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News/Blog

PARIS OLYMPIC RACEWALKERS DRAW BIG CROWDS TO TROCADERO AREA; THEIR SENIORITY DESEVES MORE RESPECT.

8/11/2024

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     By ELLIOTT DENMAN 
   Fact: Men’s racewalking has been in the Olympic Games since 1904.
   That means it’s been on the Games track and field program, in one form or another, longer than the javelin throw (which joined the card in 1906), and the 5,000 and 10,000 meters, decathlon and both 4x100 and 4x400 relays (which all commenced in 1912).
     And, of course/of course, long before every women’s event.
     You’d think that form of seniority would have accumulated
heaps of respect all these years, wouldn’t you?  
      You’d think that the rest of Olympic sport would have learned to appreciate its elders.
     You’d think that the great champions of racewalking all those years would be occupying pedestals as high as their immortal running-jumping-throwing colleagues.
      You’d think that, in this day and age of Olympic “urban” inclusion, walking would be embraced as the most “urban” activity of them all.  Heck, there are 'interval training devices' in every big city's downtown.  You know, those signs that say "walk now" and "don't walk."    Well, keep on pondering.
    The first two racewalking events of the Games of the
XXXIII Olympiad are already in the books.  The men’s 20K and the
women’s 20K were staged on the first day of August over anL-shaped one-kilometer loop course in the Trocadero area of Paris,
in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower.
    They were huge successes, great shows, attracting thickly-packed crowds
on the sidelines, generating great TV coverage, and good racing news
that was quickly  dispatched to some of the far corners of the planet.
     But too many allegedly close followers of this sport – the one called athletics in virtually nation but our own – chose to look the other way.
    The first of August?  Great day for them to do some sightseeing. In some other arrondisement. And Paris surely has so many sights to see. Or to catch up on their laundry.
    To these folks, the Olympic track and field slate began on the second of August.
  What a show they skipped.
  Listen to two-time (1992-96) USA Olympic racewalker Allen James:
   
   “Day one represented the most globally competitive event in the Olympic program….and that’s not just track and field.
   “Look at the men’s 20 km. walk.
   “All six areas (of World Athletics’ geo-categories) were
represented in the top 11 finishers.
    “The separation between 9th to 11th was less than 1 second.
   “The race had constant lead changes and negative splits throughout the course of the race.
   “It was beautifully negotiated by Ecuador’s Brian Daniel Pintado.
(1:18:55) with Brazil’s Caio Bonfim second (1:19:09.).  That meant a great day for South America.
    “Then came Europe, 3,4 and 9  – Spain’s Alvaro Martin, Italy’s Massimo Stano, and Aurelien Quinon of France, the home team.
   “A North American was fifth (Canada’s Evan Dunfee, )
   “An African walker was sixth (Misgana Wakuyama of Ethiopia.)
  “Then Asia 7-8-10 ( Japan’s Koki Ikeda and Yuta Koga; China’s  Jun Zhang)
    “Then Oceania 11th ( Declan Tingay, Australia).”
   The women’s 20K immediately followed the men’s race – and get this – was even more global.
   Said James: “We had five areas in the top five.”
  It was Asia (China’s Jaiyu Yang 1:25:54), Europe (Spain’s Maria Perez 1:26:19) and Oceania (Australia’s Jemima Montag 1:26:25) on the podium, with South America (Lorena Arenas of Colombia) and North America ( Alekna Gonzalez of Mexico ) fourth and fifth.
  “When does that happen other than the walks?” asked James.
   His answer, of course, was “never.”
 As James saw it, “Yang was phenomenal breaking the field very early as she set off on her own. The chase pack did everything they could to pull her back, but Yang was technically flawless and executed her solo journey to perfection.
   “Perez and Montag made it much closer at the end, but it was all Yang.
  “If anyone can find another event in any Olympic sport that comes close to this sort of high quality representation from across the globe, please take up my challenge. “
  They’d fall short, by eons, by kilometers, by any measure. 
  Other observers chimed in (electronically.)
  Sandi Lake: “Racewalking is hard.”
  Jim McFadden:  “We saw some great racing under tough conditions.”
  Milton Brents Witty: “Awesome sport.”
  Monica Zaragoza:  “I need to learn how to do this.” 
 And this one aimed at racewalking’s critics:
 Saul Richardson: “Yet people see nothing peculiar about swimming breaststroke or even swimming backwards.” 
  Bottom lines:  These global ambassadors of the racewalking game are
the truest of sportsmen.
  Their event is underappreciated but they would never want to detract from any other’s specialty, either.
  They just don’t like being kicked around by some of the folks in their
sport’s hierarchy.
  Are you listening, you moguls of the media?
  Are we getting through to you, Lord Coe? 
  Et al.
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  • Home
  • About Us
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    • Club Records >
      • Masters Men Outdoor Relay Records
      • Masters Men Relay Indoor Records
    • Hall Of Fame
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    • Sign up/Renew
    • Youth programs
    • Compete with us
    • USATF Long Distance Running >
      • 2025 USATF-NJ 8K XC: SAC Results
  • Our Events
    • MOPL
    • Captain Zinn Memorial Races
    • All-Comers T&F Meet Series
    • NJ International T&F Meet
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  • Photos & Videos
    • 85th Anniversary/Elliott's Birthday
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    • Millrose 2020
    • Misc. Photos
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