BOSTON, Jan. 10, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- John Hancock and the Boston Athletic Association (B.A.A.) today announced the elite international fields for
the 123rd Boston Marathon on April 15. Complete field lists follow.
Nine Boston Marathon open champions and seven Boston Marathon wheelchair champions will challenge their respective fields to
seek the coveted olive wreath. Combined, the field has won more than 200 international marathons and includes Olympic
and Paralympic medalists, IAAF World Championships Marathon medalists and Abbott World Marathon Majors champions.
"John Hancock as principal sponsor of the Boston Marathon has recruited the world's best
runners to race on this historic course for over three decades," said John Hancock Chief
Marketing Officer Barbara Goose. "This year we welcome back 16 returning champions to challenge an
accomplished international field of Olympians, World Champions and Abbott World Marathon Majors winners. We recognize the
commitment and hard work it takes to compete at the highest level of the sport and look forward to another compelling race in
Boston."
"Each year, a collection of the world's best runners descends on the start in Hopkinton with
the goal of becoming Boston Marathon champion," said B.A.A. CEO Tom Grilk. "John Hancock has once again assembled an Elite Team that will ensure a fiercely competitive race. From
decorated champions to Olympians, Paralympians and national record holders, we are excited to watch another chapter of Boston
Marathon history unfold on Patriots' Day."
Men's Field Summary
The field's success in strategic and tactical championship style racing will prove critical as they run the world's most
historic marathon course from Hopkinton to Boston.
Leading a formidable field of 29 elite open men are: 2018 Boston winner Yuki Kawauchi of
Japan; 2017 Boston and 2017 IAAF World Marathon Champion Geoffrey
Kirui of Kenya; two-time Boston champion and 2018
TCS New York City Marathon champion Lelisa Desisa of
Ethiopia; 2016 Boston victor Lemi Berhanu of Ethiopia; and 2012 Boston champion Wesley Korir of Kenya.
Chasing the champions are 2:04 marathoners Lawrence Cherono of Kenya, a two-time
Amsterdam, two-time Honolulu, Seville and Prague champion; Sisay
Lemma of Ethiopia, winner of Carpi, Warsaw,
Vienna, Frankfurt and Ljubljana; and Solomon Deksisa of Ethiopia, winner of Mumbai and Hamburg.
The Japanese pair of Hiroto Inoue and Hayato Sonoda also join
the team. Inoue won the 2018 Asian Games Marathon and Sonoda was runner up in Beppu-Oita last year.
From Eritrea, 2015 World Championships Marathon gold medalist and 2016 TCS New York City
champion Ghirmay Ghebreslassie will be in contention as will countryman Zersenay
Tadese, a four-time Olympian, former world record holder in the half marathon and winner of six World Championships
titles.
The previously announced American team includes third place finisher last year, Shadrack
Biwott; Olympians Dathan Ritzenhein, Abdi
Abdirahman, and Jared Ward; as well as Jeffery
Eggleston, Elkanah Kibet, Timothy Ritchie, Scott Fauble, Aaron Braun and Brian
Shrader.
Among those making their Boston debuts are several men who ran their personal best times in
2018: Rotterdam winner Kenneth Kipkemoi of Kenya;
two-time Toronto champion Benson Kipruto of Kenya; and
Beirut winner Mohamed Reda El Aaraby of Morocco.
Also joining the international field is British Olympian Scott Overall and 2:06 Kenyan
marathoners Felix Kandie, the Athens and Prague champion; Festus Talam, a two-time Eindhoven winner; and
Philemon Rono, a two-time Toronto champion.
In the men's wheelchair division, previously announced defending champion Marcel Hug of
Switzerland looks to earn his fifth wheelchair title and is part of a stellar international
field featuring 10-time winner Ernst van Dyk of South
Africa. In his 19 Boston appearances, van Dyk has placed on the podium all but two times, including ten wins, five
runner-ups, and a pair of third place finishes.
Joining Hug and van Dyk are fellow Boston winners Masazumi
Soejima and Hiroyuki Yamamoto (both from Japan)
as well as former course record holder Joshua Cassidy (Canada). British stars David Weir and Johnboy Smith; Japan's Hiroki
Nishida, Ryota Yoshida, and Kota Hokinoue; Canada's Tristan Smyth; and Ireland's
Patrick Monahan round out the international men's field.
American men's contenders Daniel Romanchuk, Joshua George,
Aaron Pike, James Senbeta, Krige
Schabort, and Brian Siemann are all entered as well. Romanchuk won the 2018 TCS New
York City and Bank of America Chicago Marathons.
Women's Field Summary
On the women's elite team, John Hancock has assembled an accomplished field of 22 elite open
women, 11 of whom have personal best times under 2:23:00.
Leading the way is 2018 winner Desiree Linden of the United
States; two-time World Championships Marathon gold medalist, three-time Abbott World Marathon Majors series winner and
2017 Boston champion Edna Kiplagat of Kenya; 2015 Boston,
Prague and Las Vegas winner Caroline
Rotich of Kenya; and 2012 Boston, Hamburg,
Toronto, Torino and Singapore
winner Sharon Cherop of Kenya.
Challenging the Boston champions are 2:19 Ethiopian marathoners Aselefech Mergia, a London champion and three-time winner of Dubai; Mare Dibaba, the 2015 World Championships Marathon gold medalist, 2016 Olympic Marathon bronze
medalist, Bank of
America Chicago Marathon champion, Beijing and two-time Xiamen winner; and Worknesh Degefa, a Dubai champion.
Last year's second and third place finishers, Sarah Sellers of the United States and Krista DuChene of Canada return to improve their positions. They join Olympic and World Championships silver medalist in the
10,000m, Sally Kipyego of the United States; and previously
announced U.S. elites: Jordan Hasay, third at Boston in
2017; Sara Hall, 2017 national champion; Lindsay
Flanagan; Becky Wade; and Sarah Crouch.
Joining them will be a trio of Ethiopians: two-time Olympian Meskerem Assefa, winner of
Rotterdam and Frankfurt; Olympian Belaynesh Oljira, 2015
World Championships 10,000m bronze medalist; and Marta Megra,
a Toronto champion.
Rounding out the field and new to the Boston course are Olympian Betsy Saina of Kenya, a Paris champion;
Olympian Eva Vrabcova of the Czech Republic, the bronze medalist in the 2018 European
Marathon Championships; Olympian Alyson Dixon of Great
Britain; and making her marathon debut is Mary Wacera of Kenya, the World
Championships Half Marathon silver medalist in 2014 and bronze medalist in 2016.
In the women's wheelchair division, Manuela Schar of Switzerland returns to the scene of her course record and world best performance. Schar timed a blistering
1:28:17 from Hopkinton to Boston in 2017, becoming the first
woman ever to dip under the 1:30 barrier in Boston. She'll be joined on the starting line by
compatriot Sandra Graf; Madison De Rozario and
Eliza Ault-Connell of Australia; Margriet Van Den Broek of the Netherlands; Diane Roy of Canada; and Aline de
Rocha of Brazil.
Five-time winner and defending champion Tatyana McFadden fronts the American charge,
leading Susannah Scaroni, Amanda McGrory, Arielle Rausin, Katrina Gerhard, and Michelle
Wheeler.
2019 Boston Marathon John Hancock Elite Men's Open Field
Name
|
Country
|
PB
|
|
Name
|
Country
|
PB
|
Lawrence Cherono
|
Kenya
|
2:04:06 (Amsterdam, 2018)
|
|
Yuki Kawauchi
|
Japan
|
2:08:14 (Seoul, 2013)
|
Sisay Lemma
|
Ethiopia
|
2:04:08 (Dubai, 2018)
|
|
Zersenay Tadese
|
Eritrea
|
2:08:46 (Berlin, 2018)
|
Lemi Berhanu
|
Ethiopia
|
2:04:33 (Dubai, 2016)
|
|
Abdi Abdirahman
|
USA
|
2:08:56 (Chicago, 2006)
|
Solomon Deksisa
|
Ethiopia
|
2:04:40 (Amsterdam, 2018)
|
|
Mohamed Reda
|
Morocco
|
2:09:16 (Chicago, 2018)
|
Lelisa Desisa
|
Ethiopia
|
2:04:45 (Dubai, 2013)
|
|
El Aaraby
|
Kenneth Kipkemoi
|
Kenya
|
2:05:44 (Rotterdam, 2018)
|
|
Hayato Sonoda
|
Japan
|
2:09:34 (Oita, 2018)
|
Felix Kandie
|
Kenya
|
2:06:03 (Seoul, 2017)
|
|
Scott Overall
|
Great Britain
|
2:10:55 (Berlin, 2011)
|
Geoffrey Kirui
|
Kenya
|
2:06:27 (Amsterdam, 2016)
|
|
Jeffrey Eggleston
|
USA
|
2:10:52 (Gold Coast, 2014)
|
Festus Talam
|
Kenya
|
2:06:13 (Eindhoven, 2017)
|
|
Jared Ward
|
USA
|
2:11:30 (Rio de Janeiro, 2016)
|
Wesley Korir
|
Kenya
|
2:06:13 (Chicago, 2012)
|
|
Elkanah Kibet
|
USA
|
2:11:31 (Chicago, 2015)
|
Philemon Rono
|
Kenya
|
2:06:52 (Toronto, 2017)
|
|
Timothy Ritchie
|
USA
|
2:11:56 (Sacramento, 2017)
|
Hiroto Inoue
|
Japan
|
2:06:54 (Tokyo, 2018)
|
|
Shadrack Biwott
|
USA
|
2:12:01 (New York City, 2016)
|
Benson Kipruto
|
Kenya
|
2:07:11 (Seoul, 2018)
|
|
Scott Fauble
|
USA
|
2:12:28 (New York City, 2018)
|
Ghirmay Ghebreslassie
|
Eritrea
|
2:07:46 (London, 2016)
|
|
Aaron Braun
|
USA
|
2:12:54 (Houston, 2015)
|
Dathan Ritzenhein
|
USA
|
2:07:47 (Chicago, 2012)
|
|
Brian Shrader
|
USA
|
2:13:31 (Sacramento, 2018)
|
2019 Boston Marathon John Hancock Elite Women's Open Field
Name
|
Country
|
PB
|
Aselefech Mergia
|
Ethiopia
|
2:19:31 (Dubai, 2012)
|
Edna Kiplagat
|
Kenya
|
2:19:50 (London, 2012)
|
Mare Dibaba
|
Ethiopia
|
2:19:52 (Dubai, 2012)
|
Worknesh Degefa
|
Ethiopia
|
2:19:53 (Dubai, 2018)
|
Meskerem Assefa
|
Ethiopia
|
2:20:36 (Frankfurt, 2018)
|
Jordan Hasay
|
USA
|
2:20:57 (Chicago, 2017)
|
Belaynesh Oljira
|
Ethiopia
|
2:21:53 (Frankfurt, 2018)
|
Sharon Cherop
|
Kenya
|
2:22:28 (Berlin, 2013)
|
Desiree Linden
|
USA
|
2:22:38 (Boston, 2011)
|
Marta Megra
|
Ethiopia
|
2:22:35 (Toronto, 2018)
|
Betsy Saina
|
Kenya
|
2:22:56 (Paris, 2018)
|
Caroline Rotich
|
Kenya
|
2:23:22 (Chicago, 2012)
|
Sara Hall
|
USA
|
2:26:20 (Ottawa, 2018)
|
Eva Vrabcova
|
Czech Republic
|
2:26:31 (Berlin, 2018) NR
|
Sally Kipyego
|
USA
|
2:28:01 (New York City, 2016)
|
Krista Duchene
|
Canada
|
2:28:32 (Toronto, 2013)
|
Alyson Dixon
|
Great Britain
|
2:29:06 (London, 2017)
|
Lindsay Flanagan
|
USA
|
2:29:25 (Frankfurt, 2018)
|
Becky Wade
|
USA
|
2:30:41 (Sacramento, 2013)
|
Sarah Crouch
|
USA
|
2:32:27 (Chicago, 2018)
|
Sarah Sellers
|
USA
|
2:36:37 (New York City, 2018)
|
Mary Wacera
|
Kenya
|
66:29 (Houston, 2016)
|
2019 Boston Marathon Elite Men's Wheelchair Field
Marcel Hug
|
Switzerland
|
1:18:04 (Boston, 2017)
|
Ernst van Dyk
|
South Africa
|
1:18:04 (Boston, 2017)
|
Josh Cassidy
|
Canada
|
1:18:25 (Boston, 2012)
|
Masazumi Soejima
|
Japan
|
1:18:50 (Boston, 2011)
|
Hiroyuki Yamamoto
|
Japan
|
1:19:32 (Boston, 2017)
|
Hiroki Nishida
|
Japan
|
1:20:28 (Boston, 2017)
|
Kota Hokinoue
|
Japan
|
1:20:54 (Seoul, 2013)
|
Joshua George
|
USA
|
1:21:47 (Boston, 2017)
|
Aaron Pike
|
USA
|
1:22:09 (Boston, 2017)
|
Ryota Yoshida
|
Japan
|
1:23:18 (Boston, 2017)
|
Krige Schabort
|
USA
|
1:23:44 (Boston, 2012)
|
James Senbeta
|
USA
|
1:24:27 (Boston, 2017)
|
David Weir
|
Great Britain
|
1:26:17 (Boston, 2016)
|
Daniel Romanchuk
|
USA
|
1:26:26 (Boston, 2017)
|
Brian Siemann
|
USA
|
1:26:46 (Boston, 2017)
|
Patrick Monahan
|
Ireland
|
1:29:10 (Seoul, 2017)
|
Johnboy Smith
|
Great Britain
|
1:29:44 (Berlin, 2018)
|
Tristan Smyth
|
Canada
|
1:29:53 (Berlin, 2018)
|
2019 Boston Marathon Elite Women's Wheelchair Field
Manuela Schar
|
Switzerland
|
1:28:17 (Boston, 2017)
|
Amanda McGrory
|
USA
|
1:33:13 (Boston, 2017)
|
Susannah Scaroni
|
USA
|
1:33:17 (Boston, 2017)
|
Tatyana McFadden
|
USA
|
1:35:05 (Boston, 2017)
|
Sandra Graf
|
Switzerland
|
1:35:44 (Padua, 2008)
|
Margriet Van Den Broek
|
Netherlands
|
1:38:33 (Boston, 2017)
|
Madison De Rozario
|
Australia
|
1:39:22 (Chicago, 2017)
|
Katrina Gerhard
|
USA
|
1:40:34 (Boston, 2017)
|
Diane Roy
|
Canada
|
1:40:37 (Beijing, 2008)
|
Arielle Rausin
|
USA
|
1:41:26 (Boston, 2017)
|
Aline de Rocha
|
Brazil
|
1:41:40 (Duluth, 16)
|
Eliza Ault-Connell
|
Australia
|
1:44:13 (Gold Coast, 2018)
|
Michelle Wheeler
|
USA
|
1:45:22 (Oita, 2018)
|
The 2019 Boston Marathon marks the 34th year of John Hancock's landmark sponsorship of the
legendary race. For additional information about the elite athlete program and sponsorship, please visit www.johnhancock.com/bostonmarathon/sportspartnerships.html or follow us @jhboston26 and @johnhancockUSA
on Twitter.
About John Hancock and Manulife
John Hancock is a division of Manulife Financial Corporation, a leading international financial
services group that helps people make their decisions easier and lives better. We operate primarily as John Hancock in the United States, and Manulife elsewhere. We provide
financial advice, insurance and wealth and asset management solutions for individuals, groups and institutions. Assets under
management and administration by Manulife and its subsidiaries were over CAD$1.1 trillion
(US$863 billion) as of September 30, 2018. Manulife Financial
Corporation trades as MFC on the TSX, NYSE, and PSE, and under 945 on the SEHK. Manulife can be found at manulife.com.
One of the largest life insurers in the United States, John
Hancock supports approximately 10 million Americans with a broad range of financial products, including life insurance, annuities, investments, 401(k) plans, and college savings plans. Additional information about John Hancock may be found
at johnhancock.com.
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