spring and we’ve already seen an increase in field quality for New York earlier this week. Chicago doesn’t appear a whole lot stronger, however. Here is how the PBs of the elites stack up from last year to this for the men.

Sub-2:03 Sub-2:04 Sub-2:05 Sub-2:06 Sub-2:07
2022 1 5 7 8
2021 1 5 7 9

For the women, there are double the number of sub-2:21 women which is good but it’s pretty darn thin.

Sub-2:19 Sub-2:20 Sub-2:21 Sub-2:22 Sub-2:23 Sub-2:24 Sub-2:25
2022 1 1 4 4 4 5 5
2021 1 1 2 3 4 4 5

Quick Take: Where is Keira D’Amato?

We noticed one elite not in the Chicago or New York fields is American record holder Keira D’Amato. We are going to reach out to her and see what her plans are.

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