The PUBLIX Atlanta Half marathon is taking it to the streets! After the pandemic-influenced half marathon in 2021, the Atlanta Track Club is moving the Half Marathon back to the streets of Atlanta.
David Monti, writing for Race Results Weekly, which we use with permission, wrote this piece on the half marathon, which will be held on February 27, 2022.
RelatedPosts
Viola Cheptoo (center) will be running the Publix Atlanta Half-Marathon on Sunday, February 27 (Photo by Jane Monti for Race Results Weekly), used with permission.
PUBLIX ATLANTA HALF-MARATHON GOES BACK TO THE STREETS
By David Monti, @d9monti
(c) 2022 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved, used with permission.
(15-Feb) — After a special pandemic edition in 2021 at Atlanta Motor Speedway, the Publix Atlanta Half-Marathon returns to city streets for the 2022 edition on Sunday, February 27. The race, part of the Publix Atlanta Marathon Weekend organized by the Atlanta Track Club (ATC), will feature an elite field, a $17,000 prize money purse, and a $5,000 bonus pool for exceeding the fastest times ever run in the state of Georgia (1:08:29 for women and 1:03:59 for men).
Leading the women’s elite field will be Kenya’s Viola Cheptoo who, when she competed as a middle distance runner for Florida State University in the NCAA system, went by “Violah Lagat.” The younger sister of two-time Olympic medalist Bernard Lagat will be running her first race since her dramatic marathon debut at the TCS New York City Marathon last November where she finished a close second to compatriot and Olympic champion Peres Jepchirchir. Her time of 2:22:44 was the third-fastest time in race history. She’ll be incorporating the Publix Atlanta Half-Marathon into her Boston Marathon training.
“I am looking forward to it,” said Cheptoo who has never been to Atlanta before. “I want to do well and build a relationship with the community, as I am aware of all the good work done by Atlanta Track Club.”
Cheptoo, who has a half-marathon best of 1:06:47, will face another strong Kenyan, Dorcas Tuitoek, who has run similarly fast: 1:06:33. These two woman have an excellent chance of bettering the state record which was set by 2021 Olympic Marathon bronze medalist Molly Seidel at last year’s race.
North American athletes will also be represented on the women’s side, including Dakotah Lindwurm of Minnesota Distance Elite (1:09:36 PB), Maegan Krifchin of the Atlanta Track Club (1:09:51), and Canadian Lanni Marchant (1:10:47) a 2016 Olympian and the 2021 Honolulu Marathon champion.
The top entrants on the men’s side are also from Kenya, and both have broken 60 minutes for the half-marathon. Benard Ngeno (59:07 PB) and Geoffrey Koech (59:36) are the fastest men in the field. The top North Americans will be Canadian record holder Rory Linkletter (1:01:08 PB), Jonas Hampton of Newtonville, Mass. (1:03:57), and Matthew McDonald of the Boston Athletic Association High Performance team (1:04:48). McDonald, the tenth place finisher at the 2020 USA Olympic Trials Marathon, formerly trained with the ATC at Georgia Tech. He now works at MIT in Cambridge, Mass.
The complete elite fields are below with personal best times:
Dorcas Tuitoek, KEN, 1:06:41
Viola Cheptoo, KEN, 1:06:47
Mary Munanu, KEN, 1:07:54
Tsige Haileslase, ETH, 1:08:30
Daisy Kimeli, KEN, 1:08:34
Dakotah Lindwurm, USA, 1:09:36
Maegan Krifchin, USA, 1:09:51
Ludwina Chepngetich, KEN, 1:10:34
Lanni Marchant, CAN, 1:10:47
Leslie Sexton, CAN, 1:11:21
Bridget Lyons Belyeu, USA, 1:12:24
Grace Kahura, KEN, 1:12:49
Janel Blanchett, USA, 1:13:43
Anne-Marie Comeau, CAN, 1:14:09
Joanna Stephens, USA, 1:14:23
Benard Ngeno, KEN, 59:07
Geoffrey Koech, KEN, 59:36
Raymond Magut, KEN, 1:00:00
Bayelign Teshager, ETH, 1:00:30
Bethwell Yegon, KEN, 1:00:57
Rory Linkletter, CAN, 1:01:08
Mike Cheshire, KEN, 1:03:45
Jonas Hampton, USA, 1:03:57
Matt McDonald, USA, 1:04:48
Chris May, USA, 1:04:50
Paul Hogan, USA, 2:15:51 (Marathon)
Author
Jeff Benjamin has written for 30 years for American Track and Field along with RunBlogRun. The Former President of the Staten Island AC & Chair of the Staten Island Running Association was the 5th man scorer for his Susan Wagner High School NYC XC City Championship team. Also a member of the College of Staten Island Sports Hall of Fame for XC, Jeff currently serves as the LDR Chairman for USATF NY. A passionate (or fanatical) follower of the Sport, some of Jeff's subjects have included Sebastian Coe, Emma Coburn, Eamonn Coghlan, Matt Centrowitz, Jim Spivey, Galen Rupp, Joe Newton, Tom Fleming, Ajee’ Wilson, Bill Rodgers, Allan Webb, Abel Kiviat, Jordan Hassay, Marty Liquori, Caster Semenya, Rod Dixon, Carl Lewis and Jim Ryun as well as Book Reviews and articles covering meets and races in the Northeast U.S.
View all posts