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The Dallas Marathon (formerly known as the Dallas White Rock Marathon and also known as the BMW Dallas Marathon for sponsorship reasons) is an annual marathon road running event usually hosted in December by Dallas, Texas, and is Texas' oldest marathon, [citation needed] having been held every year since 1971 (with the exception of 2013 [a] and 2020 [b]).
In 2008, the Competitor Group took over Elite Racing, the company that had been organizing the Rock 'n' Roll Marathon. The following year, 2009, an internal audit revealed that the charity in whose name the race had been run, Elite Racing Foundation for Children, Education & Medical Research, had been improperly commingling funds with the for-profit Elite Racing.
A half marathon is a road running event of 21.0975 kilometres (13 miles 192.5 yards)—half the distance of a marathon. [1] It is common for a half marathon event to be held concurrently with a marathon or a 5K race, using almost the same course with a late start, an early finish, or shortcuts. [ 2 ]
Per the Marathon Handbook, the average marathon runner takes about 52,400 steps in a 26.2 mile race. All of the Rules and Guidelines Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders Hopefuls and Team Members Must Follow
October: 2018: Niagara Marathon: Niagara Falls, New York to Niagara Falls, Ontario United States Canada: October: 1974: Nunavut Midnight Sun Marathon: Arctic Bay, Nunavut Canada: July [19] Okanagan International Marathon: Kelowna, British Columbia Canada: October: 1995 [20] Oklahoma City Marathon: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma United States: April: 2001
38-year-old diagnosed with stage 4 cancer weeks after finishing half-marathon Horton, a 6-foot-4, 275-pound powerhouse, had started noticing symptoms like night sweats, fatigue and weight loss.
Dallas Marathon: Dallas, US Cardiac arrhythmia IRE: Colin Dunne [34] 27 1 March 2009 Barcelona Marathon: Barcelona, Spain Heart attack USA: Peter Curtin [35] 23 10 October 2009 Baltimore Marathon: Baltimore, US Undetermined, possible heat stroke; body temperature 107 °F (42 °C) USA: William Caviness 35 9 October 2011 Chicago Marathon: Chicago, US
[20] [21] It was the fastest marathon time for an American runner in 1984—until December, when Ken Martin would run 11 seconds faster in the Sacramento Marathon. [22] US Track and Field News ranked Torneden in the top 10 marathon runners for 1984 along with Pete Pfitzinger , Alberto Salazar , Bill Rodgers (runner) , and others. [ 23 ]