Newport to be course for marathon
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Deirdre Newman
When you think of first-class marathons, New York and Boston come to
mind.
Running enthusiasts hope to add Orange County to that list with
the debut of the Orange County Marathon in December. On Wednesday,
the Run for Orange County Kids committee announced the race and
unveiled the course, most of which will be in Newport Beach, at a
kickoff in Santa Ana.
It will be the first full-length marathon in the county and comes
with a unique twist: all of the proceeds from the race will be
donated to selected children’s charities.
“We will be on the map not because of a movie or a TV sitcom, but
because of caring people,” Orange County Supervisor Tom Wilson said.
The race will take place Dec. 5 and is expected to draw 10,000
runners and 75,000 spectators. The course is set to start at Fashion
Island, wind past the Irvine Spectrum, and finish up along the Back
Bay at the Newport Dunes resort.
The marathon has been two years in the works. In April 2002, the
Run for Orange County Kids committee formed to establish the
marathon.
Committee members searched for two years for a main sponsor. They
finally found a generous one in PacifiCare Health Systems, which
provided a quarter of a million in cash and a commitment of another
quarter of a million in in-kind services, said former Assemblyman
Scott Baugh, a member of the marathon’s board of directors.
Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian is the exclusive hospital
supporter for the marathon.
“We’re very excited about it,” said Debra Legan, Hoag’s
vice-president of marketing. “I think it’s a great opportunity for us
to support a healthy lifestyle in our community and especially for
the young people who will be involved with the charities.”
The race capitalizes on a popular pastime throughout the county,
said marathon director Bill Sumner.
“There are about 20,000 runners in Orange County and about 5,000
in Newport Beach,” Sumner said. “If you go to the Back Bay, you see
people running. They’re everywhere.”
The Orange County marathon will be enhanced by the experience of
the runners putting it on, founder and assistant race director Steve
Robinson said. He has run fifteen marathons and Sumner has run
between 40 and 50, Robinson said.
The race will be in December so it doesn’t conflict with other
marathons in October, Robinson explained. And since the last part of
the course is through the Back Bay bike path with no traffic lights,
the slower runners won’t be ushered off the course as they are in
other marathons, Robinson added.
“It’s a respect thing,” Robinson said. “If it takes you eight
hours, you can finish and will get the same respect as the person who
finishes first. They won’t get crowded off the course and they will
have a great time.”
Organizers of the race will also provide training to any runner
who wants to participate.
“All you gotta do is get to the start line, we’ll help you do the
rest,” Sumner said. “We don’t care if you’re 8 or 80.”
The marathon will replace the 16-year Orange County Half Marathon
& 5K, which was also directed by Sumner. Both of these events will be
folded into the Orange County Marathon weekend as well as a kids’
marathon, a mayors’ two-mile walk and a health and fitness expo.
One of the charities that will benefit from the new marathon is
THINK Together, an after-school program which has a branch in Costa
Mesa.
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