1985 Chicago Marathon
The 1985 Chicago Marathon was the 9th running of the annual marathon race in Chicago, United States and was held on October 20. The elite men's race was won by Britain's Steve Jones in a time of 2:07:13 hours and the women's race was won by America's Joan Samuelson in 2:21:21. A total of 7562 runners finished the race, an increase of over 1700 from the previous year.[1]
9th Chicago Marathon | |
---|---|
Venue | Chicago, United States |
Dates | October 20 |
Champions | |
Men | Steve Jones (2:07:13) |
Women | Joan Samuelson (2:21:21) |
Results
Men
Position | Athlete | Nationality | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Steve Jones | 2:07:13 | ||
Djama Robleh | 2:08:08 | ||
Robert de Castella | 2:08:48 | ||
4 | Gianni Poli | 2:09:57 | |
5 | Ralf Salzmann | 2:10:56 | |
6 | José Gómez | 2:11:08 | |
7 | Don Janicki | 2:11:16 | |
8 | Francisco Pacheco | 2:11:57 | |
9 | Ken Martin | 2:12:00 | |
10 | Henrik Jørgensen | 2:12:03 | |
11 | Allister Hutton | 2:12:28 | |
12 | John Graham | 2:12:55 | |
13 | Mats Erixon | 2:13:29 | |
14 | Bill Donakowski | 2:14:07 | |
15 | David Olds | 2:14:19 | |
16 | Jean-Pierre Paumen | 2:14:25 | |
17 | Gianni Demadonna | 2:14:30 | |
18 | Craig Holm | 2:14:43 | |
19 | Kurt Hürst | 2:14:49 | |
20 | Agapius Masong | 2:14:54 | |
— | Mark Curp | DNF | |
— | David Gordon | DNF | |
— | Simon Kigen | DNF | |
— | Martín Pitayo | DNF |
Women
Position | Athlete | Nationality | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Joan Samuelson | 2:21:21 | ||
Ingrid Kristiansen | 2:23:05 | ||
Rosa Mota | 2:23:29 | ||
4 | Carla Beurskens | 2:27:50 | |
5 | Véronique Marot | 2:28:04 | |
6 | Glenys Quick | 2:31:44 | |
7 | Mary O'Connor | 2:33:41 | |
8 | Maria Rebelo | 2:34:02 | |
9 | Sylvie Bornet | 2:34:05 | |
10 | Rita Borralho | 2:36:03 | |
11 | Charlotte Teske | 2:36:42 | |
12 | María Trujillo | 2:37:10 | |
13 | Susan Stone | 2:38:48 | |
14 | Gillian Castka | 2:38:53 | |
15 | Henrietta Fina | 2:39:52 | |
16 | Sissel Grottenberg | 2:43:52 | |
17 | Linda Somers | 2:46:29 | |
18 | Susan Bosch | 2:47:09 | |
19 | Joanne Scianna | 2:49:31 | |
20 | Jane Murphy | 2:50:04 |
gollark: It seems harder to shield humans and the weird biological processes which get affected against radiation than computers, where it basically just boils down to more redundancy and possibly better materials/processes.
gollark: (there's ECC support in RAM and SSDs and stuff, but as far as I know they just put radiation shielding on for CPUs)
gollark: Stuff is generally not designed for an environment where bits might be flipped randomly at some point, though.
gollark: It's more "error rates increase" than "you slowly die", at least.
gollark: The logic gates operate at stupidly small scales, and are pretty sensitive.
References
- Chicago Marathon. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
- Results. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
External links
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