| organic crunchy peanut butter |
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Geoffrey Mutai worked as a lumberjack (while training) before he started running top times...http://www.nyrrmedia.org/Beyond-The-Stats-profiles/beyond-the-stats-geoffrey-mutai.html I don't disagree about Kawauchi. But not all top Africans go from nothing to stardom overnight. I mean, a lumberjack - that's badass. |
| HRE |
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No argument there. It's occurred to me that the sport might benefit if we had stories like the one you just told about Africans but in more detail. |
| runxcidod |
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I would also agree, but details about stories on stars before they were runners are few and far between. |
| Consider This |
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I remember some enthusiasm for Wesley Korir, who at least used to work on the facilities maintenance crew at the University of Kentucky while training (I'm not sure if he still does). |
| Rodeo Clown |
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Kawauchi has the same kind of appeal that Brian Sell had, which is seeming more like an ordinary guy than a lot of top runners. You might know that you never had the talent to be like Ritz or Ryan Hall, but you can fantasize that if you just had more self-discipline to train harder and push through the pain in a race just a bit better you could be like Brian Sell - or like Kawauchi. With the Africans, so many of them seem to start out with such a gift for running, that it's harder for an average runner to identify with them, just like it's harder to identify with Ritz than Sell. |
| parsing up |
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Very nice analysis, Clown. |
| HRE |
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Peter Renner from New Zealand was a 2:12 marathoner and a world class steeplechaser, I think an Olympian and a full time lumberjack. And he was ok. |
| Total Knob |
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That sounds like a typical PR department story - nobody who reads this will know anything about Kenya, he cut down some trees for his job, so we'll say he was a lumberjack. Eldama Ravine is where a lot of cut roses come from, it is very highly cultivated area, and there isn't much in the way of forest nearby (any more). Mutai may well have cut down trees, but that doesn't make him a lumberjack. |
| malmo |
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HRE, they're called "loggers" not lumberjacks. |
| organic crunchy peanut butter |
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Nice. He was also badass then. I do also agree about the underdog mystique of guys like Sell and the way that can make them easier to identify with. That's a good point. Re: loggers vs. lumberjacks...I guess I started use of the word lumberjacks on this thread. It does sound outdated. But I took it straight from the NYRR press on Mutai so I blame them. |
| Hot, Hard Facts |
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What job was Peter Snell holding down full-time while he was winning 3 Olympic Gold Medals? |
| organic crunchy peanut butter |
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That sounds like a typical PR department story - nobody who reads this will know anything about Kenya, he cut down some trees for his job, so we'll say he was a lumberjack. Eldama Ravine is where a lot of cut roses come from, it is very highly cultivated area, and there isn't much in the way of forest nearby (any more). Mutai may well have cut down trees, but that doesn't make him a lumberjack.[/quote] Fair enough, though I think the initial comparison to Kawauchi stands. That's still hard labor and Mutai took a pretty long time to get to the top. Agreed the story has a fluff PR feel, though it's a fun story. |
| waitwut |
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Anyone know if there was video coverage for this? I'd love to see the classic Kawauchi finish again. |
| Total Knob |
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Since when has "true" been less important than "fun"? Personally, I'd rather read a dull, but true story about Mutai than the imaginings of an NYRR publicist - but maybe that's just me? |
| HRE |
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Not in the Monty Python song. |
| Bob Wildes |
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Not http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CBwQtwIwAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3D5zey8567bcg&ei=mC7eTuWNJ8u_tgfqiqWeDw&usg=AFQjCNH4r8PR6G5a6jpdAt-MkBOBT2Z4Ww&sig2=O_CYj38UhOpDdRgz966Ngwin the Monty Python song.[/quote] |
| HRE |
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Actually, the Kiwi term is "bushman." |
| No PR |
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The Mutai story and all of the "Beyond the Stats" stories were researched and written by David Powell, a British athletics journalist who formerly wrote for the London Times. There were no "NYRR publicists" involved; the only people at NYRR who could be called publicists are Richard Finn and his media team (of two), who all work on press releases but don't write stories for NYRR. |
| fwiw |
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In the 80s, 1500 meter runner Peter Elliot worked full time (I think) as a mechanic or something for the RAF or whatever they call the air force in Britain. Mid distance track training might be less time consuming than marathon training but still impressive to be world class working a job. |
| Total Knob |
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Macmillan's defines a publicist as: " someone whose job is to use newspapers, television, etc. in order to make people notice a person, organization, or product". Whether or not David Powell's job title was "publicist" he was supplying this information in the spirit of garnering publicity for an NYRR race, therefore he was a "NYRR publicist" for the purposes of the story about Mutai. |