Malibu Puts On Its Running Shoes

First time running the 'Bu

By John Adams and Jonathan Lloyd
|  Thursday, Jan 7, 2010  |  Updated 3:03 PM PST
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Malibu Puts On Its Running Shoes

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Malibu is ready for their first marathon on Nov. 15th. (Photo by Jarrett Baker/Getty Images)

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Two 39-year-olds, Todd Martin of Pacific Palisades and  Lisa Fink of Newhall, won Sunday's inaugural Malibu International Marathon.

Martin completed the 26-mile, 385-yard course in two hours, 58 minutes, 23.7  seconds. Chris Price of Thousand Oaks was second in 3:01.48.1.

Fink won the women's division in 3:13:07, the seventh fastest time  overall. Margot Fleming of Glen Ridge, N.J., was second in 3:19:48.8.

One runner collapsed from exhaustion and was taken to a hospital, but is  fine, a race official who asked not to be identified told City News Service.

The race, billed as "The Run to Paradise," began at the Camarillo  Airport, then continued through Ventura County's flat farmlands. At Mile 10,  the field of about 500 ran through the "Keyway to the Coast," a rock  passageway to the Pacific Ocean.

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The remainder of the course was along the Pacific Coast Highway and  concluded at Zuma Beach.

The race was organized by the Malibu-based Forever Runners LLC, whose  five directors have run more than 400 marathons, according to race director  Lisa Ohlson.

The Malibu City Council voted unanimously on Sept. 14 to allow Forever  Runners LLC to operate the race for five years. Ohlson said she expects the  field to double next year.

The race raised funds for various organizations in Malibu. The city  received $10 per entrant, which it will use to benefit its clean water  programs, Ohlson said.

Organizations benefiting from the race include the Malibu Boys & Girls  Club; Malibu Green Machine, which is seeking to install a landscaped median  strip along Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu; and Christopher's Haven, a home  for families whose children are undergoing cancer treatment.

The race's other charitable organizations included the Malibu Special  Education Foundation, which funds programs for students with disabilities in  the Santa Monica-MalibuUnified School District, and The Shark Fund, which  raises funds for various programs at Malibu High School.

Another beneficiary was Future Leaders for Peace, which describes itself  as a group that "gives young people an outlet for expression, while teaching  positive ways of approaching life challenges and dreams."

The Malibu International Marathon was the second marathon in Los Angeles  County to debut this year. The inaugural Pasadena Marathon was run March 22.   

Posted Saturday, Nov 14, 2009 - 2:07 PM PST
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