Winning Isn't The Most Important Thing Vince Lombardi's famous saying “Winning isn't the most important thing. It's the only thing” is unfortunately the motto of too many athletes today. Although winning is important and sports are, and should be taken seriously, by far, winning isn't the only thing. Putting everything you have and giving one hundred percent to the effort is also very important to competition. A team that puts everything they have into a game and comes out the losers, has a lot more to be proud of than a team who comes in first but only gave some effort. Over the years many teams have lost important games due to a few inches, one pitch or a strike of “bad …show more content…
Trophies and plaques were to be awarded to the first, second and third place runners. A 10K is a 6.2 mile long race across the streets of downtown Erie in 85 degree heat and humidity. Runners who are running in the 10K have to show tremendous determination, stamina, speed and physical agility not to mention surviving in grueling temperatures and humidity. Great Olympic and Boston Marathon runners have dropped out of a 10K due to it's intense strain. I was on hand to witness the race and saw many great athletes finish the race with great times. These are runners who put every day into running and run every race. Soon after these runners had crossed the finish line and been handed their trophies, the last runner in the race came through the finish line with his hands in the air and to thunderous applause. He was 87 years old, and had taken up the sport after his doctors told him he had a cholesterol problem when he was 67. The runner in this story was not out to win the Mayor's Cup 10K, he wasn't out to set a record time or come in first. He came in dead last, but finished the race. If he would have listened to Vince Lombardi and say “Oh, I can't win, their are professional runners from colleges and high schools competing against me!” he wouldn't have completed his life long goal of running in a 10K. Better late than never.
He took on his new challenge as he usually had. Terry made himself strong by pushing his wheel chair. He would push himself along the sea wall of Stanley Park in Vancouver or find a steep mountain of a log road and would go to his hands bled. Two years after Terry stated his training to run, so nobody could see him he ran his first half-mile in the dark. For fifteen months of training and after running 3159 miles his stump was raw and bleeding. Terry ran 101 days everyday he ran 23 miles a day and only stopped for Christmas because his mother asked him. Terry was always determined. One day when his artificial leg broke he hitchhiked home and fixed his leg and ran another 5 miles. He told his mother about his journey to run across Canada his mother told him he was crazy but when she told his father he simple asked "When?"
Terry Fox’s journey began in 1977, when his right leg was amputated because of a malignant tumour (“The Marathon of Hope”). After a successful amputation, he had dreams of running and started to train for his cross-Canada run – the Marathon of Hope. After running
While he was in the hospital he knew that he wasn’t the only one suffering with cancer so he decided to run across Canada to raise money for cancer research. On April, 12, 1980 he put on his artificial leg and started to run from st. Johns to Thunder Bay. Each day he ran 26 miles and in total he ran 6 provinces. He was forced to stop running on the outside of Thunder Bay because his cancer appeared in his lungs. He went to the hospital and he didn’t want to spend the fundraised money on hi treatment because he wanted to donate all the money for cancer research but when he died he was happy because he did what he wanted to do. On july, 28 1981 he died.
Running was the only thing that brought Louie happiness after his appalling time in the Pacific and Japan. Regrettably, Louie had sustained several injuries from his time in the POW camps, including dysentery and ankle injury. Upon his arrival back to the states, Louie was sent to be examined by doctors. The doctors told Louie that because of his injury, his running career was over. Louie, asked later by a reporter about his running career, said: “It’s finished, I’ll never run again.” (pg. 323) This was a difficult and emotional announcement for Louie as it marked the end of Louie’s happiness. Nevertheless, Louie decided to try and run again. Even with his ankle and leg injuries, Louie ran a mile in just 4:18 minutes. As Louie ran on, his enjoyment for the activity depreciated. One day, while Louie was running a two mile, he felt a sharp pain in his ankle in the same place that it was injured in the POW camp Naoetsu. Louie, distraught, continued running until he made it to the finish line. A doctor confirmed that Louie had brought back his war injury and could likely no longer run. This distinctly marked the end of any running career Louie had. Louie, no longer able to run, fell into a deeper depression. Luckily enough, Louie learned to come to peace with his war experiences and inability to run, ending his depression and permitting him a harmonious life. Louie even ran in the 1988 Winter Olympics, holding the
Every runner wore a bib number with the time they start on it. As I was running people were passing me who had started after me, and I kept thinking I was going too slow and that I shouldn’t be taking this long to complete it. Through words of encouragement from my mom and decipline mentras from myself I finished the race, I crosses the fanish line and the feeling of triumph as I crossed it was something I’ll never forget.
“By spring of ‘38, he had whittled his mile down to 4:13.7, some even seconds off the world record which now stood at 4:06.4. (pg. 41)” Louie is determined to get a good time. “In February, he ran a 4:08.2, six-tenths of a second short of the fastest indoor mile ever run. (pg. 44)” This quote explains how Louie is a very determined person while he is running because he doesn’t let people beat him easy. “Two weeks later, he scorched a 4:07.9. (pg. 44)” Louie cut his time a week before he beat that time by a second he was determined to get a better score and he did it. That Louie was a very determined person to win and finish stuff and do
The race was being held and Sun’s point all the way to pluto’s night this was estimated to about a 15 mile race. The road consisted of a lot of twisting and turning. Lase had so much confidence that it was so over rated to race that he already knew he would win. Lase had the Mega Cart 2.0 which was very fast. However if you reached top speed there’s a chance that this Mega Cart could
Participation trophies should be banned from all competitive youth sports. Despite their original intentions of making everyone win, participation trophies hurt kids more than they help them. They can teach kids bad life lessons, take away competition, and are more for parents to protect their kids then the kids themselves.
Right out of the gate in the high school boys race, everybody knew Junior Zach Kreft from Buckeye Valley would run away with the victory but the 2nd overall finisher was still a question. Freshman Luke Malone and Gavin Frick worked off each other the entire race moving from as far as 17th and 18th place early on to finishing 2nd and 4th. The two were able to run a 5:17 and 10:52 for their mile splits. At the end, Malone was just able to beat out Frick and Sophomore Adam Brown from North Union to race into 2nd place racing to a PR of 16:58. Frick was able to PR, finishing just behind Malone running a 17:03. The two were able to beat Buckeye Valley’s number two,
How did Roger Banister break the 4 min mile? How did Dennis Kimetto run a marathon in 2:02:57?
Slowly he gained balance and strength to a make it work. After fifteen months of training, after logging more than 4800 km. Terry was ready, he could run 42 km in a single stretch. As his strength increased so did his goal. A million dollars seemed small. He now saw the marathon in greater terms. In which he saw that involving the whole country of people. Especially when the 10,000 people of Port aux Basques, NL, raised $ 10,000, Terry vowed to raise $1 for every Canadian living in Canada - Which was $22 million dollars. Terry convinced that he was gonna do this, approached the Canadian Cancer Society. He was astound by their lukewarm response. They believed that his goal was unrealistic and completely absurd. They told him to find corporate support, secure pledges, and contact them again when he had stronger proof that he was serious about it. Terry did exactly that he wrote a letter saying the running I can do, even if I have to crawl every last mile. We need your help. The people in cancer clinics all over the world need people who believe in miracles. In a few months Terry returned to the Cancer Society with the pledges and finally got the funding he needed.
Without help from students all over the town, this yearly occasion would not continue. Many cars or other unregistered runners or walkers may come into the race and compete for the first place award. This community race has been going on for
McGorty joined the marathon -- which garnered more than 50,000 runners in the previous year -- as a hand
I take a deep breath. This is the moment I have been training for. The announcer calls us to the starting line. We see that gun raise towards the sky. Ready. Set. Go. Then bang the gun goes off and hundreds of girls take off like they are being chased by an angry pack of wolves. 1 mile in and the pain begins to set in but I push through it. Legs weak and struggling the for air I fly past the second mile mark. Finally, I hear the crowd roaring and the finish line is in sight, I begin to sprint until my legs cannot move any faster. Crossing the finish line, I collapse to the ground. Running 3.1 miles as fast as you can will do that to anyone, but all the early morning and hot summer practices are all worth it in the end. Laying on the ground gasping for air, a smile full of pride stretches across my face because I am a runner and it is awesome.
I believe the message the author is trying to portray to readers that nothing that comes easy isas meaningful in the end. Meaning, if you were a runner like Wes Santee who was just naturally talented and didn’t have to work for much the sweet taste of the win wouldn’t be as valuable s it would for someone like Roger. Roger didn’t have much free time outside of work but he used every spare minute he had to perfect his skills. That is why when he achieved his goal the win was so sweet. I used the following textual evidence from the book to help develop my interpretation “You get very tired, very fast and after a certain amount of pain and you slow up. If you don't keep running, keep your blood circulating, the muscles stop pumping the blood back and you get dizzy” (Bascome 106). This expert shows the pain that Roger had to put his body threw for perfection. Personally, I learned some new skills and techniques to help improve my racing. I have my first track meet on Friday January 6 and when I run I will keep Rogers motivation and pain in my head as motivation for when I get weak. I also learned not to quit no matter what anyone says. I really want to get my