Is eating a sport?
Millions of highly intelligent humans are asking themselves
this question as we speak, following the incendiary
Independence Day ESPN television show, The 2011 Nathan's
World Hot Dog Eating Championship. My God, this was a
programme and a-half. And it was on ESPN, so it must be a
sport.
The two commentators certainly thought so, drawing parallels
between the competitors and many famous sports people as the
show, witnessed by 45,000 people at the Coney Island fun park
and watched live by two million on TV, swallowed and
indigested itself to a shattering climax.
Statistics on the screen revealed 81% believed eating was NOT
a sport. The commentators were outraged. 17% believed it was,
which begged the obvious question, what did the other 2%
think?
One assumes they didn't understand the question.
I not only loved this show to death and moved so close to our
50in screen as it unfolded that I nearly finished up behind
the set altogether, but I also became consumed by the contest
and its major players for days afterwards.
Imagine how stunned I was to find this competition began in
1916, after four immigrants decided to hold an eatdown, at
Nathan's, Coney Island, to determine who was the most
patriotic.
The aim since, same venue, same date, has been simply to find
who can eat the most hot dogs in 10 minutes. But the
patriotism sub-text ripples quietly underneath.
There still isn't much money in the world hot dog eating
championship - the winner gets a pithy poor $10,000 - but the
money men are moving in. An attempt to sign the major players
to exclusive contracts has resulted in the sport's living
legend, Takeru Kobayashi, who gets 10 grand just for opening
an envelope in Japan, refusing to sign and being banned.
Kobayashi, his eyes ablaze with kamikaze lust, stormed the
stage last year and was arrested.
This year, with favourite Joey Chestnut having announced he
was going to best his world record of 68 hot dogs in 10
minutes, Kobayashi set up a parallel event on the roof of a
neighbouring hotel, starting his own solo contest at exactly
the same time as the Nathan's finalists began gorging on a
huge TV screen beside him. And Kobayashi had the last laugh.
Chestnut, dunking his dogs in water for a smoother passage
down the throat, took out the title comfortably, but only ate
62. Kobayashi managed 69, and threw world eating
administrators into a furrowed quandary. Was his world record
legal?
Kobayashi is probably the finest unknown sports star in the
world today. He has a magnificent body, biceps that would
crack glass, and a cat-like hunger in the eye I can compare
only to Rambo.
Kobayashi is so good at eating hot dogs, he once went up
against a 1089lb bear, who had been especially starved for
the bout. This suggests that Kobayash is not only a supreme
sportsman, but also as mad as a shoe, for the bear was right
beside him on the stage, and highly likely to eat Kobayashi
for dessert. The bear won, Kobayashi survived.
Chestnut's victory, by four downed dogs, was his fifth in a
row. The dark horse was Eater X, who was found in the streets
of Tangiers as a baby and brought up with no knowledge of his
parents or, indeed, himself. He was using World Championship
Eating, said the commentators, to try and find out who he is
and where he comes from. Eater X, despite excellent
technique, came a distant third.
The crowd went home fat and content that America is still the
greatest nation in the world. But there was an ominous
footnote with the first appearance of competitors from China.
Three eaters, each with different styles and bodies,
suggested this hugely ambitious nation has earmarked the
WHDEC for their next commercial conquest. What they send to
the 2012 championship will be of riveting interest to all
sports-lovers.
This one is already booked on our MySky.
• Roy Colbert is a Dunedin writer.
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