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On Sunday, November 2, 2025, the five-borough spectacle of the New York City Marathon will unfold once again, offering more than 50,000 runners the chance to push 26.2 miles through the heart of New York. From the cannon blast on Staten Island to the triumphant finish in Central Park, this is a race that marries endurance, emotion and urban drama.
Kipchoge and Hassan Headline an Extraordinary Field
The biggest storyline heading into this year’s race is the presence of Eliud Kipchoge, the greatest marathoner in history, and Sifan Hassan, the double Olympic champion who stunned the world with marathon victories in both London and Chicago. For Kipchoge, New York completes his journey through all six Abbott World Marathon Majors — a crown that has eluded him until now.
Hassan, meanwhile, returns to the marathon distance after a string of world-class performances on both track and road, her fearless racing style perfectly suited to the unpredictable rhythm of New York’s streets.
They’ll face an elite field stacked with world-class names, including Benson Kipruto of Kenya (2:02:16 PB), Evans Chebet (two-time Boston champion, 2:03:00 PB), and defending champion Tamirat Tolaof Ethiopia (course record holder at 2:04:58). The women’s field is equally star-studded, featuring 2022 champion Sharon Lokedi, Tokyo winner Rosemary Wanjiru, and a host of East African contenders ready to test Hassan on one of the sport’s toughest stages.
Among the American hopefuls, Emily Sisson, the U.S. record holder in the marathon, headlines the women’s field and will make her New York debut. On the men’s side, Biya Simbassa leads the U.S. charge, joined by a deep domestic field racing for top-American honors and prize bonuses.
Course Records
• Men: 2:04:58 — Tamirat Tola (ETH), 2023
• Women: 2:22:31 — Margaret Okayo (KEN), 2003
These records reflect both top-tier performance and the challenging character of the course — rather than flat, pacer-assisted routes that routinely see world-record times.
Prize Purse
The stakes are high. Open-division winners stand to earn $100,000, with descending prizes through 10th place. The event also offers a $50,000 bonus for a winner who breaks the standing course record, plus separate prize pools for top U.S. finishers and wheelchair divisions. With total payouts approaching nearly a million dollars, the financial motivation is real — even if the course isn’t built for world-record thrills.
Why a World Record Isn’t Realistic
Make no mistake: the New York course is legendary for its toughness rather than its speed. Runners face five major bridge crossings, a long ascent up the Queensboro Bridge around mile 15–16, variable terrain, sharp turns and a final push up Fifth Avenue into Central Park. Unlike flat, pacemaker-led courses such as Berlin or Chicago, NYC emphasises tactical racing, rivalries and finish-line theatre. The organising body eliminated dedicated elite pacemakers years ago in favour of pure head-to-head competition.
While pace groups may support recreational waves, elite winners will race without the type of structured pacemaking that enables constant sub-2:03 splits. In short: this is a championship-style contest, not a time-trial.
What Makes NYC Unique
• Cityscape & crowd noise: From Staten Island’s Verrazzano Narrows Bridge to Brooklyn’s vibrant neighborhoods, the Queensboro Bridge, Manhattan’s First Avenue and the final loop in Central Park, the scenery is unmatched.
• Massive scale but elite depth: The global field, the tens of thousands of recreational runners, the international media — the race’s atmosphere is unmatched in road-racing.
• Legacy of racing over timing: Past editions have celebrated bold attacks and dramatic finishes more than normally smooth pacing. That makes this one of the world’s most storied and unpredictable marathons.
What to Watch on November 2
• How Kipchoge adapts his disciplined, flat-course style to a course that demands rhythm changes, hills and surges.
• Whether Hassan will leverage her track speed and tenacity to counter a course that rewards strength and race-tactics.
• Whether Sisson (and other U.S. entrants) can navigate the final tougher miles to claim top-American status or even an open podium spot.
• The weather and pacing strategy: any wind across the bridges or mis-timed surge could decide the race more than early splits.
• Whether someone dares to go after Tola’s 2:04 : 58 mark — unlikely but possible under perfect conditions.
The 2025 New York City Marathon is more than a race. It is a testament to endurance, to the city that hosts it and to runners who thrive in challenge rather than comfort. Kipchoge and Hassan bring star power. The U.S. challengers bring ambition. And the 50,000+ starters bring stories.
Whether you’re chasing a personal best, seeking a finish-line moment or just watching from the sidelines, November 2 will be unforgettable. The bridges, the boroughs, the final climb into Central Park — the city will judge your resolve. And with no pacemakers to pull you through, this year’s finishers will know they earned every step with heart.
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The first New York City Marathon, organized in 1970 by Fred Lebow and Vince Chiappetta, was held entirely in Central Park. Of 127 entrants, only 55 men finished; the sole female entrant dropped out due to illness. Winners were given inexpensive wristwatches and recycled baseball and bowling trophies. The entry fee was $1 and the total event budget...
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