New
York marathoners undaunted by deadly truck attack
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[November 04, 2017]
By Peter Szekely and Barbara Goldberg
NEW YORK (Reuters) - This week's deadly
truck attack in New York could not deter blind Japanese runner
Toshiaki Ito from joining 50,000 fellow competitors in the city's
marathon this Sunday.
"I will not be defeated by it," Ito, a 59-year-old banker, said as
he picked up his race number three days after an Uzbek immigrant
drove a truck down a Manhattan bike path, killing eight people and
injuring a dozen more.
Holding his white cane, Ito, who will run with a sighted guide, said
through an interpreter that while the attack gave him "a little
trepidation," he is "definitely running."
He is far from alone, according to organizers of the annual road
race, who said runners were defying concerns to join the world's
biggest marathon.
"There's been no spike in cancellations that we've seen," said Chris
Weiller, a spokesman for race organizer the New York Road Runners.
New York officials allowed the city's Halloween parade to step off
just hours after the attack and vowed that the marathon would go
forward, with some enhanced security.
The race has been canceled only once in its 47-year-history, in
2012, following Superstorm Sandy's devastating hit to the region. It
even went forward after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, which killed
about 2,600 people in New York.
Marathoners train for months to prepare their bodies for the
26.2-mile race, and some wait years before winning a spot in the
drawing which gives about 30 percent of them access to a field that
includes the world's top runners and draws about 2.5 million
spectators.
"The determination that got them here is the determination that I
think that they have right now going into Sunday," Weiller said.
Sunday's race will not be the first time U.S. runners have had to
worry about violence. Two brothers inspired by al Qaeda killed three
people and injured more than 260 with bombs at the finish line of
the 2013 Boston Marathon.
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Philadelphian Neil Gottlieb remembers that attack vividly as it
occurred shortly after he crossed the finish line. But he was back
on that course in 2014 and said he was undaunted about racing in New
York.
"I'm not going to win the New York City Marathon, but it's a victory
for me, and I'm not going to let anyone stop me," said Gottlieb, a
48-year-old healthcare executive and father of three.
New York police stepped up security, saying they would deploy extra
"blocking trucks" to protect against vehicle attacks, rooftop
snipers, heavy weapons, dogs and helicopters.
"This increase will supplement the already large, substantial detail
of uniformed officers that you will see along the route," New York
Police Chief Carlos Gomez said on Wednesday.
The route connects all five of the city's boroughs, starting near
the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge in Staten Island, snaking through
Brooklyn, Queens and Manhattan, before circling up to the Bronx and
back to Manhattan.
Stephanie Trumbino, 35, of Maplewood, New Jersey, said she felt
concerned about the attack but did not consider missing her first
attempt at the race.
"I never gave it a second thought," said Trumbino, a human resources
manager at Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey.
(Reporting by Peter Szekely and Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Andrew
Hay)
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