An 86-year-old retired nurse from Orange extended her streak of finishing a race in every edition of the Surf City Marathon Sunday, finishing the 5K in 1:02.1 despite suffering a mild stroke last month.

Dorothy Strand is the only runner to start a race each year the Huntington Beach event has been held. She ran the 5K in 57:42 last year.

Strand became a runner in her late 40s. Her sons were running cross-country at Orange Lutheran High School when her husband, John, decided to join them in road races.

“I thought, `Heck, I need to join in on this,”’ she said.

Strand was among the 5,200 runners to enter Sunday’s 5K in the 30th edition of the marathon, which began at 11 a.m. after starting at 8:10 a.m. last year. The change was prompted because of the “significant growth” of the 5K field and in an attempt to “reduce congestion at the finish line when the lead marathon and half marathon runners are coming through,” race publicist Dan Cruz told City News Service.

The 5K drew a capacity field of 4,500 last year.

Overall, the Surf City USA Marathon attracted its largest field since the coronavirus pandemic, with 3,000 runners entering the marathon and 12,000 runners entering the half-marathon, which were also capacity fields, Cruz said.

The marathon and half-marathon drew 2,000 and 9,300 entrants in 2025, also capacity fields.

Runners from 47 states and 18 nations entered Sunday’s races.

Nicholas Goldstein of Newbury Park won the men’s marathon, completing the 26-mile, 385-yard course in 2:30:01, 15 seconds ahead of Joshua Lerch of Huntington Beach.

“At the end, I was struggling,” said Goldstein, who was a cross-country and distance runner at Furman University. “My longest training run was 22 miles. I started to feel it. I got some water and made it happen.”

The women’s marathon was won by Monica Ruiz of Chula Vista in a personal-record 2:59:09. Kate Baranski, who ran cross-country for Costa Mesa-based Vanguard University from 2023-25, was second in 3:02:39.

The marathon started on Pacific Coast Highway between the Pacific Ocean and the Waterfront Beach Hotel. The course then quickly passed the Huntington Beach Pier. Miles two through nine went through Huntington Beach’s Central Park and miles 9 through 15 through the Bolsa Chica Ecological Reserve.

Miles 16 through 25 were on a beachfront running path paved over the sand. The final mile took runners along Pacific Coast Highway to the finish line, also near the Waterfront Beach Resort.

The race prompted the closure of Pacific Coast Highway in both directions from First Street to Beach Boulevard from 1 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and from Warner Avenue to First Street from 4 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

This is one of three times a year a stretch of Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach is closed. The others are for the Independence Day parade and a 10-mile race held in September, Cruz said.

In other races Sunday, Esteban Prado won the men’s half-marathon in 1:06:23, while Piper Atnip took the women’s half-marathon in 1:14:36.

The women’s 5K was won by Mariana Cuevas in 13:41. Alan Yoho was the men’s winner in 15:28.

The races’ primary benefiting charities are the American Cancer Society, which expected to raise more than $100,000, Ainsley’s Angels, which had 33 push-team duos of runners pushing wheelchairs ridden by children with special needs and disabilities, and the Huntington’s Disease Society of Greater Los Angeles.

Ainsley’s Angels of America is a Virginia Beach, Virginia-based charity that aims to build awareness about America’s special needs community through inclusion in all aspects of life.

The charity is named for Ainsley Rossiter, who was born in 2003 and was diagnosed with infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy, an extremely rare terminal illness that slowly causes global paralysis, just before she turned 4 years old.

When Ainsley went for her first jog during a local road race in 2008, she gave a radiant wind-induced smile. Running provided the family with a way to fight the pain of having a daughter with a terminal illness. She died at age 12 in 2016.

Ainsley’s Angels was founded by her father, Kim `Rooster’ Rossiter, a professor of disability culture at Old Dominion University and a retired Marine Corps major.

Huntington’s disease is a fatal neurodegenerative disease often passed down through a changed gene from a parent.

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