Ngugi bullish of maiden triumph over 42km in Chicago

The 2014 World Half Marathon silver medallist, Mary Ngugi-Cooper, is plotting a big statement at next month’s Chicago Marathon as she chases an elusive first career victory over the 42km distance.

‎Ngugi headlines a stellar women’s field announced for the Windy City showdown, going toe-to-toe with some top-class athletes.
‎The 36-year-old has been burning the midnight oil in training and is brimming with anticipation.
‎ “The road to the Chicago Marathon has begun. I can’t wait. Really looking forward to getting back out there,” she declared on her socials.
‎Ngugi heads to Chicago looking to improve on her last outing at the Boston Marathon on April 21, where she clocked 2:24:39 for 11th place.
‎That race was dominated by Sharon Lokedi (2:17:22), Hellen Obiri (2:17:41), and Ethiopia’s Yalemzerf Yehualaw (2:18:06), who occupied the podium.
‎Her marathon journey began in 2019 with solid runs in Boston and New York.‎She posted 2:28:33 for seventh in Boston before returning a 10th-place finish in New York with 2:27:36.
‎Her breakthrough came in Boston 2021, where she stormed to her maiden podium finish, clocking 2:25:20 for second place, behind veteran Edna Kiplagat (2:25:09), with Monicah Wanjuhi sealing the podium in 2:25:32.
‎Ngugi returned to Boston in 2022 and again impressed, running 2:21:32 for third place behind world champion Peres Jepchirchir (2:21:01) and Ethiopia’s Ababel Yeshaneh (2:21:05).  ‎That same year, she also tackled the London Marathon, where she placed seventh in 2:20:22.
‎Her 2023 campaign proved rocky, finishing ninth in Boston (2:24:33) and fifth in New York (2:27:53). ‎In 2024, she was back in Boston, this time crossing the line sixth in 2:24:24 in a race won by Obiri in 2:22:37.
‎Despite the frustrations over 42km, Ngugi remains a proven half-marathon specialist.  ‎She owns back-to-back Boston Half Marathon crowns from 2015 (1:10:21) and 2016 (1:10:19), as well as a sensational Houston win in 2016 (1:06:29).
‎On the global stage, she claimed silver at the 2014 World Half Marathon Championships (1:07:44) and returned for bronze in 2016 (1:07:54), finishing behind Jepchirchir (1:07:31) and Cynthia Jerotich (1:07:34).
‎In Chicago, she will line up alongside fellow Kenyan Irene Cheptai, last year’s third-place finisher, who is also in search of redemption after opening her 2025 season with a fourth-place (2:21:32) in Boston.
‎Adding intrigue is Loice Chemnung, who makes her much-anticipated full marathon debut. ‎The Kenyan trio, however, face formidable opposition from Ethiopia. ‎Leading the charge is Alemu Megertu, the 2023 London Marathon runner-up and, on paper, the fastest in the field. ‎She will be joined by compatriot Hawi Feysa, the Tokyo third-place finisher.
by TEDDY MULEI

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