Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

City’s runners still determined to finish 26.2 miles

Runners are determined to complete 26.2 miles — even if this year’s marathon is virtual

- By Shannon Ryan

Just because this year’s Chicago Marathon was canceled because of COVID-19 concerns doesn’t mean runners aren’t trying to complete a 26.2-mile course. Registered runners could compete as part of an online community this weekend in self-designed courses throughout Chicago. The virtual marathon was designed to help replace what would have been the 43rd running of the annual event. At right, Andra Bradley and Emily Jakacki participat­e in the virtual run Saturday.

Gloria Rojas had been looking forward to the 2020 Chicago Marathon after missing last year’s race while recovering from being hit by a taxi as she crossed the street downtown afterwork.

When this year’s marathonwa­s canceled because of COVID-19 concerns, she was disappoint­ed but determined.

“I think I was with everyone: I was hoping the marathon was going to happen,” Rojas said. “But Chicago is a bunch of doers. We’re doing to do, whether it’s (in a group) or trying to prove it to yourself.”

Rojas, 26, is one of hundreds of runners competing in the Chicago Marathon virtually this year.

Registered runners could defer to next year’s race orwere offered a chance to sign up to receive a medallion and T-shirt by competing as part of an onlinecomm­unity this weekend in self-designed courses throughout Chicago. The virtual marathon was designed to help replace what would have been the 43rd running of the annual event that takes over the city’s streets and brings more than 40,000 participan­ts from around the globe.

Running groups such as Chicago Area Runners Associatio­n and Black Chicago Runners will space hydration stations along the

Lakefront Trail. CARA will also provide stations in five suburban locations.

CARA, which usually has about 2,000 runners in the marathon, will have about 700 members participat­ing in the virtual event.

Some groups will hand out oranges, vaseline, running gel — and perhaps most important — support.

“A lot of our runners have been excited for the opportunit­y to

accomplish this goal,” said Greg Hipp, CARAexecut­ive director. “A lot of them are taking pride running 26.2 (miles): ‘No matter what, we’ve found a way to accomplish this goal.’”

While runners head to the lake, forest preserves or neighborho­od streets thisweeken­d to fulfill their missions, they still will be longing for the sightsands­ounds along the traditiona­l Chicago Marathon course.

The colorful parties in Lakeview East. The lively dancing dragons in Chinatown. The bridges crossing the Chicago River.

“I’m going to miss downtown, running over that red carpet on Wacker Drive,” said Mel Handy, 67, whohas run the last 21 Chicago Marathonsa­ndis registered to run virtually. “I’m going to miss going through the neighborho­ods with different good food being handed out. Someone always has a banana or orange slices.”

Cheering spectators who line the sidewalks, often with hilarious encouragin­g homemade signs, will be missed by some runners when they toil alone this weekend. Being one of thousands with the same goal was a meaningful experience to others.

“There’s nothing like the experience of being in Grant Park with 45,000 other runners,” said Gabriela Perez, who ran the Chicago Marathon 24 times and will run on Sunday. “It’s one of the most profound experience­s, one of the reasons that brought me back every year. It’s that camaraderi­e.”

Rojas will miss the emotional componento­f themaratho­n, especially running through Pilsen.

“My favorite is Mile 18,” said Rojas, who has Selena songs on her playlist. “It’s bitterswee­t for

me. I’m a first generation Mexican American. Iwantmy parents to come watch (the Chicago Marathon in previous years). It can be a lot to ask. But the music is so loud, it reminds me of the music I listen to withmy family. It feels like they’re next to me. Mile 18 is where you’re hitting that wall. You’re looking for anything to give you support.”

Downtown will look starkly different this weekend. Absent are the spectators jumping on the “L” to encourage friends along the course. Restaurant­s will be void of carb-loading runners on marathon eve. Hotelswon’t reach capacity because of out-of-towners pouring into the city.

“We will miss the business that the marathon brings to Chicago tremendous­ly,” said Liz Lombardo Stark, director of marketing and public relations for the Gibsons Restaurant Group. “Historical­ly, the marathon brings in thousands and thousands of people to downtown Chicago. Runners and their families would come to Quartino the Saturday before themaratho­n to carb-load. Since we opened this has been Quartino’s single busiest night of the year.”

Last year, Quartino Ristorante & Wine Bar served close to 2,000 pasta dinners and 360 pizzas on the night before the marathon, Stark said.

The group also offered a nextday “Marathon Monday brunch” every year at Luxbar. Doing so this year “doesn’t make sense for us,” Stark said, “but that had alwaysbeen a huge success for us. Several out- of-town runners would stay at the Thompson and surroundin­g hotels, and visit for one last celebrator­y meal before heading home.”

Thisweeken­d, Quartino hopes to attract runners with its pasta offerings, pizzas for $5 from 10 p.m. to midnight nightly (dine-in only) and selected drinks that will be sold at 26.2% off on Sunday.

“Most restaurant­s have their busiest day on Mother’s Day or New Year’s Eve,” said Quartino managing partner Bob Kanzler. “For Q, Marathon Eve has always been the busiest. Over the threeday weekend (last year) we did over 5,000 covers. Even more than the Restaurant Show weekend.”

But the race will go on for many.

Some are driven by a worthy cause.

Lisa Niehaus, 60, a nurse from Kentucky, will run several halfmile loops on a trail in Cincinnati as part of her virtual experience. She plans to carry a red bandana with names of people who have donated to the charity she is raising money for — the AmericanHe­art Associatio­n.

“There’s a long history of heart disease inmy family,” she said. “It was never an option to not do it for the people who are not here because of (heart disease).”

Niehaus said her father died of a heart attack at 64.

She hopes her 94-year-old mother, who has survived multiple heart attacks, will make it to see her finish.

“I’ll be carrying this bandana,” Niehaus said. “It’s emotional. It will be great. It’s for everyone.”

Rojas will participat­e with GumboFit’s running series Road Less Traveled, which also featured 5-kilometer, half-marathon and marathon races and is a fundraiser for generating $10,000

in grants to five Black running and fitness organizati­ons in Chicago.

The Chicago Marathon joined with GumboFit to allow 50 runners to earn a second medal with them during the Road Less Traveled socially distanced group run at Sauk Trail in ChicagoHei­ghts.

“Mentally, it will be hard,” Rojas said. “It’s not going to be around the city. It’s eight loops of the same thing. I’m looking at the positives. It will be really nice to have nutrition every 3.4 miles. I’ll seemy friends in the same spot.”

Randy Burt, 72, is one of four who have finished every Chicago Marathon since 1977.

He ran his virtual race earlier this week, starting at his Antioch home at 2:15 a.m. and running a 2-mile loop a little more than 13 times. He left power gels and water bottles in his mailbox to refuel.

It was his second slowest marathon time, he said, but that didn’t matter much this year. He talked with Chicago Marathon director Carey Pinkowski over the phone when he finished, compliment­ing the executives for offering the virtual option.

“When they said therewas not going to be a marathon, at first I thought, OK, I’ll let myself heal,” Burt said. “Then I said, ‘Nope, I’ve been running 43 years. I’m running the marathon.’ Eventually they came out with the virtual marathon, and I said

‘That’s perfect.’ You miss all the excitement, the other runners and the spectators. Was I disappoint­ed a little? Yes. But we have to settle for whatwe’ve got.”

Burt planned to drink a glass of wine and sit on his deck to celebrate before an early bedtime.

For first-timers, the cancellati­on brought another type of disappoint­ment.

Ryan Hieronymus, 44, helps run the Rogers Park Running Group. He already ran a virtual marathon for the Champaign race that was canceled in the spring, so he feels prepared to do it again for Chicago.

He has run for more than 300 consecutiv­e days and is eager to keep his streak alive, running his virtual marathon in Skokie. He’ll be running to raise money for the Anthony Rizzo Family Foundation.

“Chicago is so massive there are a lot of risks with that many people,” Hieronymus said. “I knew it was kind of a foregone conclusion. I think in my mind I already realized it. By the time Chicago was canceled, I had run one bymyself already. Iwas going to do it whether it was a virtual event or just to keep up my training.”

Training for the virtual marathon during the pandemic has been a morale boost for many runners.

LaShaun Hobbs, 55, from

Calumet City, has run several virtual races the last several months — from local 5Ks to the Boston Marathon. She’ll be running the Chicago Marathon virtually with a group of runners along the Lakefront Trail on Saturday.

In some ways, finishing a virtual race proves another type of mettle.

“It’s a different sense of accomplish­ment,” said Hobbs, who ran the Chicago Marathon in 2000 and 2018. “It’s a little bit harder. You really have to, toward the end, focus on your thoughts and really have to fight those negative thoughts of wanting to stop. You don’t have that support. You really are relying on your training and mental state of mind.

“It’s definitely been a great experience training during COVID and running different races. It definitely challenges your mental toughness.”

Hobbs plans to compete in the official running of the Chicago Marathon next year.

“I think I’ll be happy when everything goes back to normal,” she said, “and we can race in groups again.”

 ?? YOUNGRAE KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ??
YOUNGRAE KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE
 ?? ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Kaitlyn Simoneau gives a thumbs-up as she nears Mile 19 south of McCormick Place while running the virtual Chicago Marathon on Saturday.
ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Kaitlyn Simoneau gives a thumbs-up as she nears Mile 19 south of McCormick Place while running the virtual Chicago Marathon on Saturday.
 ?? JOHN J. KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Gloria Rojas plans to run the virtual Chicago Marathon today. After having run four previous marathons, she was injured in 2019 when a taxi hit her, but she’s committed to running a full marathon again this year.
JOHN J. KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Gloria Rojas plans to run the virtual Chicago Marathon today. After having run four previous marathons, she was injured in 2019 when a taxi hit her, but she’s committed to running a full marathon again this year.
 ?? ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Runners stop at a Chicago Area Runners Associatio­n water station Saturday near Belmont Harbor.
ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Runners stop at a Chicago Area Runners Associatio­n water station Saturday near Belmont Harbor.
 ?? ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? A runner participat­es in the virtual Chicago Marathon on Saturday along the lakefront.
ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE A runner participat­es in the virtual Chicago Marathon on Saturday along the lakefront.
 ?? ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? A woman wears a sign indicating why she is running the virtual Chicago Marathon on Saturday near Belmont Harbor.
ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE A woman wears a sign indicating why she is running the virtual Chicago Marathon on Saturday near Belmont Harbor.
 ?? RANDY BURT ?? Randy Burt, who has run every Chicago Marathon since 1977, poses for a photo on Tuesday outside his Antioch home after completing the virtual race.
RANDY BURT Randy Burt, who has run every Chicago Marathon since 1977, poses for a photo on Tuesday outside his Antioch home after completing the virtual race.

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