1986 Chicago Marathon
The 1986 Chicago Marathon was the 10th running of the annual marathon race in Chicago, United States and was held on October 26. The elite men's race was won by Japan's Toshihiko Seko in a time of 2:08:27 hours and the women's race was won by Norway's Ingrid Kristiansen in 2:27:08. A total of 8173 runners finished the race, an increase of over 600 from the previous year, and a number that would not be beaten until 1995.[1]
10th Chicago Marathon | |
---|---|
Venue | Chicago, United States |
Dates | October 26 |
Champions | |
Men | Toshihiko Seko (2:08:27) |
Women | Ingrid Kristiansen (2:27:08) |
Results
Men
Position | Athlete | Nationality | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Toshihiko Seko | 2:08:27 | ||
Hussein Ahmed Salah | 2:09:57 | ||
Charlie Spedding | 2:10:13 | ||
4 | Michael Musyoki | 2:10:30 | |
5 | Herbert Steffny | 2:11:17 | |
6 | John Burra | 2:13:36 | |
7 | Paul Williams | 2:13:59 | |
8 | Jürgen Dächert | 2:14:27 | |
9 | José Gómez | 2:14:58 | |
10 | Rodolfo Gómez | 2:15:02 | |
11 | Bill Rodgers | 2:15:31 | |
12 | Allister Hutton | 2:15:57 | |
13 | Martti Vainio | 2:16:41 | |
14 | Michael Buhmann | 2:16:46 | |
15 | Werner Grommisch | 2:16:57 | |
16 | Sid-Ali Sakhri | 2:17:04 | |
17 | Mark Curp | 2:17:16 | |
18 | Bruce Wainman | 2:17:19 | |
19 | Pablo Vigil | 2:17:51 | |
20 | Tommy Ekblom | 2:18:03 |
Women
Position | Athlete | Nationality | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Ingrid Kristiansen | 2:27:08 | ||
Maria Rebelo | 2:29:51 | ||
Priscilla Welch | 2:31:14 | ||
4 | Deborah Raunig | 2:31:28 | |
5 | Maureen Roben | 2:34:41 | |
6 | Gail Kingma | 2:35:43 | |
7 | Tuija Toivonen | 2:36:48 | |
8 | Carina Leutner | 2:37:09 | |
9 | Dorothy Goertzen | 2:40:34 | |
10 | Solweig Harrysson | 2:43:24 | |
11 | Beth Farmer | 2:44:39 | |
12 | Karen Bukowski | 2:47:16 | |
13 | Gillian Beschloss | 2:47:28 | |
14 | Joanne Scianna | 2:48:12 | |
15 | Bridgid Williams | 2:49:45 | |
16 | Francesca Negri | 2:49:59 | |
17 | Diane Stoneking | 2:51:11 | |
20 | Charlene Soby | 2:53:22 | |
— | Lisa Rainsberger | DNF |
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gollark: Did I now.
gollark: I'm sure you'd like to think so.
gollark: It's simple. The initial python bit detects strings which are UTTERLY spacious, and then (in an oddly obfuscated way) ensures that each character in one string exists at least once in the other. Then, it calls the C bit with - due to odd pythonous scoping - the string without the index where they were found to match. The C bit actually does the same thing, calling back into Python afterward. If there is ever an *unmatched* character, it returns false.
gollark: But I posted mine earlier. Four of them, even.
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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