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WOOKEY HOLE BIG EAT HISTORY
The History of competitive eating
Competitive
eating is among the most diverse, dynamic and demanding sports in
history. It dates back to the earliest days of mankind and stands
alongside original athletic pursuits such as running, jumping and
throwing. If you have 30 hungry Neanderthals in a cave and rabbit
walks in, that is a competitive eating situation. Of course, in
the last two centuries competitive eating has been practiced with
somewhat more formality.
The Japanese culture is known for its reverence
of competitive eaters and continues to celebrate their accomplishments.
Takeru Kobayashi, Kazutoyo Arai and Hirofumi Nakajima are just a
few of the eaters who have distinguished themselves at the table,
setting record after record before stunned crowds.
In
the United States, competitive eaters were dominant figures early
in the 20th Century, when names like Charles Sylvester Carter and
Stan Libnitz tripped off the tongue of any self-respecting sporting
man. During the past decade the discipline has again risen in popularity
in America, appealing to fans seeking a pure and fundamental sport.
It is impossible to overstate the contributions of American eaters
such as Mike "The Scholar" Devito (now IFOCE commissioner), Ed Krachie
and Charles Hardy, who held the U.S. eating mantle high in the 1990s
despite the ever-increasing challenge from the Pacific rim.
Nations that have now embraced the sport
include Canada, Germany, Thailand, England, Russia and Scotland.
Barry Noble, Peter Dowdeswell and Chris Eyre are just a few of the
international emissaries who have leveraged the popularity of competitive
eating for charity and other good works.
The IFOCE has organized the major sanctioned
eating events of the year into a formal (and ever-growing) circuit.
Chicken wings are followed by matzo balls are followed by pickles
are followed hot dogs and so on in a dizzying series of challenges
for the amateur and professional gurgitators who pursue the eating
life.
The dominant event of the year -- and indeed
the dominant event in the sport as it is practiced internationally
-- is the Nathan's Famous Fourth of July Hot Dog Eating Contest,
which has stood as the de facto Olympics of the sport and as a litmus
test of patriotism for eaters of all nations.
The
Nathan's Fourth of July Hot Dog Eating Contest Each Fourth of July
a group of 20 steely-eyed individuals line up behind a 30-foot table
at Nathan's flagship restaurant on Surf Avenue in Coney Island to
begin the world hot dog eating championship. At 12 Noon, crushed
by fans and media, the competitors begin the historic 12-minute
contest.
According to archives, the Fourth of July
Hot Dog Eating Contest was first held in 1916, the year Nathan's
opened on Surf Avenue. The contest has been held each year since
then, except in 1941, when it was canceled as a protest to the war
in Europe, and in 1971, when it was canceled as a protest to civil
unrest and the reign of free love.
The
all-time world record is currently held by Takeru Kobayashi of Japan,
who ate 50 hot dogs and buns in 12 minutes in 2001 to nearly double
the previous record held by countryman Kazutoyo Arai, who ate 25
1/8 hot dogs and buns in July 2000. American Steve Keiner held the
belt in victory 1999, beating Hirofumi Nakajima and prompting tears
of joy in Coney Island.
However,
Hirofumi Nakajima will remain known as one of the world's greatest
eaters, due in part to his early record of 24 1/2 hot dogs and buns
and to his years-long rivalry with former world champion and fan
favorite, American Edward Krachie.
Krachie ate 22 1/4 hot dogs and buns on
July 4, 1996 to top the previous record held by Frank "Large" Dellarosa,
a fellow Maspeth resident who ate 21 1/2 hot dogs and buns in the
1991 contest. Prior to this, Peter Washburn, a Brooklyn carnival
worker, was world-record holder for more than a decade, with 18
1/2 hot dogs and buns.
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