RUNNING: Sanon wins Long Island Marathon

5 May 1997

Associated Press

EAST MEADOW, N.Y. (May 4, 1997 - 20:03 EST) -- Harold Sanon of Haiti won the Long Island Marathon on Sunday in 2 hours, 33 minutes, 38 seconds.

"My goal is to qualify for the Olympics in 2000," Sanon said after his first ever marathon. "It's a good sign that I won on my first try."

Steve Marsalese of Middle Village finished second in 2:37.34. Lauren Kearney of New York took the women's race in 3:03.40.


6 May 1997

LONG ISLAND MARATHON

By John Hanc. STAFF WRITER of Newsday

(snip)

Men's marathon winner Harold Sanon (2:33:38) had never raced 26.2 miles before. A native of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, he came to Long Island to run his first marathon, at the suggestion of his coach, Ralph Kenizan. "I wanted him to run a race that would be tough, psychologically," Kenizan said. He had heard about Long Island - with its long, lonely stretches of parkway - from fellow countryman, last year's winner Lamothe Dieudonne (who finished 20th yesterday, in 2:55:25).

It lived up to its billing. "The race was hard," said Sanon, speaking through an interpreter (Kenizan). "I'm tired, but really happy."

Sanon is looking to the Olympic Games of 2000.

(snip)


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