| National Marathon
Keeps On Growing
Bob Sweeney is bracing for a challenge
in the next few weeks. In the past, the president of the Greater
Washington Sports Alliance worried about attracting enough entries for the SunTrust
National Marathon in the District. This year is quite the contrary.
"I am contemplating what to do when we sell out, which we
are going to do," said Sweeney, whose 26.2-mile race is scheduled
for March 21. "We have just under 7,000 registered runners
and a sellout is 8,000. We're probably going to sell out in the
next 30 days, so we're trying to deal with that. We are trying
to figure out how not to disappoint those runners who wanted to
run but couldn't get in." Sweeney said the race received a huge boost after New Year's, with some 1,060 athletes ponying up registration fees in a weeklong period. He said he believed the boost came in part from New Year's resolutions and post-holiday blues, along with television advertisements that were running full time. "That's what got us into the mode this week on how to message
that we are sold-out," he said. "The race is turning
out to being a very successful property." Just a year ago, the event, which includes a full marathon and
a half marathon, struggled for an identity. Shaking off the bad
taste that the defunct Washington DC Marathon left in runners'
mouths, the marathon inspired just 1,713 finishers - only 745 marathoners
- in its inaugural 2006 showing. The next year, there were 1,179 marathon finishers and 2,306 half
marathon completions. Last year, just 1,388 marathoners and 2,631
half marathoners broke the tape, hardly enough participants to
close down the city streets on a Saturday morning. Sweeney said there were 5,400 entries last year. The 8,000 this
year, which includes at least 3,000 marathoners, would be substantial
growth. "We're not out of the woods by any means; there are a lot
of challenges in this race," Sweeney said. "There are
a lot of security issues going through downtown. The police have
been wonderful this year, though; they've actually become a partner
in this race." The race got another boost last week when former race director
and elite marathoner Keith Dowling was hired back as technical
director. Since Dowling left last summer, race officials hadn't
been in a hurry to hire his successor. They relied on an outside
company, BlueWolf Events of Grantsville, Utah, the past two years. Meanwhile, the economic downturn seems to have missed this marathon. "Sponsorships have been very good," Sweeney said. "We have more sponsors now than even last year. We have the third-largest running market in the country, and people who want to run a marathon are running one right here and not necessarily traveling out of town now."
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