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Monday, March 21, 2011

Los Angeles Politics Hotsheet for Monday

As the City of LA and AEG get more serious about demolishing a portion of the Los Angeles Convention Center to build an NFL stadium in Downtown LA, competing stadium builder Ed Roski is firing his local lobbying team.  It's a race to the finish to see which billionaire can lure an actual team to their site.

The LA Marathon continued on despite a massive downpour.  Thousands of runners were later treated for hypothermia and 25 were sent to local hospitals for additional care.


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Sunday, March 02, 2008

The scenic route

Photo by Riley Behling

Congratulations to Sunday’s first place finishers, Tatiana Aryasova, a Russian and Laban Moiben of Kenya. Aryasova crossed the finish line 4 minutes, 18 seconds ahead of Moiben to win the $100,000 "Banco Popular Challenge."

More than 26,000 runners, including participants from all 50 states and 100 nations, are participating in Sunday's 23rd Annual Los Angeles Marathon, making it the fourth largest among U.S. races and seventh largest in the world, according to organizers.

For the second consecutive year, the 26-mile, 385-yard race is being run on a "point-to-point" course with the start and finish in different places.

Previous: Marathon enthusiasm sandbagged by unpopular route

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Friday, February 29, 2008

Marathon enthusiasm sandbagged by unpopular route

Joseph Mailander a guy in laelsewhereemail

Even though enrollment is high, the enthusiasm for LA's twenty-second Marathon this Sunday is not quite the same as it has been through its history. Reason: the de-volution of the course.

The course used to dart for long, healthy doses along some of LA's prime boulevards. Now it commences in a big downhill cascade down Cahuenga (good for elite runners, bad for the shinsplint set) and keeps cutting corners until it ends up in the Flower Street DMZ immediately east of the Bonaventure.

Here's why the course has such a silly route: big churches kept complaining. Now the course is routed to cross grand streets rather than along them, and to bypass the churches that worry about Sunday tithes brought about by closures. The course hits more nondescript neighborhoods than ever, and virtually switchbacks through downtown in an effort to add length safely.

This is this particular course's second year. "It's not fun to run," a doctor told me. "We used to get some people who were really enthusiastic at the churches and along the good boulevards; now we don't see those people. I don't know any runners who actually like this course."

If you don't know the course, check this .pdf. Marathon/wheelchair course in blue.

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