Boris and Yelena Sobolev, a married couple from Staten Island, have volunteered with the marathon for six years. At the start area on Sunday, Boris said he was “very excited.”
“They have so much energy you literally feel it in the air,” he said.
Yelena added, “I was very upset last year. You get energized for the whole year, it’s amazing. You have to feel it.”
The area near Cumberland Street and Lafayette Avenue in Brooklyn was electric, with runners slowing down and dancing to “Hot in Herre” by the rapper Nelly as they made their way along the course. The DJ, acknowledging the marathon’s hiatus last year, told the runners, “We can’t even tell you how much we missed you. We’re back, that’s all that matters.”
As runners filled the street on First Avenue in Manhattan, people shouted, blew whistles, rang cowbells and a live band played “Ring of Fire.”
Brian Dillon strolled along the route in Bay Ridge, where he had lived all of his life, wearing an absolutely peculiar accessory: a miniature replica of Parachute Jump, the old amusement park ride in Coney Island. His brother had made it for a previous Mermaid Parade out of cardboard, barbecue skewers, foil from the tops of yogurt containers, plastic from milk containers, a fishing line and lots of glue.