Pat Smyth said her husband’s last race took more than 11 hours to complete.
“We walked the last race together and every hour someone from our running group would come and walk with us for a while,” she said.
“He would have ran another race too but he became too unwell,” Pat said.
Colin walked the last 10 of his marathons due to problems with his knees, and later died from complications with his lungs.
While Pat doesn’t believe Crosswell would ever truly beat Colin, as he ran all 50 marathons consecutively, she said there was no better person to overtake his record.
Crosswell had run in six to eight different marathons throughout the country, sometimes missing Rotorua, so could not beat his friend’s consecutive streak there.
Crosswell and Smyth met in the 1970s through running, while both were working in the plumbing sector.
In 1993, they helped found the Rotorua Marathon Survivors Club, a group celebrating runners who ran the race more than 15 times.
The Smyths would host after-race dinners after Colin’s passing, Crosswell became the host.
The club was started as an attempt to bring more tourism to the city, as runners would bring supporters and spend money in the local economy.
Crosswell said Rotorua was unique in its marathons, with seasoned runners telling him its scenic lap around the lake was seven minutes harder than any other marathon in New Zealand.
Alice Mason, who has won the woman’s title several times, in 2023 described it as “a tough, honest marathon course, the toughest in New Zealand”.
Harriet Laughton is a multi-media journalist based in the Bay of Plenty.