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Startlists, results and link to live stream of the resultater og live stream from New York Marathon, Sunday November 6 2022.
New York Marathon 2022
51th editon
Date
November 6 2022
Place
New York City – USA
Distance
Marathon – 42 195 meters/26,2 miles
Highlights
Weather
Results New York Marathon (live)
Top 10 Men
1. Evans Chebet (KEN) – 2:08:41
2. Shura Kitata (ETH) – 2:08:54
3. Abdi Nageeye (NED) – 2:10:31
4. Mohamed El Aaraby (MAR) – 2:11:00
5. Suguru Osako (JPN) – 2:11:31
6. Tetsuya Yoroizaka (JPN) – 2:12:12
7. Albert Korir (KEN) – 2:13:27
8. Daniele Meucci (ITA) – 2:13:29
9. Scott Fauble (USA) – 2:13:35
10. Reed Fischer (USA) – 2:15:23
Top 10 Women
1. Sharon Lokedi (KEN) – 2:23:23
2. Lonah Salpeter (ISR) – 2:23:30
3. Gotytom Gebreslase (ETH) – 2:23:39
4. Edna Kiplagat (KEN) – 2:24:16
5. Viola Cheptoo (KEN) – 2:25:34
6. Hellen Obiri (KEN) – 2:25:49
7. Aliphine Tukiamuk (USA) – 2:26:18
8. Emma Bates (USA) – 2:26:53
9. Jessia Stenson (AUS) – 2:27:27
10. Nell Rojas (USA) – 2:28:32
Best Americans – Men
1. Scott Fauble 2:13:35
2. Reed Fischer 2:15:23
3. Jared Ward 2:17:09
4. Leonard Korir 2:17:29
5. Matthew Llano 2:20:04
6. Jonas Hampton 2:22:58
7. Edward Mulder 2:23:42
8. Nathan Martin 2:25:27
9. Jeff Thies 2:25:45
10. Shadrack Kipchirchir 2:28:15
Best Americans – Women
1. Aliphine Tuliamuk 2:26:18
2. Emma Bates 2:26:53
3. Nell Rojas 2:28:32
4. Lindsay Flanagan 2:29:28
5. Stephanie Bruce 2:30:34
6. Keira D’Amato 2:31:31
7. Desiree Linden 2:32:37
8. Sarah Pagano 2:35:03
9. Annie Frisbie 2:35:35
10. Molly Grabill 2:39:45
Women Elite
Men Elite
American athletes women
American athletes men
Wheelchair men
Wheelchair women
Startlists:
Start Timeline
8:00 a.m. Professional Wheelchair Division
8:22 a.m. Handcycle Category and Select Athletes with Disabilities
8:40 a.m. Professional Women’s Open Division
9:05 a.m. Professional Men’s Open Division
9:10 a.m. Wave 1
9:45 a.m. Wave 2
10:20 a.m. Wave 3
10:55 a.m. Wave 4
11:30 a.m. Wave 5
New York City Marathon Men’s Elite Field
ATHLETE | AGE | COUNTRY | MARATHON PR |
---|---|---|---|
EVANS CHEBET | 33 | KEN | 2:03:00 |
SHURA KITATA | 26 | ETH | 2:04:49 |
DANIEL DO NASCIMENTO | 24 | BRA | 2:04:51 |
ABDI NAGEEYE | 33 | NED | 2:04:56 |
SUGURU OSAKO | 31 | JPN | 2:05:29 |
GALEN RUPP | 36 | USA | 2:06:07 |
TADESSE ABRAHAM | 40 | SUI | 2:06:38 |
MOHAMED EL AARABY | 32 | MAR | 2:06:55 |
OLIVIER IRABARUTA | 31 | BDI | 2:07:13 |
TETSUYA YOROIZAKA | 32 | JPN | 2:07:55 |
LEONARD KORIR | 35 | USA | 2:07:56 |
ALBERT KORIR | 28 | KEN | 2:08:03 |
GIRMA BEKELE GEBRE | 29 | ETH | 2:08:23 |
SCOTT FAUBLE | 30 | USA | 2:08:52 |
ABDI ABDIRAHMAN | 45 | USA | 2:08:56 |
MARTY HEHIR | 29 | USA | 2:08:59 |
DANIELE MEUCCI | 36 | ITA | 2:09:25 |
JARED WARD | 34 | USA | 2:09:25 |
REED FISCHER | 27 | USA | 2:10:42 |
NATHAN MARTIN | 32 | USA | 2:11:05 |
MATT LLANO | 34 | USA | 2:11:14 |
FRANK FUTSELAAR | 31 | NED | 2:11:30 |
JONAS HAMPTON | 33 | USA | 2:12:10 |
BEN TRUE | 36 | USA | 2:12:53 |
CALEB KERR | 28 | USA | 2:14:50 |
EDWARD MULDER | 29 | USA | 2:16:55 |
SAM GEHA | 26 | USA | 2:17:25 |
BEN TOOMER | 33 | GBR | 2:23:57 |
MATT BAXTER | 27 | NZL | DEBUT |
SHADRACK KIPCHIRCHIR | 33 | USA | DEBUT |
JEFF THIES | 27 | USA | DEBUT |
LUIS PORTO | 27 | PUR | DEBUT |
Women’s Elite Runners
ATHLETE | AGE | COUNTRY | MARATHON PR |
---|---|---|---|
LONAH CHEMTAI SALPETER | 33 | ISR | 2:17:45 |
GOTYTOM GEBRESLASE | 27 | ETH | 2:18:11 |
KEIRA D’AMATO | 38 | USA | 2:19:12 |
EDNA KIPLAGAT | 42 | KEN | 2:19:50 |
DES LINDEN | 39 | USA | 2:22:28 |
MAO UESUGI | 26 | JPN | 2:22:29 |
VIOLA CHEPTOO | 33 | KEN | 2:22:44 |
EMMA BATES | 30 | USA | 2:23:18 |
CAROLINE ROTICH | 38 | KEN | 2:23:22 |
SENBERE TEFERI | 27 | ETH | 2:24:11 |
LINDSAY FLANAGAN | 31 | USA | 2:24:35 |
DAKOTAH LINDWURM | 27 | USA | 2:25:01 |
ELOISE WELLINGS | 39 | AUS | 2:25:10 |
JESSICA STENSON | 35 | AUS | 2:25:15 |
GERDA STEYN | 32 | RSA | 2:25:28 |
NELL ROJAS | 34 | USA | 2:25:57 |
ANNIE FRISBIE | 25 | USA | 2:26:18 |
ALIPHINE TULIAMUK | 33 | USA | 2:26:50 |
STEPHANIE BRUCE | 38 | USA | 2:27:47 |
ROBERTA GRONER | 44 | USA | 2:29:09 |
MOLLY GRABILL | 29 | USA | 2:29:17 |
RUTH VAN DER MEIJDEN | 37 | NED | 2:29:30 |
MAEGAN KRIFCHIN | 34 | USA | 2:30:17 |
MOLLY (CULVER) ROBERTS | 31 | USA | 2:30:20 |
GRACE KAHURA | 29 | KEN | 2:30:32 |
SARAH PAGANO | 31 | USA | 2:33:11 |
KAYLA LAMPE | 29 | USA | 2:38:25 |
EMILY DURGIN | 28 | USA | DEBUT |
SHARON LOKEDI | 28 | KEN | DEBUT |
HELLEN OBIRI | 32 | KEN | DEBUT |
About New York Marathon
Prize money for New York Marathon 2022
Open Division
Prize amounts determined by finish position; amounts are equal for men and women. See eligibility requirements below.*
Place | Amount |
---|---|
1st | $100,000 |
2nd | $60,000 |
3rd | $40,000 |
4th | $25,000 |
5th | $15,000 |
6th | $10,000 |
7th | $7,500 |
8th | $5,000 |
9th | $2,500 |
10th | $2,000 |
USA Division
Prize amounts determined by finish position; amounts are equal for men and women.
Place | Amount |
---|---|
1st | $25,000 |
2nd | $15,000 |
3rd | $10,000 |
4th | $5,000 |
5th | $3,000 |
NYRR Member Division
Prize amounts determined by finish position; amounts are equal for men and women; cumulative with Open Division and USA Division above; see eligibility requirements below.**
Place | Open | Masters (40+) | Teams |
---|---|---|---|
1st | $5,000 | $500 | $1,500 |
2nd | $4,000 | $250 | $1,000 |
3rd | $3,000 | $150 | $500 |
4th | $2,000 | $100 | |
5th | $1,000 |
Masters Division
For athletes 40 years of age or older; prize amounts determined by finish position; equal amounts for men and women; cumulative with Open Division amounts above, if applicable:
Place | Amount |
---|---|
1st | $3,000 |
2nd | $2,000 |
3rd | $1,000 |
Professional Wheelchair Division
Place | Amount |
---|---|
1st | $25,000 |
2nd | $20,000 |
3rd | $15,000 |
4th | $10,000 |
5th | $5,000 |
6th | $2,500 |
Open and Wheelchair Division
INew York Road Runners will pay a $50,000 bonus to the Open Division and/or Wheelchair Division race winners who breaks the existing event record. This bonus is limited to the race winners only. Athlete must break, not tie, the record.
Open Division Men: 2:05:06, Geoffrey Mutai, 2011
Open Division Women: 2:22:31, Margaret Okayo, 2003
Wheelchair Division Men: 1:29:22, Kurt Fearnley, 2006
Wheelchair Division Women: 1:43:04, Tatyana McFadden, 2015
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The New York City Marathon (currently branded TCS New York City Marathon after its headline sponsor) is an annual marathon (42.195 km or 26.219 mi) that courses through the five boroughs of New York City. It is the largest marathon in the world, with 53,627 finishers in 2019 and 98,247 applicants for the 2017 race. Along with the Boston Marathon and Chicago Marathon, it is among the pre-eminent long-distance annual running events in the United States and is one of the World Marathon Majors.
The race is organized by New York Road Runners and has been run every year since 1970, with the exception of 2012, when it was cancelled due to the landfall of Hurricane Sandy, and 2020, when it was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The race is held on the first Sunday of November and attracts professional competitors and amateurs from all over the world. Because of the popularity of the race, participation is chosen largely by a lottery system. Guaranteed entry to the marathon can be gained by satisfying the requirements of the 9+1 program or the 9+$1K program (where NYRR members run in nine sponsored races and either volunteer at another event or donate $1,000 to support NYRR programs for young athletes), having completed 15 or more previous New York Marathons, or meeting time qualification standards. In addition, runners can gain an entry by joining a team to raise funds for one of a number of charities.
History of New York Marathon
The first New York Marathon was held 52 years ago on September 13, 1970, organized by New York Road Runners presidents Fred Lebow and Vincent Chiappetta, with 127 competitors running several loops around the Park Drive of Central Park. Only about 100 spectators watched Gary Muhrcke win the race in 2:31:38. In fact, a total of only 55 runners crossed the finish line.
Over the years, the marathon grew larger and larger. To celebrate the U.S. bicentennial in 1976, city auditor George Spitz proposed that the race traverse all five boroughs. With the support of Manhattan Borough President Percy Sutton, the men convinced Mayor Abraham Beame and, eventually, race director Fred Lebow. The race was a huge success, and what was intended as a one-time celebration, became the annual course.
Dick Traum became the first person to complete a marathon with a prosthetic leg when he finished the 1976 New York City Marathon. The marathon grew in popularity two years later when Norwegian Grete Waitz broke the women’s world record, finishing in 2:32:30. She went on to win the race an unprecedented nine times. An official wheelchair and handcycle division was introduced in 2000, and starting in 2002, the elite women are given a 35-minute head start before the elite men and rest of the field.
Beginning in 1976, the New York Marathon was run in late October and continued to be held in late October until 1986, when the race day was moved to November. The earliest race day was the marathon’s first; the latest date in the season of the marathon was November 14, 1993. The hottest year for the race was 1979, when the race day of October 21 reached 80 °F (27 °C). The coldest race was in 1995, when the race day of November 12 only reached 43 °F (6 °C), with a strong wind chill.
The New York Marathon has now become the largest marathon anywhere in the world. Each year nearly two million spectators line the course. Prior to 2013, the marathon was broadcast live in the New York area on WNBC, and on Universal Sports for the entire country, However, in 2013, WABC-TV and ESPN announced they would begin broadcasting the New York Marathon. The Marathon can also be watched online.
Initial course New York Marathon
The race was founded by Fred Lebow. Ted Corbitt helped plan the course of the New York Marathon. The initial course of 1970 consisted of repeated racing around Central Park. As per Ted Corbitt, who measured the original course:
The final measurements of the original New York Marathon course, Manhattan’s Central Park, were done the evening of September 8, 1970, after work and training day, using the Calibrated Bicycle Method of Measuring. The course consisted of a start-up, out and back loop of 0.79 mile, from W. 67th St. and Central Park West, near the Tavern-on-the-Green Restaurant, up to the 72nd St. and the West Drive intersection and return to the Tavern-on-the Green followed by a loop of 1.695 miles; then four 5.935 mile loops, totaling 26.225 miles (11 yards over distance), ending at the Tavern-on-the Green Restaurant.
From 1976, the New York Marathon-course covers all five boroughs of New York City. It begins on Staten Island, in Fort Wadsworth, near the approach to the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge. The bridge, which normally carries only vehicular traffic, is closed for the event. Runners use both sides of the upper level of the bridge and the westbound side of the lower level. In the opening minutes of the race, the bridge is filled with runners, creating a dramatic spectacle that is closely associated with the event.
After descending the bridge, the course winds through Brooklyn, mostly along Fourth Avenue and Bedford Avenue, for approximately the next 11 miles (18 km). Runners pass through a variety of neighborhoods, including: Bay Ridge, Sunset Park, Park Slope, Bedford–Stuyvesant, Williamsburg, and Greenpoint.
At 13.109 miles (21.097 km), runners cross the Pulaski Bridge, marking the halfway point of the race and the entrance into Long Island City in Queens. After about 2.5 miles (4.0 km) in Queens, runners cross the East River via the lower level of the Queensboro (59th Street) Bridge into Manhattan. It is at this point in the race when many runners begin to tire, as the climb up the bridge is considered one of the most difficult points in the marathon.
Reaching Manhattan after about 16 miles (26 km), the race proceeds north on First Avenue, then crosses into The Bronx via the Willis Avenue Bridge. The race is only in The Bronx for one mile before returning to Manhattan as the course follows East 138th St. before crossing the Madison Avenue Bridge. It then proceeds south through Harlem down Fifth Avenue and into Central Park at East 90th St. At the southern end of the park, the race proceeds west along 59th St./Central Park South, where thousands of spectators cheer runners on during the last mile. At Columbus Circle, the race reenters the park and finishes beside Tavern on the Green. The time limit for this course is 8½ hours from the 10:10 a.m. start.
Corrals and timing New York Marathon
In 2008, the race initiated a corral system. Professional women runners were given a separate, earlier start and the balance of the runners began in three staggered starts. The official times are those recorded by a computer chip attached to the back of the runner’s bib number, which calculates when a runner crosses the start and when she crosses the finish, known as «net time» (as opposed to «gun time»).
Runners also pass timing mats at 5 km intervals along the course, and e-mail notifications can be received by people following runners during the race to track their progress. Although the marathon publicity material uses miles, the timing mats are at 5 km intervals to accommodate the publishing of splits and also enabling potential world records for 20 km, 30 km and other sub-marathon distances to be recorded.
Different initial routes for New York Marathon
Although there are three different routes taken through Bay Ridge and up Fourth Avenue in Brooklyn, all the routes eventually merge at Lafayette Avenue in Brooklyn at Mile 8, and the distance covered by the runners are the same. A runner’s bib will have a color (green, orange, or blue) showing the initial route that they are assigned to, with each color having its own start village and corrals in the staging area.
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