Daniel Romanchuk


Daniel Romanchuk is an American Paralympian athlete who competes primarily in wheelchair racing events. He won the Chicago Marathon on October 7, 2018; just under a month later, he became the first American to win the men's wheelchair race at the New York City Marathon, as well as the youngest winner in the history of the wheelchair event in New York.
Romanchuk followed up these wins with a win at the Boston Marathon on April 15, 2019. He became the first American man to win Boston's wheelchair division since 1993. With his victory at the London Marathon in April of 2019, Romanchuk also won the World Para Athletics Marathon Championships title.

Early life

Romanchuk was born in Mount Airy, Maryland with spina bifida, a birth defect in which there is incomplete closing of the backbone and membranes around the spinal cord. When he was 2, his parents enrolled him in an adaptive sports program linked to the Kennedy Krieger Institute in nearby Baltimore. He participated in his first track meet at age 6, but also took part in other sports, including archery, sled hockey, and softball. In track events, he set age-group records and took part in national competitions at an early age.

2016 Paralympics

In the winter of 2014, Romanchuk's mother Kim encouraged him to focus more on track in an effort to make the 2016 Paralympic team. He made the team, and competed in every track event in Rio, from the 100m to the 5000m.

Marathon racing

Romanchuk entered and finished the Baltimore Marathon, his first, at the age of 14. In April of 2018, he placed 3rd in the London Marathon.
In October of 2018, Romanchuk won the Chicago Marathon with a time of 1:31:34; he beat defending champion Marcel Hug by one second. Less than a month later, he became the first American winner and youngest winner in the history of the New York Marathon's wheelchair event, again defeating Hug, and again by just one second.
In 2019, Romanchuk won the Boston Marathon in 1:21:36. He became the youngest ever winner of that race, as well as the first American to win Boston since 1993. In April of 2019, he won the London Marathon with a time of 1:33:38. In 2019 he also won the Chicago Marathon and he qualified to represent the United States at the 2020 Summer Paralympics.