Austin8
Literotica Guru
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- Mar 15, 2009
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November 7th 2010
To get to the starting line, runners will board 12 ferries leaving from Manhattan. (Nearly half the participants now arrive by ferry.) About 500 buses will take runners to the start at Fort Wadsworth on Staten Island from points in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Long Island, New Jersey and beyond.
(For what it’s worth, 56 percent of the entrants last year were married and 36 percent were single. The rest were divorced, partners or widowed.)
At the start on the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, there will be 1,694 portable toilets, 42,000 PowerBars, 90,000 bottles of water and 563 pounds of Dunkin’ Donuts coffee beans, enough to make 45,000 cups. About 500 volunteers will collect more than 10 tons of sweat suits, sleeping bags and Snuggies, much of which will be cleaned and given to charities. The bridge must be cleared within an hour of the last runner’s leaving. More than 70 United Parcel Service trucks will take the athletes’ belongings to the finish line.
Along the course, 62,370 gallons of water and 32,040 gallons of Gatorade will be served in 2.3 million paper cups that, thanks to some new technology, can now be recycled. Another 60,000 PowerBar Gel packets will be available at Mile 18.
About 11 tons of trash will be collected at the 24 fluid stations, much of it cardboard, plastic jugs and cups. The 24 station “captains” have more than 400 years of experience combined. Along the course, 137 bands (all vetted by New York Road Runners) will perform on dozens of stages. Runners can check their times on the 106 clocks on the course.
Among the more than 6,000 volunteers on race day are medical workers at the 38 aid stations. They will have on hand 11,410 pounds of ice, 13,475 bandages, 57,059 salt packages and 390 tubs of Vaseline. They will have 435 cots and 30 defibrillators that hopefully will not be needed.
In all, 1,200 vehicles will be used during the race, including many assembled into convoys that clean the course as runners push ahead. School buses will pick up stragglers. Runners who make it to the finish will be handed one of the 52,000 medals, and possibly one of the 60,000 heat sheets and 52,000 food bags.
Jim Heim, who works with Ciaccia (NYCRR), said the Road Runners operations staff was “a well-oiled machine” in part because it hosted events throughout the year. But he admitted that “at every event, there’s something that is going to go wrong.”
Source: New York Times
Can Meb retain his 2009 title... It's going to be an exciting race.
Televised NBC sports, 2-4pm Eastern 1-3pm Central
Go Meb!!
To get to the starting line, runners will board 12 ferries leaving from Manhattan. (Nearly half the participants now arrive by ferry.) About 500 buses will take runners to the start at Fort Wadsworth on Staten Island from points in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Long Island, New Jersey and beyond.
(For what it’s worth, 56 percent of the entrants last year were married and 36 percent were single. The rest were divorced, partners or widowed.)
At the start on the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, there will be 1,694 portable toilets, 42,000 PowerBars, 90,000 bottles of water and 563 pounds of Dunkin’ Donuts coffee beans, enough to make 45,000 cups. About 500 volunteers will collect more than 10 tons of sweat suits, sleeping bags and Snuggies, much of which will be cleaned and given to charities. The bridge must be cleared within an hour of the last runner’s leaving. More than 70 United Parcel Service trucks will take the athletes’ belongings to the finish line.
Along the course, 62,370 gallons of water and 32,040 gallons of Gatorade will be served in 2.3 million paper cups that, thanks to some new technology, can now be recycled. Another 60,000 PowerBar Gel packets will be available at Mile 18.
About 11 tons of trash will be collected at the 24 fluid stations, much of it cardboard, plastic jugs and cups. The 24 station “captains” have more than 400 years of experience combined. Along the course, 137 bands (all vetted by New York Road Runners) will perform on dozens of stages. Runners can check their times on the 106 clocks on the course.
Among the more than 6,000 volunteers on race day are medical workers at the 38 aid stations. They will have on hand 11,410 pounds of ice, 13,475 bandages, 57,059 salt packages and 390 tubs of Vaseline. They will have 435 cots and 30 defibrillators that hopefully will not be needed.
In all, 1,200 vehicles will be used during the race, including many assembled into convoys that clean the course as runners push ahead. School buses will pick up stragglers. Runners who make it to the finish will be handed one of the 52,000 medals, and possibly one of the 60,000 heat sheets and 52,000 food bags.
Jim Heim, who works with Ciaccia (NYCRR), said the Road Runners operations staff was “a well-oiled machine” in part because it hosted events throughout the year. But he admitted that “at every event, there’s something that is going to go wrong.”
Source: New York Times
Can Meb retain his 2009 title... It's going to be an exciting race.
Televised NBC sports, 2-4pm Eastern 1-3pm Central
Go Meb!!
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