NY Marathon canceled, but runners stride on — on their own

Paul Casino
Short Url
Updated 01 November 2020
Follow

NY Marathon canceled, but runners stride on — on their own

  • The annual race, originally set for Sunday, was one of many events canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic

NEW YORK: In Central Park or along the Hudson River, runners will complete the storied New York City Marathon — just not along the same course.

The annual race, originally set for Sunday, was one of many events canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic, but diehard runners are not missing their shot in what would have been the marathon’s 50th year.

“The day they announced that it wasn’t going to happen, that’s the day I said I’m going to run it anyway,” said Paul Casino, 55, who has competed every year since 2004. “If I stop, I’m going to regret it.”

Casino, who is originally from the Philippines, even joined hundreds of people who ran the marathon in 2012, despite its cancelation following the direct hit from Superstorm Sandy.

Organizers canceled the marathon on June 24 but, like many other major road races, offered runners the option of completing the 26.2 miles between Oct. 17 and Nov. 1 — anywhere in the world.

A smartphone app measures the distance covered, allowing the competitor to log an official time and — if they finish — obtain the coveted finisher’s medal.

For many runners, months of lockdown and no other races on the horizon cramped their preparations. For some, like Matt Coneybeare, the coronavirus took a direct toll.

After suffering through two days of acute symptoms in early April, the computer engineer needed a month — but only a month — to get back to where he was pre-Covid.

Coneybeare has already completed his marathon, running through four of New York’s five boroughs in a little more than three hours.

He had to skip Staten Island because the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge linking it to Brooklyn — closed for the tens of thousands of runners during a normal marathon — has no pedestrian path.

Casino is keeping his Manhattan marathon itinerary a carefully guarded secret — but says if seen from the sky, the route design will spell out a clear tribute to the world’s biggest marathon.

The banker said he couldn’t just do “four laps” around Central Park.

“That’s just mentally draining. I don’t want to run it just for the sake of doing 26.2 miles. That’s just not fun,” he told AFP.

“And so I thought about it and then I looked at Google Maps...”

Casino admits he stopped running for two months out of fear of being infected at the start of the health crisis, and sank into a depression because of the lack of exercise and the lockdown.

Usually, he would run 60-80 miles a week while training for a marathon.

He headed to therapy, which he says helped. And then he started to run again.

“The way I see the marathon, it’s like a goal. It’s perfect timing at the end of the year,” he said.

Many runners, like Coneybeare, said exercise helped them keep going as the pandemic dragged on.

“The routine of getting out there every day and running just keeps me sane throughout all of this,” he said. “It was important for my mental health.”

Casino, who says he gained 15 pounds because of the pandemic, says he has no specific goal time, especially given that he will have to stop for traffic lights and cars.

For Coneybeare, “no one’s ever going to compare a virtual race versus a real race. It all comes down to whether you feel that you did a good job on your own or not.”

A virtual marathon is a personal challenge — no one is watching, there are no real competitors, and given the need to remain distant from others, it is a solitary pursuit.

Jack Hirschowitz, a 75-year-old psychiatrist, says running this year will certainly be less stressful.

He normally juggles while running — earning the admiration of onlookers — which makes it harder to look ahead, so completing the race on his own will be a lot easier.

In a regular marathon, “I have to dodge people and sometimes you get stuck behind a group,” he says.


Proud dad Zinedine Zidane watches Algeria beat Sudan 3-0

Updated 24 December 2025
Follow

Proud dad Zinedine Zidane watches Algeria beat Sudan 3-0

  • Former Real Madrid legend Zidane watches his son Luca keep a clean sheet in the Algeria goal during the Africa Cup of Nations match in Rabat
  • Riyad Mahrez scores twice for Algeria, one of the tournament favorites, who move top of Group E

RABAT, Morocco: France great Zinedine Zidane watched his goalkeeper son’s safe hands as Algeria started its Africa Cup of Nations campaign with a 3-0 win over 10-man Sudan on Wednesday.
Riyad Mahrez scored twice and the 20-year-old Ibrahim Maza scored his first international goal for Algeria, one of the tournament favorites, to move top of Group E.
“The most important thing was to start with a win,” Mahrez said. “The last two AFCONs, we didn’t start good. Today, we really wanted to make it happen and we did.”
Zidane, who was at the sweet-smelling Moulay El Hassan Stadium in Rabat to see his son Luca Zidane playing in the Algeria goal, was feted by the crowd every time he was shown on the big screens.
Luca Zidane opted to represent his grandfather’s country after getting the Fennec Foxes’ invitation and he’s been given his chance to shine because of an injury to Alexandre Oukidja, who might have been expected to start otherwise.
Algeria wasted little time Wednesday with Mahrez sweeping in the opener in the second minute after unselfish play from Hicham Boudaoui to set him up.
Zidane was called into action shortly afterward to deny Yaser Awad on a break.
Sudan had to play all its qualification games away from home because of the near 1,000-day old civil war ravaging the country.
Though the Algerians looked confident and played with intensity, the big chances fell at the other end, with Zidane saving again from Awad before Abdel Raouf fired over.
Salah Adil was sent off just as the rain began to fall shortly before the break with his second yellow card for a foul on Rayan Aït-Nouri, who would have been through otherwise.
But the Algerian fans, who were in a majority, needed to be patient.
Mohammed Amoura produced a brilliant cross with the outside of his boot for Mahrez to score in the 61st, and Baghdad Bounedjah headed the ball into Maza’s path for the substitute to complete the scoring in the 85th.

Drama in Casablanca

Edmond Tapsoba completed a remarkable turnaround as Burkina Faso scored two goals in stoppage time to beat 10-man Equatorial Guinea 2-1 in the early Group E game.
Tapsoba’s team had pushed hard for the opening goal after Basilio Ndong was sent off early in the second half for a bad challenge on Bertrand Traoré’s ankle.
Marvin Anieboh then stunned the Stallions when he launched himself at Carlos Akapo’s cross to score with a looping header in the 85th minute.
Georgi Minoungou equalized in the fifth minute of stoppage time and Tapsoba headed the winner three minutes after that.
Later Wednesday in Group F, defending champion Ivory Coast began its title defense against Mozambique in Marrakech and five-time champion Cameroon opened against Gabon in the coastal city of Agadir.