Sports
Runners From Orland Park Complete 2024 Chicago Marathon
Orland Park's runners finished strong in the 2024 marathon, with the race seeing a record number of participants and broken records.

ORLAND PARK, IL â A total of 49 runners from Orland Park successfully completed the 2024 Bank of America Chicago Marathon on Sunday, joining more than 50,000 participants who crossed the finish line in Grant Park.
This yearâs marathon, the 46th edition of the event, solidified Chicagoâs reputation as a record-setting race.
The race, which saw a world record broken in the womenâs division, attracted runners from all 50 states and over 100 countries.
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The 26.2-mile race started and ended in Grant Park, with runners traversing 29 of Chicagoâs neighborhoods.
This yearâs event set also a record with more than 50,000 finishers, the largest field in race history, and was supported by over 1.7 million spectators lining the streets.
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Local athletes competed alongside elite runners from around the globe, including Ruth Chepngetich of Kenya, who smashed the womenâs world record with a time of 2:09:56, and John Korir of Kenya, who ran the second-fastest menâs time in the eventâs history at 2:02:44.
Here are the top local participants from Orland Park and their finishing times:
Top 10 Orland Park Women
- Amanda Tracy: 3 hours, 9 minutes, 48 seconds, 20â24 division
- Julia Ruzevich: 3:46:07, 25â29 division
- Elizabeth Lampasona: 3:47:11, 25â29 division
- Karen Clifton: 3:50:54, 50â54 division
- Katherine Somerfield: 3:51:13, 50â54 division
- Meghan Preston: 3:52:33, 40â44 division
- Arianna Weber: 4:02:32, 30â34 division
- Hannah Lehnhardt: 4:11:47, 20â24 division
- Sara Heinking: 4:31:54, 30â34 division
- Valeria Lazo: 4:38:02, 25â29 division
Top 10 Orland Park Men
- Jose Torres: 3:20:57, 55â59 division
- Krzysztof Wasik: 3:29:34, 50â54 division
- John Hanley: 3:49:14, 65â69 division
- Hugh Doyle: 3:58:17, 50-54 division
- Anthony Marotta: 4:11:41, 25â29 division
- William Hoffman: 4:34:36, 55â59 division
- Edwin Zavala: 4:38:32, 30â34 division
- Aneta Swistro: 4:42:28, 30â34 division
- Bradley Villegas: 4:44:54, 45â49 division
- Paul Hunger: 4:45:25, 55â59 division
Chepngetichâs 2:09:56 finish made her the first woman to break the 2:10 barrier, shattering the previous world record of 2:11:53 set in Berlin in 2023 by Tigst Assefa.
After the race, Chepngetich said setting a new record Sunday was part of her plan.
âI was not worried [about the pace]," she said. "I was feeling good. I decided we will go with that pace. My plan was 2:09 or 2:10. The world record is not easy. You need focus and determination.â
Chepngetich's performance in Chicago now gives her the first, fourth, and fifth fastest times ever run in the marathon.
Seven and a half minutes after Chepngetichâs record-breaking finish, Sutume Kebede of Ethiopia crossed the line in 2:17:32, and Irine Cheptai of Kenya finished third in 2:17:51. American Susanna Sullivan was the top American finisher on the womenâs side, placing seventh in 2:21:56.
On the menâs side, Korir pulled away from the pack between the 30- and 35-kilometer marks â about 20 miles in â running back-to-back miles in 4:25 and 4:22 to secure his victory in 2:02:44, a personal best and the second-fastest time ever in Chicago.
âI knew I was in 2:02 shape," Korir said after the race. "I knew I wanted to close the season with my PB [personal best], and I did. My training was good and when I was training, my coach told me, âYou can run 2:02.â I believed him.â
Huseydin Mohamed Esa of Ethiopia finished second with a time of 2:04:39, and Amos Kipruto of Kenya rounded out the top three at 2:04:50. Fresno native CJ Albertson was the top American male finisher, placing seventh with a time of 2:08:17, setting a personal best by more than 90 seconds.
In the wheelchair division, five-time champion Marcel Hug of Switzerland, known as the "silver bullet," defended his men's title, finishing the race in 1:25:54.
"It was a tactical race," Hug said after a tight finish with Daniel Romanchuk. "I attacked countless times and then we had a finish sprint and luckily I won."
And Catherine Debrunner of Switzerland broke her own 2023 course record in the womenâs wheelchair race, finishing in 1:36:12, far ahead of the competition, after Susannah Scaroni of the United States had to drop out due to a flat tire.
âI was super excited to come back here to Chicago. It was just really unfortunate that Susannah got a flat tire really early," Debrunne said. "There was a lot of wind and of course, it's always tough when you do all yourself. And I struggled quite often, so I was really happy when I was in the finish."
The 47th running of the Bank of America Chicago Marathon is scheduled for Oct. 12, 2025. The four application period opens on Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2024.
The Associated Press and Patch staff contributed reporting.
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