US & Canada
Home
World
UK
England
N. Ireland
Scotland
Wales
Business
Politics
Health
Education
Sci/Environment
Technology
Entertainment & Arts
Africa
Asia
Australia
Europe
Latin America
Middle East
US & Canada
4 November 2012
Last updated at
19:30
In pictures: Unofficial New York marathon
Runners who had been intending to take part in Sunday’s New York Marathon refused to let its cancellation halt their stride.
It may not have been the 40,000 expected for the official race, but some 2,000 gathered in the city’s Central Park to run impromptu marathons of their own.
Many were determined not to let the months of preparation - and the costs of getting to New York - go to waste by running the laps needed to complete the marathon’s 26.2 miles.
The finishing line, along with portable toilets and tents, were still in place despite the cancellation of the event on Friday.
Lance Svendsen (left), who organised a group called Run Anyway, said: “A lot of people just want to finish what they’ve started”.
Meanwhile, around 1,000 other runners decided to spend the day helping the hard-hit borough of Staten Island – carrying out informal runs to deliver food and relief supplies to the storm's victims.
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg cancelled the marathon on Friday after his decision earlier in the week that it should go ahead was met with a barrage of criticism as the city and surrounding areas deal with the devastation caused by Storm Sandy.
Share this page
Delicious
Digg
Facebook
reddit
StumbleUpon
Twitter
Email
Print
Related Stories
NY alert over post-storm housing
In pictures: Cleaning up after Sandy
Sandy: map overview
Services
Mobile
Connected TV
News feeds
Alerts
E-mail news
About BBC News
Editors' blog
BBC College of Journalism
News sources
Editorial Guidelines