John Hancock and the Boston Athletic Association (B.A.A.) today announced the elite international fields for the 124th Boston Marathon on April 20. Complete field lists follow.
The 2020 Boston Marathon elite field has won more than 230 international marathons and includes 16 Boston Marathon champions, Olympic and Paralympic medalists, World Record holders, World Champions and Abbott World Marathon Majors Series champions. These accomplished athletes will challenge their respective fields to seek the coveted olive wreath at the world’s most historic marathon.
2020 Boston Marathon Elite Team Video
“John Hancock is proud to announce our accomplished international team in our 35th year as principal sponsor of the Boston Marathon,” said Barbara Goose, Chief Marketing Officer at John Hancock. “Over the years we’ve recruited more than 900 of the world’s best runners from 48 countries and this year’s team is one of the most accomplished. We’ll be cheering for these athletes and all participants as they run from Hopkinton to Boston in April.”
“The Boston Marathon is proud to welcome the world’s best athletes each April, and this year’s race is no exception,” said Tom Grilk, CEO of the B.A.A. “With Olympic and Paralympic medalists, national record holders, and rising stars, the race toward the finish line will be both fierce and exciting. We look forward to crowning our 2020 champions on what will be another memorable Patriots’ Day.”
Women’s Field Summary
John Hancock has assembled a talented field of seasoned and rising elites with 12 women holding personal best times under 2:23 and five under 2:20.
Leading the way are five Boston Marathon champions: Worknesh Degefa, the defending Boston champion and Ethiopian marathon national record holder; two-time Olympian Desiree Linden of the United States, who won Boston in 2018; two-time World Championships gold medalist and three-time Abbott World Marathon Majors Series winner Edna Kiplagat of Kenya, who won Boston in 2017; 2015 Boston Marathon, Prague, and Las Vegas champion Caroline Rotich, also of Kenya; and Ethiopian Buzunesh Deba, the 2014 Boston Marathon course record holder.
Challengers for the title include Mare Dibaba of Ethiopia, who returns in excellent fitness having recently run 2:20:21 to place runner-up at the 2019 BMW Berlin Marathon. Dibaba has finished as high as second in Boston and is the 2015 World Athletics Championships Marathon gold medalist, 2016 Olympic Marathon bronze medalist, and 2014 Bank of America Chicago Marathon winner.
Olympian Rose Chelimo of Bahrain is on the team, having claimed both a silver and gold medal at the last two World Athletics Championships Marathons (2019 and 2017). Chelimo was eighth at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympic Marathon.
Three-time Olympian Gelete Burka, a gold, silver, and bronze medalist at World Athletics Championships on the track and in cross country will lead a trio of Ethiopians: two-time Olympian Meskerem Assefa, winner of the Rotterdam and Frankfurt Marathons; Yebrgual Melese, who has earned wins in Shanghai, Prague and Houston; and three-time Rome Marathon champion Rahma Tusa.
Returning to the team with top finishes in previous Boston Marathons are Canadian Olympian Krista Duchene, third in 2018; World Athletics Half Marathon silver and bronze medalist Mary Ngugi of Kenya, seventh in 2019, and Kate Landau of the United States, 13th and top masters finisher last year.
The Kenyan trio of Magdalyne Masai, Olympian Besu Sado and Caroline Chepkoech Kipkirui will make their Boston debuts, as will Ethiopian Haftamnesh Tesfay. Masai won in Toronto last fall and was runner-up in Hamburg; Sado made her marathon debut in Amsterdam last October and finished fourth in 2:21:03; Kipkirui is a two-time Falmouth Road Race winner and the former world-record-holder in the 5K (14:48 en-route to a 30:19 win at the 2018 Prague 10K); and Tesfaye ran 2:20:13 in her 2018 marathon debut in Dubai.
Four-time TCS New York City and Virgin Money London winner Mary Keitany of Kenya had accepted an invitation to run Boston, but she is currently sidelined with a back injury.
In the women’s wheelchair division, Manuela Schär of Switzerland returns as defending champion, having won last year’s race in 1:34:19. A two-time Boston winner, Schär’s first victory came in course record fashion when she timed a world best of 1:28:17 from Hopkinton to Boston in 2017, becoming the first woman ever to dip under the 1:30 barrier. She’ll be joined on the starting line by five-time Boston champion Tatyana McFadden of the United States and Madison De Rozario of Australia; the pair finished second and third in Boston a year ago. McFadden has earned 17 Paralympic medals over the course of her career.
Americans Susannah Scaroni, Amanda McGrory, and Massachusetts native Katrina Gerhard all have personal bests under 1:37, while Australia’s Eliza Ault-Connell looks to podium for the first time. McFadden and Scaroni have already secured their positions on Team USA for the 2020 Paralympic Games in Tokyo.
Men’s Field Summary
With 10 men holding personal best times under 2:07, and most having competed against each other in championship events, the race up front should prove competitive on the challenging Boston course.
Leading the elite men are four Boston Marathon champions from the last five years: Lawrence Cherono of Kenya, the reigning Boston and Bank of America Chicago Marathon champion; Lelisa Desisa of Ethiopia, a two-time Boston winner, TCS New York City champion and the 2019 World Athletics Championships Marathon gold medalist; Yuki Kawauchi of Japan, the 2018 Boston victor; and 2017 World Athletics Championships gold medalist Geoffrey Kirui of Kenya.
Chasing the champions is 2012 Olympic Marathon champion and 2013 World Athletics Championships gold medalist Stephen Kiprotich of Uganda. Also in the hunt are two athletes looking for their first Abbott World Marathon Majors win: Albert Korir of Kenya, second at the TCS New York City Marathon last fall, and Ethiopian Dejene Debela, runner-up to Cherono by one second at the Bank of America Chicago Marathon.
Returning to Boston are Kenyans Kenneth Kipkemoi, third at Boston last year and winner of the Rotterdam Marathon; Philemon Rono, three-time Toronto champion; and Benson Kipruto, also a past Toronto winner. Felix Kandie also returns after finishing fourth in Boston last year.
The Japanese pair of Kentaro Nakamoto and Shoya Osaki also join the John Hancock Elite Team. Nakamoto has represented his country on three World Championships teams and was sixth at the 2012 Olympic Marathon.
Newcomers to the course include 2019 Frankfurt winner Fikre Bekele of Ethiopia and two-time Eritrean Olympian and junior stand-out Abrar Osman. Making his marathon debut is Jemal Yimer, the Ethiopian national record holder in the half marathon (58:33).
Also joining the John Hancock Elite Team are Olympians Dylan Wykes of Canada and Li Zicheng of China, as well as Stephen Scullion of Ireland and Fernando Cabada of the United States.
In the men’s wheelchair division, previously announced defending champion Daniel Romanchuk of the United States looks to earn his second wheelchair title. Romanchuk, 21, became the youngest Boston Marathon wheelchair champion in history and is the first American since 1993 to hold the men’s wheelchair title in Boston. Four-time champion Marcel Hug of Switzerland and 10-time winner Ernst van Dyk of South Africa will both challenge Romanchuk, the reigning Abbott World Marathon Majors Series champion.
Joining Romanchuk, Hug, and van Dyk are fellow Boston winners Masazumi Soejima of Japan as well as former course-record-holder Joshua Cassidy (Canada). British star David Weir, Spain’s Jorge Madera, as well as Japan’s Hiroki Nishida and Kota Hokinoue all are in search of their first Boston win.
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