This letter is associated with the following article:
Letters
Saturday, November 3, 2007 12:00 AM

How Oprah ruined the marathon

America's competitive spirit has been wrecked by feel-good amateurs like Oprah whose only goal is to stagger across the finish line.

Read other letters about this article

  • Friday, November 2, 2007 11:40 PM

    The best stories are at the end of the marathon!

    Mr. McClelland, this article is completely off the mark, and the basic premise, that the flood of newcomers to the sport is somehow affecting American competitive ability, is ridiculous and unfounded.

    Inferring that the problem in the Chicago event was the slower participants totally ignores the poor planning and greedy over-booking of the organizers. I think it was a criminal act to take people's money for such an event without providing for their basic needs.

    If the problem is that too many Americans are overweight and not oriented towards competitive sports, how does restricting amateur events to the sports elite counter that issue?

    While most folks who enter marathons may not be capable of imagining a finish in the top ten, that does not mean that they don't compete.

    At the age of 50, my wife decided to get up off the couch and train to walk the Portland marathon with the help of a local support group. We decided to document that effort in a movie, "Walk to Me", and got to interview a couple dozen people who participated.

    The group included people who were over 70, cancer survivors, people who were more than 100 pounds overweight, and one woman who had lost half of her lung capacity from emphysema. The last one in came in at over 10 hours - and we were waiting there to celebrate her monumental accomplishment. Even if the the raw talent was lacking, I've rarely seen that kind of determination and effort on professional playing fields.

    My wife is still at it three years later, and competes in several events a year now, against her personal best (she's cut a couple hours off her original time!). It's made a huge change in her life, and documenting her journey has proven to be an inspiration to many others who have taken up the sport. Though she felt funny saying it at first, she now proudly shouts the mantra of her coach, Ellie Hodder, with all the other marathon walkers in training, "I AM AN ATHLETE!"

Most Active Letters Threads

530

Do Obama officials know what his Afghanistan plan is?

What explains the completely contradictory statements from key aides on a central plank of the war strategy?
128

Is my kids making me not smart?

Stay-at-home fatherhood dulls my intellect to a nub. Excuse me while I ponder the subtext of "Hippos Go Berserk"
126

Trig, the anti-abortion straw baby

Sarah Palin's son is being used to demonize pro-choicers
113

I survived Glenn Beck's Christmas spectacular

The preposterous showman brings his holiday book, and waterworks, to the stage and screen. Lights! Camera! Jesus!
106

I live in a van down by Duke University

How do I afford grad school without going into debt? A '94 Econoline, bulk food and creative civil disobedience

View all »

Letters Help

Currently in Salon