The Twin Cities Marathon wasn't exactly canceled Tuesday. But its conversion to a virtual event — with entrants running any 26.2-mile route on any day in October — will make the 39th edition of the race the most unusual in its history.
Twin Cities in Motion, which stages the marathon, announced it will shift the rest of its 2020 races to a virtual format because of pandemic-related restrictions on large gatherings. Runners will submit their times online, and race finishers still will receive their T-shirt and medal.
It will be a much lonelier road, though, without 300,000 spectators urging them on, Alan Page playing his tuba near Mile 3 or volunteers wrapping them in silver blankets at the finish line.
The marathon was scheduled for Oct. 4, the culmination of a weekend that also includes the TC 10 Mile, TC 10K and TC 5K. As many as 30,000 runners were expected to participate in those events.
Mike Logan, president of Twin Cities in Motion, said the group does not anticipate Minnesota's limits on large group gatherings to loosen up substantially before October. Though race organizers held out hope they could conduct the event safely, they came to believe that was not possible after consulting with public health authorities and the race's medical directors.
"We did the calculus on marathon weekend,'' Logan said. "With 30,000 people over two days, and 22,000 the morning of the marathon on Sunday, it became clear. We don't foresee the state changing things quickly enough for it to happen.
"We're going to do as much as we can to give people a unique, special experience. But we're gutted.''
The Twin Cities Marathon typically attracts runners from around the country to tackle a course from downtown Minneapolis to the State Capitol in St. Paul. Other marathons in recent months, including Grandma's Marathon in Duluth and the Boston Marathon, also have switched to a virtual format.