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Go Home Frank Shorter, Winner

THE PLANK OCTOBER 12, 2007

Frank Shorter, Winner

Wow, was Frank Shorter always so vain and I just missed it, or does this kind of thing worsen with age? Shorter writes in the lede to his New York Times op-ed today:

AT the 16-mile mark of a very hot and humid marathon at the Pan American Games in Cali, Colombia, in 1971, I looked over at my good friend and teammate Kenny Moore and noticed something. "You've stopped sweating," I said, trying to sound calm. Kenny looked at his dry forearms, and then his eyes got very big. Ten minutes later he was in an ambulance, incoherent with heat stroke.
We had both expected extreme conditions and had prepared accordingly all summer. But it was not his day, and I went on the win the race. (The next summer, Kenny would finish fourth in the Olympic Marathon in Munich, which I won.) In Cali, my genetics had prevailed: some athletes simply handle heat and humidity better than others. [emphasis added.]

It would have been a real shame if Moore had been hospitalized and Shorter had lost the race. Nice of him to put our minds at ease.

--Noam Scheiber

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3 comments

Face it, Noam, Frank Shorter can run your a** into the ground, and you can't handle it!

- AMVHuck

October 12, 2007 at 4:36pm

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Agreed. It seems a small and petty observation.

- pgutermann

October 12, 2007 at 8:34pm

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For some purely subjective reason I've always liked Bill Rodgers more than Shorter. This quote is unflattering, but at least Shorter is admitting here that genetics matter. Prefontaine (who was admittedly very tough, but also had a freaklishly large heart) claimed that success in running is just a matter of who has the most guts -- the sort of thing you can only believe if you've never had the singularly depressing experience of running 100+ miles per week in training only to end up as the eighth man on your cross country team. (I'm not bitter -- really!) I've found that good distance runners are often a bit like self-made tycoons; because they worked so hard to achieve success, they assume that dedication alone is a sufficient condition for achievement, and that everybody they've left in the dust must be lazy.

- Bowdoin

October 13, 2007 at 1:01pm

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