Put it up wrote:
I haven't read the entire thread but the focus seems to be on guys running hard vs easing up. I happen to personally know a person very highly placed on the BAA and another person high up in the Hancock organization involved with the marathon. Both find the fix theory absolutely laughable. In order to fix you would need to pay off say 5 runners a total of at least 500k. After all a win at boston is worth at least that much to the winner, especially when you consider the BAA will pay just about anything to get the defending champ back. If you think you could get Hancock (which is owned buy a canadian company, Manulife Financial) to sign off on a $500k bribery payoff and risk being exposed and ruining their rep, you know absolutely nothing about business. In theory Adidas could have put up the money but Hancock and the baa would have to be involved.would never happen, ever.
Anyway, if it were fixed it is reasonable to assume it will be exposed eventually. I will put up $1,000 against a fixer-believer, go public with my name, funds to be held by ROJO, who will hold the other $1,000 from another guy; the correct person keeps the $2,000. Time frame of one year.
Any takers? Otherwise, end this thread, it's a brutal insult to a great runner.
Your assumtion is CORRECT! It HAS been exposed! Right here on Letsrun. Read all the posts and you will see many posters have provided plenty of scenerios and evidence (the race itself is great evidence)that it was fixed. What I guess you and others mean by exsposed is a CONFESSION by one of the priciples involved and that you will never get. Why? Because in conspiracies like these maybe ALL of it was UNSPOKEN! In other words the Africans knew WITHOUT BEING TOLD(they are smart despite what people may say)that an American MUST win this year. What was the payoff? They get to have a long happy career in marathoning and make money next race. Fixing and rigging competitions is far more common place than most realise (Canada's defeat of Spain in Davis Cup was "rigged")so all professional athletes know when it is time for "show" and when it is time for "go".