London Marathon unlikely to get go-ahead on its new date
IT will be “extremely difficult” to hold the London Marathon this year amid the coronavirus pandemic, the founder of the Great North Run, Brendan Foster, has said.
Foster’s event, due to be staged on September 13 with a record 60,000 adult participants, was cancelled on Monday due to the insurmountable challenges posed by the Covid-19 outbreak.
A decision on whether this year’s London Marathon – already postponed from April to October – can go ahead is expected to be made on Sunday.
“Mass participation events in the form that ours takes, and the London Marathon takes, are clearly going to be extremely difficult to hold and it’s going to be up to us to find a formula for the future,” he said.
Over £20m was raised for charity by last year’s Great North Run, and Foster admits the sector will be “hurting” as a consequence of the cancellation.
Foster said it would have been impossible to make the race Covid-secure,
adding that the start line “would have stretched from Newcastle to Berwick” with twometre social distancing in place.
Organisers are focusing on making next year’s edition, already scheduled for September 12, the biggest and best event possible.
“It’s in our DNA to run, and to run in groups. We have been doing it for two million years, so there’s no way that a pandemic like this is going to blow away man’s endeavour in terms of running, and running together,” said Foster. “Running together has been there for two million years, this isn’t going to stop it.”
Another consideration in cancelling the race was the pressure on health workers, with over 500 having previously volunteered to take care of any participants who suffered any medical issues.