It’s doping in track discourse, we love to see it.
It makes so much money. You have no idea.
All in Running
In this article, the author attempts to suggest that his college club cross-country team is the template for a new universal archetype of storytelling…which is exactly what you’d expect.
Penalty kicks are the worst thing in sports not named Dan Dakich.
8 hours at a club track meet in Illinois made me very philosophical.
The forces of systemic stupidity, like some demented pack of hounds chasing after a hunk of inexplicably mobile meat, refused to let me finish my marathon in peace. There were too many mistakes. In a race like the marathon, where, like the Challenger disaster, one mistake can mean the difference between success and a dreaded "did not finish", the sheer vastness of my errors were coming back to haunt me.If you recall, I was huddled at the 30km mark, desperately trying to inject life into my cramping body through Powerade, bananas, and water. I had not eaten enough food. I had not gotten enough sleep. I had not paced the race whatsoever. My legs were cramping, I had lost a large amount of useful minerals, and my mind was exhausted. But there was a silver lining. Well, more like a golden nugget that I had systematically panned from the depths of a river. I had finished three-quarters of the marathon. I had, by my estimation, less than an hour remaining.