Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest

Patz

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Ok guys lets bet on a real sport! Eating!!!!! The hot dog eating contest has odds posted on several of the major books for this weekend. Ive got a bet avaliable on my tradesports.com account to be that Kobayasi will not win at 4-1. He has won tw o years in a row, but i have to think that the other eaters have learned what what he is doing and may very well upset him this year. Any opinions?
-Patz
 

The Big Tease

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what the fuk???? I thought we had sunken to new lows with wrestling and survivor, but betting on how many damn hot dogs a guy can stuff down his throat is just plain sick.

I love it! Give me the smallest guy in the field, whoever it may be. Those fukers always win those eating contests.

Oh what the hell, let me enter, I will shove them bastards down my throat so fast they wont know what hit em.:cool:
 

THE KOD

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I heard that Refrigerator Perry is going to EAT hot dogs in this contest.

I saw the medium size man last year Kolmereyo , that dude can eat. He dont wait he just chews. Its amazing.

Alot of people think that the winning edge in a eating contest is in a persons bulk or having a large stomach. In actuality it is the man that can chew the food and swallow it down faster that will win.

Look at the teeth and jaws, I am telling you.

KOD
 
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flag

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Hotdog eating contest, you have got to be kidding that they have a line on it, if so what book, must be one of the fly by night books.
 

kickserv

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and to think tons of starving people in the world :rolleyes:
 

THE KOD

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For an unprecedented third straight year, rail-thin Takeru "Tsunami" Kobayashi out-gorged the competition Friday in the Nathan's Famous hot dog eating contest, downing 44? dogs and dominating adversaries three times his size.

Kobayashi, the Michael Jordan of wiener wolfing, twitched and twisted to finish his franks at the rate of one every 16 seconds in a 12-minute display of gastronomic supremacy at the annual Fourth of July extravaganza.

Celebrity contestant William "The Refrigerator" Perry was outclassed by the assembled chowhounds. The 410-pound former NFL star dropped out of the competition after just five minutes, with only four hot dogs finished.

Once again, the American competitive eaters were left to fight for second place as a Japanese champion was crowned for the sixth time in the last seven years. Runner-up Ed "Cookie" Jarvis, 6-foot-6 and 420 pounds, trailed the champion by 14 hot dogs.

The 145-pound Kobayashi, of Nagano, Japan, employed his trademark "Solomon method" -- snapping the dogs in half before swallowing them -- to destroy both the other 19 contestants and his digestive track.

He once again raised the mustard-yellow championship belt above his head in victory, flashing thumbs-up to a crowd of more than 3,000 fans outside the original Nathan's in Coney Island. The contest was first held in 1916.

Kobayashi downed his first hot dog in five seconds, and 13 in the first two minutes, as he sprinted to the lead like Carl Lewis with a frankfurter fetish.

But the 5-foot-7 Kobayashi, who sports a 30-inch waist, was disappointed that he failed to break his own record of 50? dogs. Kobayashi banged the table holding the hot dogs, and put his hands to his head in dismay.

"I feel sad I didn't break the record," he said through an interpreter. "I came here to set the record."

George Shea, spokesman for the event, couldn't believe that Kobayashi was anything but proud of his performance.

"I'm shocked anybody would characterize this as anything short of stupendous," Shea said. "This is an athlete who still remains at another level than the rest of the competition."

Jarvis, of Nesconset, N.Y., pounded down a U.S. record 30? franks to finish second. Third place went to New York subway conductor Eric "Badlands" Booker, a 6-foot-4, 400-pounder who sucked down 29 tube steaks and buns.

Sonya Thomas of Alexandria, Va., set a women's record by downing 25 hot dogs and finishing fourth.
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This guy is a chow hound.


KOD
 

THE KOD

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Sonya Thomas of Alexandria, Va., set a women's record by downing 25 hot dogs and finishing fourth.


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I got alot of respect for a woman with the stamina to
swallow 25 hot dogs !

We men maybe should hold womans only weiner swallowing contests monthly.

I could think of some ways for some good practice sessions with the woman without actually having to eat the dogs.

KOD
 

countinguy

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Celebrity contestant William "The Refrigerator" Perry was outclassed by the assembled chowhounds. The 410-pound former NFL star dropped out of the competition after just five minutes, with only four hot dogs finished.

How in the hell did that fat fawker only eat 4 hot dogs.

Did they give him appetizers in the green room????:rolleyes: :D
 

THE KOD

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a_nathans2_i.jpg

CONEY ISLAND, N.Y. -- Three minutes into the Nathan's International Hot Dog Eating Contest, Japanese speed-eater Takeru Kobayashi had scarfed down 17 hot dogs and buns. There were nine minutes remaining, but Kobayashi had already bested the personal highs of more than half of the competitors.

The numbers don't lie, even though they're nearly impossible to believe. For the third consecutive year, the event was no contest as Kobayashi dominated. Although he did finish six hot dogs and buns short of the record he set last year, Kobayashi's 44? dogs were 14 better than runner-up Ed "Cookie" Jarvis.

Kobayashi's unmatched success and overwhelming margin of victory have caused some to speculate that the only explanation is the feasting phenom has an unfair advantage.

Kobayashi has told other competitive eaters that he uses aloe vera to coat his stomach, but after the competition, he once again denied he uses any sort of drugs to get an advantage.

Still, you can't blame the rest of the field for feeling like they're competing against an unnatural eating machine -- one that comes in an unbelievably rail-thin 145-pound package.

In 2001, David O'Karma ate 17 hot dogs in the first half of the contest, but when he heard that Kobayashi had already finished 27, he put down his franks and just watched.

"Ever since that day, I've been trying to figure out how he does it," said O'Karma, a 47-year-old painting contractor from Akron, Ohio, who owns the world doughnut eating title (30 donuts in 5:28). "I've researched and researched on the Internet, but I still can't understand it. Kobayashi gets stronger and stronger as he goes."
You can't blame this man for feeling stuffed. He had a big lunch.
O'Karma, who retired from competitive eating two weeks ago, says he can't prove it, but he thinks there is a chance Kobayashi has an artificial advantage. O'Karma says Kobayashi has a scar on his back.

"Maybe he had some of his intestines removed," O'Karma speculated. "I mean, I was at least in the 95th percentile on the competitive eating landscape ... well, what's Kobayashi then? He's not even on the chart."

"There have been rumors on the circuit that he was surgically altered by the Japanese government," added "Crazy Legs" Conti, a wild-card entry in the contest who finished with 15 hot dogs and buns. "I just think he's the greatest athlete of all-time."

The International Federation of Competitive Eating (IFOCE) doesn't do any sort of drug testing or have contestants certify that they haven't altered their bodies in any way.

"We haven't seen any evidence or heard any reports of drug abuse," said Rich Shea, president of the IFOCE, which sanctions the Nathan's contest every year. "If we heard anything from the eaters or the audience, we would obviously launch the proper investigation, and if need be, we will institute a drug policy."

Eric Booker, left, and the rest of the competitors got gobbled up by Takeru Kobayashi. Dr. Nidhir Sheth, a gastroenterologist with the Gastroenterology Consultants of South Jersey, says the ideal surgery for a competitive eater would be a bypass surgery that would allow food to go into the small intestines instead of the stomach. The small intestines do not send signals to the brain, thus the feeling of being full wouldn't occur.

There are also drugs that would provide an edge. Reglan, which causes the digestive system to work faster, is usually given to patients with heartburn, but it could work to an eater's advantage.

Stomach relaxants like hyoscyamine sulfate would keep the stomach from getting spasms or cramps, Sheth said. Better yet, testing for the relaxant would be a challenge because it does not flow through the bloodstream.

Eric Booker, who finished third with 29 hot dogs and buns, said he doesn't suspect any foul play with the reigning hot dog eating champion.

"He told me about the aloe vera, but I don't think he does anything illegal," Booker said. "If he did cheat, it would bring such disgrace to his country that it wouldn't be worth it."

But some think testing might not be on the horizon.

"We don't need to test yet," said "Hungry" Charles Hardy, who ate 17 hot dogs and buns. "But when this becomes an Olympic sport, then we're going to have to do it."
Darren Rovell, who covers sports business for ESPN.com, can be reached at darren.rovell@espn3.com. "

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Can you believe they would have to think about drug testing a hot dog eating contest at Coney Island ? what is this world coming to ?

KOD
 
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