Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Law

Brooklyn Half Marathon Wins Battle Against Brooklyn Half Marathon

Two organizers laid claim to the same name, but one changed it after a settlement.

Running shoes on the ground

The tale of two Brooklyn Half Marathons came to an end Tuesday when one of them changed its name amid legal pressure.

The NYCRuns Brooklyn Half Marathon will now be called the NYCRuns Brooklyn Experience Half Marathon, the organizer announced. The title of Brooklyn Half will remain in the hands of rival organizer New York Road Runners.

NYRR has put on its 13.1-mile race in Brooklyn since 1981; the 2025 race is set for May 17. Its current naming sponsor is the Royal Bank of Canada.

NYCRuns was founded in 2009 and began its late-April Brooklyn race in 2018. Until Tuesday it was known as the “NYCRuns Brooklyn Half Marathon.”

NYRR filed a complaint against NYCRuns in federal court in February 2024 seeking full ownership of the Brooklyn Half name. The legal move came after NYRR contacted NYCRuns in February 2023 expressing its concerns, according to the complaint, after which NYCRuns continued using the Brooklyn Half Marathon name to promote its 2024 race.

NYRR’s argument was based on trademark law claiming people could be confused by both races having the same name, and said in its complaint that it has been contacted by runners who signed up and paid for the wrong race. (And threw a dig that NYCRuns events “do not enjoy the same established, quality reputation” as theirs do.) NYRR also argued it has earned claim to the name because it has used it for decades.

That historical reasoning is why the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office granted NYRR’s trademark request for Brooklyn Half in 2017. The USPTO originally said the organization’s petition was mainly geographical, so NYRR claimed it “acquired distinctiveness” by using its name for at least five years—making it a term people associate with its event in particular.

“If somebody started today as American Airlines for an airline that’s literally in America, we would immediately say, ‘Well, that’s descriptive, you can’t register that as a trademark,’” trademark law expert Carissa Weiss tells Front Office Sports. “But, at this stage of the game, we uniquely know that mark is referring to a single company that is not United and is not JetBlue, right?

“So that’s what acquired distinctiveness is. It’s long use over time that gets the consuming public to think of something that would otherwise be descriptive as uniquely associated with you,” Weiss says.

Becoming distinctive is the goal in trademark efforts. A descriptive term is too broad for a trademark, but a distinctive one sets it apart. This is also something NYCRuns is achieving by amending its name change.

“ I think in this context, Brooklyn Experience does the job of having us keep these two marathons apart,” another trademark law expert, Marty Schwimmer, tells FOS. “And you won’t have people signing up for the wrong one, as was alleged in the complaint.”

To Schwimmer, it’s interesting that this dispute even had to go to court, given that NYRR had already reached out to NYCRuns about the name.

“If my client came in, ‘Hey, we got this demand letter today.’ I would look up and I would say, ‘Hey, New York Road Runners has a registration that’s five years old for the term Brooklyn Half Marathon. This just isn’t worth it. Go, change the name,’” Schwimmer says. “That’s how it should have played out.”

But NYCRuns denied NYRR’s allegations to the court in March, and called NYRR’s Brooklyn Half marks “weak and unenforceable.”

The two sides began a period of discovery before agreeing to a “settlement in principle” on Oct. 25, according to court filings. NYRR voluntarily dismissed the case Dec. 16, and it was terminated the next day.

A spokesperson for NYCRuns tells FOS the lawsuit was “amicably resolved” and the group thinks the new name “better identifies the race for runners as an authentic Brooklyn running experience.” A spokesperson for NYRR also tells FOS the matter reached an “amicable resolution.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Michael Johnson Accused of Fraud in Grand Slam Track’s Collapse

Vendors are looking to sue Johnson and Winners Alliance for millions.
Mar 29, 2025; San Francisco, CA, USA; CBS Sports reporter Lauren Shehadi speaks prior to a game between the Texas Tech Red Raiders and the Florida Gators during the West Regional final of the 2025 NCAA tournament at Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-Imagn Images
exclusive

Lauren Shehadi Lands Netflix MLB Reporter Role

Shehadi will make her debut during Netflix’s Opening Night game on March 25.
April 23, 2024; Washington, D.C., USA; Exterior view of the U.S. Supreme Court as the court hears oral arguments on April 23, 2024, in a challenge by Starbucks to a judicial decision that required the coffee chain to rehire seven employees at one of its cafes in Memphis, Tennessee who a federal agency determined were fired for supporting unionization.

Why the Future of Sports Prediction Markets Hangs in the Balance

Continued government support for the sports surge is not guaranteed.

MLS Wants Yellow Card Betting Outlawed As it Bans Two Players

MLS said Derrick Jones and Yaw Yeboah bet on their own games.

Featured Today

Alex Eala Has Become One of the Biggest Draws in Tennis

Eala will face Coco Gauff in the third round at Indian Wells.
Jun 9, 2021; Paris, France; The racket of Coco Gauff (USA) after she smashed it during her match against Barbora Krejcikova (CZE) on day 11 of the French Open at Stade Roland Garros
March 6, 2026

The ‘Rage Room’ Is the Hottest Place in Tennis

The idea came from a player podcast.
March 5, 2026

Mark DeRosa Is Still Baseball’s Swiss Army Knife

DeRosa is the sport’s utility player both on the field and off.
Nicole Silveira
March 3, 2026

The Tattoo Marking Membership in the Most Exclusive Club in Sports

For athletes, the Olympic rings tattoo is “about everything it took.”

Jon Jones: UFC ‘Lowballed’ Him on White House Card, Seeks Release

Conor McGregor also weighed in on the White House card.
March 6, 2026

Creditors Bash Grand Slam Track: ‘Shocking Levels of Incompetence’

A new legal filing criticizes the league’s plan to emerge from bankruptcy.
March 9, 2026

Live Nation Deal With DOJ Draws Pushback from Several States

The deal involving the Ticketmaster parent company draws widespread rebuke.
Sponsored

Paul Rabil: Why Owning a Team Is a 100x Bet

Paul Rabil shares how he left an established league to build PLL.
Mar 30, 2025; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Detroit Pistons guard Malik Beasley (5) reacts during the second quarter against the Minnesota Timberwolves at Target Center. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images
March 6, 2026

Judge Rules Malik Beasley Owes $1 Million to Former Agency

The free-agent guard remains a subject in a federal gambling probe.
Oct 16, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Portland Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups gives instructions to his team during the first half against the Utah Jazz at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Peter Creveling-Imagn Images
March 4, 2026

Judge Targets November Trial in Chauncey Billups Case

Billups was arrested in October as part of a federal gambling probe.
A Reebok garment display is seen at a Walmart Supercenter on W. Greenfield Ave. on Thursday November 20, 2025 in West Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
March 3, 2026

Reebok, On, and Other Sports Retailers Demand Tariff Refunds

Reversing tariffs will generate up to $175B in refunds, says one group.
Sep 15, 2024; Arlington, Texas, USA; Boxer Mike Tyson on the field before the game between the Dallas Cowboys and New Orleans Saints at AT&T Stadium.
February 26, 2026

Mike Tyson’s Former Weed Biz Partners Countersue in Delaware

They are concerned about the value of their shares in Tyson 2.0.