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Sports / NBA

New York marathon cancellation is ‘best thing’: Organisers

Published: 04 Nov 2012 - 08:18 am | Last Updated: 06 Feb 2022 - 08:35 am

NEW YORK: Organisers, police and even athletes called yesterday cancellation of the New York Marathon the correct decision in the wake of the devastation caused by killer superstorm Sandy.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg axed what would have been the 43rd annual race after complaints over the timing and the notion of staging the event today while many people in the area remain without electricity or shelter.

“The best thing for New York and the best thing for the marathon for the future is unfortunately to move on. This isn’t the year or the time to run it,” said Mary Wittenberg, president of the organising group, the New York Road Runners.

“It’s crushing and it’s really difficult. It’s one of the toughest decisions we ever made, but we really believe it’s the right thing for New York.”

Patrick Lynch, president of the largest city police union, called the decision “a wise choice”.

Dwyane Wade, a star guard for the NBA’s Miami Heat, had said earlier that he thought it was a bad idea to stage the marathon so soon after the storm had caused flooding, major property damage and nearly 100 deaths in the New York area, more than 40 in the city alone.

Much of the damage was located on Staten Island, where runners would have made the traditional start to the 26.2-mile (42.2km) event today as it wound its way through all five boroughs of New York.

Wade donated his $210,000 game check for the night to storm relief efforts.

The marathon typically brings the city $340m but much of that would have been lost, organizers said, because as many as 10,000 of the field of nearly 45,000 runners would not have come this year because of the damage.

Kenyans Wilson Kipsang, third at the London Olympics, and Moses Mosop, last year’s Chicago Marathon champion, would have been men’s favorites along with 2010 New York Marathon winner Gebre Gebremariam of Ethiopia.

AFP