FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
First Finishers from Inaugural 1970 Race to Be Honored at 50th Running
of the TCS New York City Marathon
Larry Trachtenberg to return to run the 50th marathon
New York, November 1, 2021 - To mark the 50th running of the TCS New York
City Marathon, several of the First Finishers from the inaugural 1970 race
will be honored at the TCS New York City Marathon Opening Ceremony
Presented by United Airlines on Friday, November 5, and at the Marathon
finish line on Sunday, November 7.
The first New York City Marathon, organized by New York Road Runners, took
place on September 13, 1970, in Central Park, with an entry fee of $1 and a
budget of $1,000. Of the 127 registered runners, there were 55 finishers.
The race ultimately expanded to all five boroughs in 1976. To date, the
event has seen more than 1.2 million finishers.
"The TCS New York City Marathon has influenced and inspired so many people
around the world for more than five decades, and to think it all started
with 127 runners in Central Park is incredible," said Ted Metellus, Vice
President of Events for NYRR and Race Director of the TCS New York City
Marathon. "We are honored to bring back some of the First Finishers from
the 1970 race to have them with us on marathon day this year, and to honor
them for being the first to take part in what has grown to become the
world's premier marathon."
Former FDNY firefighter Gary Muhrcke was the first New York City Marathon
champion, coming off the night shift at work to win the race. He still runs
weekly in Central Park to this day, and his wife makes the laurels that the
champions wear after their victories.
Larry Trachtenberg will be the sole runner from 1970 who will run in the
50th marathon. He was born and raised in Queens, and ran at Long Island
City High School and regularly in Van Cortlandt Park, where he trained for
the first marathon.
Joining Muhrcke and Trachtenberg in New York will be a number of other
First Finishers from 1970, including:
- Arturo Montero - He came to the U.S. from Chile in 1960. He has run more
than 100 marathons, 31 of them New York City Marathons (2016 being the last
one). The 1970 race was his first marathon.
- Bill Newkirk - Born in the Bronx, he regularly ran around Central Park
and met Fred Lebow during his runs. He has now participated in more than 20
marathons, including more than 10 New York City Marathons. He also helped
NYRR by measuring courses with his friend, Ted Corbitt.
- Ed Ayres - After growing up in New Jersey, he ran the 1970 race with his
brother, Glen; both of them finished in the top 10. He went on to start
Running Times magazine.
- Gerald Miller - The oldest living First Finisher at 92 years old is
originally from Queens and moved to the Upper West Side of Manhattan after
he got married. He heard about the first marathon at the YMCA. He has run
more than 20 New York City Marathons and got his whole family into running.
- Jim Isenberg - He grew up in Boston and has run in more than 100
marathons, including the New York City Marathon four times. He ran for
Princeton University and is friends with Larry Trachtenberg, who told him
about the first marathon. He was a professor of physics and mathematics at
the University of Oregon.
- Joe Martino - He took his first trip to New York as a teenager with Rick
Sherlund, sleeping on a mattress the evening before the marathon at the
local YMCA. He also ran the marathon in 1978 and became friends with
two-time winner Tom Fleming.
- Moses Mayfield - He was the fastest African American marathoner in
history at the time with a time of 2:24:29; he led the 1970 marathon for 24
miles of the race before being passed by Muhrcke.
- Ralph Garfield - Originally, from England, he came to the U.S. in 1961
and would regularly run in Central Park on the Reservoir. He has run 14
marathons (eight New York City Marathons) and still jogs/walks to this day.
- Rick Sherlund - At 16 years old, one of the youngest runners of the first
marathon, he traveled to NYC with his friend, Joe Martino, to participate
in the marathon. He ran the first 20 miles and then had a cream soda before
cramping and having to walk the last six miles.
- Steve Grotsky - Originally from the Bronx, he was a fixture in the New
York running scene; he went on to run for Princeton University and
completed 50 marathons.
- Tom Hollander - He ran the marathon after graduating from high school in
Connecticut, and ran again in 1977. In 1972, he won the Cherry Tree
Marathon.
- Vince Chiappetta - Along with Fred Lebow, he co-directed the first New
York City Marathon and is a co-founder of NYRR. He has run in more than 100
marathons.
- Nina Kuscsik - She changed the sport of running by breaking through the
"Boys' Club" barrier and changing the rules so they included women. She
opened doors for future generations. While she did not finish the race, she
is the only woman among the 127 entrants who ran in the 1970 New York City
Marathon.
About New York Road Runners (NYRR)
NYRR's mission is to help and inspire people through running. Since 1958,
New York Road Runners has grown from a local running club to the world's
premier community running organization. NYRR's commitment to New York
City's five boroughs features races, virtual races, community events, free
youth running initiatives and school programs, the NYRR RUNCENTER featuring
the New Balance Run Hub, and training resources that provide hundreds of
thousands of people each year with the motivation, know-how, and
opportunity to Run for Life. NYRR's premier event is the TCS New York City
Marathon. Held annually on the first Sunday in November, the race features
a wide population of runners, from the world's top professional athletes to
a vast range of competitive, recreational, and charity runners. To learn
more, visit www.nyrr.org.
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