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sasquatch Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-07-07 08:53 PM
Original message
Scorching Chicago Marathon leaves 1 dead
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071008/ap_on_sp_ot/run_chicago_marathon

CHICAGO - In a race run in scorching heat that left one man dead, Kenya's Patrick Ivuti won the Chicago Marathon by a fraction of a second Sunday. At least 49 runners were taken to hospitals and another 250 were treated at the site.

The 88-degree heat and sweltering humidity were so draining that organizers shut down the second half of the course four hours after the start.

Ivuti leaned at the finish line to edge Jaouad Gharib of Morocco by 0.05 seconds. Ethiopia's Berhane Adere rallied to successfully defend her women's title.

Chad Schieber of Midland, Mich., 35, collapsed while running on the South Side and was pronounced dead shortly before 1 p.m. at a Veteran's Affairs hospital, the Cook County medical examiner's office. An autopsy was scheduled for Monday.

"Obviously very sad news, and our thoughts and prayers are with the individual's family," said Shawn Platt, senior vice president of title sponsor LaSalle Bank.

George Chiampas, the race's medical director, said witnesses reported seeing Schieber collapse and become unresponsive. "It sounds like he lost his pulse very fast and died on the race course," Chiampas said.

There was another running death Sunday in Arlington, Va. An unidentified runner from Virginia died during the Army Ten-Miler, collapsing near the finish at the Pentagon. The race started in 70-degree heat and high humidity.

These were record temperatures for the Chicago Marathon, topping the mark of 84 degrees in 1979. Runners were diverted to the starting area, where they were provided with medical attention and cooling misters. Shortages of water and energy drinks were reported along the 26.2-mile route.

Race director Carey Pinkowski said organizers were concerned that emergency medical personnel wouldn't be able to keep up with heat-related injuries.

"We were seeing a high rate of people that were struggling," Pinkowski said. "If you were out there at 1 o'clock, it was a hot sun. It was like a summer day. It was just a brutally hot day."

At first, organizers hoped those who passed the halfway mark could complete the run. But eventually even those recreational runners were told to turn back.

Still, some runners persevered, although organizers said they didn't know how many completed the course. Helicopters hovered over the race course while police officers shouted through a bullhorn and warned runners to slow down and walk.

About 10,000 of the 45,000 registered runners chose to not race in the heat despite more mist stations, cooling buses and water-soaked sponges, while another 10,934 started but didn't finish, officials said.

Lori Kaufman, a runner from St. Louis, said she was told to start walking at mile 14. She said the fire department turned on hydrants to hose people down along the course.

Paul Gardiner, a runner from England, said the weather made for a "brutal" run.

"We were at about 18 miles and we heard they canceled it and that kind of sent a little bit of concern through the crowd," he said. "It's just it's impossible to run."

Ivuti, competing in only his second major marathon, was timed in 2 hours, 11 minutes, 11 seconds in the closest finish in the race's history. He was the fifth straight Kenyan to win the race.

"I had never seen a marathon finish up close that was like that," head referee Pat Savage said. "This was really close, but at the same time you could see that one man was ahead of the other."

Adere finished in 2:33:49 after passing a surprised Adriana Pirtea, who had a comfortable 30-second lead after 24.8 miles.

Ivuti and Gharib surged ahead of defending champion Robert Cheruiyot and Daniel Njenga at the 22-mile mark to make it a two-man race. Gharib led for much of the final 4 miles before Ivuti made a push on the final mile.

"One thing I had in my mind was that everybody is going to face the same heat," Ivuti said. "I had no problem with that because everybody was going through the same thing as me."

The duo traded leads on the stretch run down Columbus Avenue before Ivuti's final push at the line. The race was so close that it took organizers several minutes to determine the winner.

Njenga finished third and Cheruiyot fourth. Cheruiyot was in position to contend but stomach craps forced him to drop back after 22 miles. Cheruiyot, who last year slipped on the finish line and banged his head on the pavement as he raised his hands to celebrate, finished in 2:16:13.

Pirtea waved to the crowd as she listlessly approached the finish line. But a final push on the last mile by Adere caught the Romanian in the final stretch.

"At 40 (kilometers), I could see she was going slowly," Adere said. "I knew if I started working from that point on, there was a possibility to catch her."

Pirtea tried to sprint toward the finish line, but finished three seconds behind.

"I had tears," Pirtea said.

American Kate O'Neill finished third and Liz Yelling was fourth.

<snip>
Somebody yesterday complained about the heat in October in Chicago in the lounge yesterday and why you couldn't run a marathon because of it. I guess they were dead on right about that, they also complained about it during the broadcast of the Ohio State/Purdue game. HELLO, IT'S FUCKING OCTOBER THE A/C IN MY APARTMENT STILL SHOULDN'T BE RUNNING!!
:banghead:

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SPKrazy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-07-07 08:54 PM
Response to Original message
1. my ac is crankin' too
although that isn't totally rare here in Arkansas

it still is hot for this time of year even here

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greatauntoftriplets Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-07-07 08:58 PM
Response to Original message
2. That was me.
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sasquatch Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-07-07 09:01 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. This really pisses me off
Edited on Sun Oct-07-07 09:02 PM by sasquatch
My prayers to the dead runners family.
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greatauntoftriplets Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-07-07 09:03 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. It was my brother-in-law....
and he was not in the race today. They had other things to do. I think that my sister would have prevented that if he had planned to be.
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sasquatch Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Oct-07-07 09:07 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. Good for him then
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