April 19, 2005

Boston Marathon fan wins Armchair Division

By John Breneman


Legendary Boston Marathon champ Johnny Kelley (1907-2004)

The Boston Marathon is insane, right? I mean just do the math. Twenty-thousand runners times 26.2 miles of ankle-busting, knee-crunching pavement from Hopkinton to Copley Square.

By my calculations that's total 524,000 miles traveled … on foot. I found that quite an impressive statistic until I realized I could get that same mileage -- without the estimated 40,000 blisters and umpteen cardiac seizures -- from a couple of old Toyotas.

I was actually planning on running this year because I could really use the $100,000 grand prize. But I had to pull out because of, uh, a ruptured flexor ligament in my, um, quadriceps. Yeah, that's it.

I'm kidding, of course. I could no more run 26 miles than sneak into the papal conclave and cast a ballot for my favorite Cardinal, St. Louis first baseman Albert Pujols.

Believe me I tried, and nearly died, at last year's race. Here's what happened:

I got to Hopkinton real early to get a prime parking space, then walked eight miles to the Main Street starting line and waded into the scantily clad sea of humanity. The aroma was a pungent blend of Ben Gay, Aspercreme and Triple-Action Gold Bond Powder.

Just as I was elbowing my way into position, the starter's gun went off. Bam! I was instantly trampled by a pack of 9-year-old Cub Scouts jogging for the Jimmy Fund and a contingent of bald hippies raising money for bone marrow transplants and medicinal marijuana.

Before I could even scrape the burnt wheelchair rubber off my back, I looked up and saw a couple stringbeans from the Kenyan junior varsity whiz by at approximately 35 mph. "See you in Beantown fellas. I hope."

Once I found my stride, I was like Rocky charging up those stairs in Philadelphia with that inspirational soundtrack blaring in my head. I was able to keep that up for nearly 200 yards.

That's when my right kneecap flared up as if I'd been stung by a giant bee, but it was actually just my ACL snapping like a dried-up gumband. No problem, I thought, I'll just tough it out. But by the time I reached the first mile marker I had tripped over my shoelace, twisted my left ankle and tried four different breathing methods, finally settling into a sort of arhythmic "gasp-wheeze-gulp."

At around three miles, I narrowly avoided a 10-runner pileup on Route 135. EMTs arrived on the scene within seconds, took one look at the twisted heap of human wreckage and radioed for the Jaws of Life.

Assuming the slow pace of that fabled long-distance champion, the tortoise, I somehow made it to the five-mile mark in Ashland. I swung my hand out to grab some water, but missed and accidentally punched myself in the face. The force of the blow knocked me into a motorcycle cop and, though the pepper spray clouded my vision, I managed to scramble away before he could cite me for resisting cardiac arrest.

By now my carbo-loading pasta dinner from the night before was really paying off, but my Cuervo-loading experiment was having the opposite effect. Pretty soon the acid reflux kicked in, warming my esophagus with the tangy taste of peptic acid and ravioli. Fortunately, I became distracted by what felt like an ice-cream headache in my left lung.

I switched to kilometers for a while to make it seem like I'd covered more ground, but got depressed at Mile 8 in Framingham when a guy with a peg leg and a bandaged head marched by playing a fife with two drummers close behind.

Around this time things were getting a little fuzzy, and I really couldn't say where I got that pony, but I rode that little guy all the way to Natick -- part Paul Revere, part Rosie Ruiz -- before a vigilant race official ordered me to ditch my steed.

Was I there yet? Nope.

Shortly after I crossed into Wellesley, I was overtaken by the Grim Reaper (with #17642 pinned to his long black cape). I assumed he was looking for the tubby, crimson-faced guy who blew by a few minutes earlier with a purple vein the size of a Vienna sausage keeping time on his left temple.

Halfway up Heartbreak Hill, I was gripped by the sensation that an angry falcon was trying to claw my heart out of my chest cavity. But that was just a hallucination. What really happened, an MRI revealed later, was that my aorta got plugged up by a chunk of Power Bar that I found on the road.

Undeterred, I ignored the brush fire burning its way through my innards, from my pancreas down to my bladder, and convinced myself that the dark blood trickling from my right ear was probably normal. But then one of my leg cramps began emitting a high-pitched whining sound, something like a circular saw cutting through a fibula or femur.

To this day, I have no recollection whatsoever of Miles 22-25.

I must have regained consciousness with about a quarter-mile to go because I distinctly remember the ghost of the legendary Johnny Kelley (#1 now and forever) tapping me on the shoulder and yelling at me to "keep going, kid."

Reliable sources report that when I finally staggered across the finish line, I guzzled four gallons of blue Gatorade and hailed an ambulance.

The doctor said I would eventually regain most of the feeling in my pelvis, but advised me to get used to the sandpaper sound between my second and third vertebrae.

Later on, I would be disqualified for the pony incident and for purchasing piggy-back rides through much of Brighton and Brookline.

But that's OK, because I actually have a small confession to make. I never even tried to run the Boston Marathon last year, and a ruptured quadraplexor tendon did not prevent me from joining the field.

I was home watching the action on TV. Somewhere along the line I decided to crown myself winner of the Armchair Division. And you know those ceremonial garlands the winners get to wear on their heads? Well, mine was made of guacamole Doritos.

You see, most of us can only imagine what it would be like to run those 26.2 miles, to participate in a singular event that symbolizes mankind's capacity for not only endurance and perseverance, but also for good will.

Twenty-thousand hearty souls logging half a million miles, raising millions for charity. We salute them all. This concludes our live coverage of the 109th running of the most patriotic race in America.

Posted 3 hours, 56 minutes ago on April 19, 2005

Add Comment

( to reply to a comment, click the reply link next to the comment )

 
Comment Title
 
Your Name:
 
Email Address:
Make Public?
 
Website:
Make Public?
 
Comment:

Allowed XHTML tags : a, b, i, strong, code, acrynom, blockquote, abbr. Linebreaks will be converted automatically.

 
 
 


Newest links
Grundage
DeadBrain (U.S.)
All Hat No Cattle
New Hampshire Gazette
Chum Bucket
Trumpery
Unconfirmed Sources

Handy sites
Alexa
Altercation
Alternet
BuzzFlash
Cursor
Counterpunch
Dictionary.com
Google
New York Times
My hometown paper
Jim Romenesko
Smirking Chimp

Humor
Dave Barry
BartCop
BBSpot
Broken Newz
Andy Borowitz
The Chortler
The Daily Farce
The Enduring Vision
Fark
Faux News
Glossy News
Perplexing Times
Mocking Word
No Apologies Press
On the John News
The Onion
The Satire Awards
sPERTS
The Spoof
The Voice of Reason
Watley Review

Humor
Betty Bowers
Boondocks
Slate's Bushisms
Barry Crimmins
DeadBrain (U.K.)
Dilbert, Inc.
Doonesbury
Will Durst
Michael Feldman
Fighting Words
Mark Fiore
Forever Dada
Bob Harris
David Horsey
HumorFeed
Internet Weekly
Joke-A-Day
Kirktoons
Madeleine Kane
Pat Oliphant
Mo Paul
Psyclops
Ted Rall
SatireSearch
Harry Shearer
Tom Toles
Tom Tomorrow

Also
Adbusters
American Family Voices
American Prospect
Angry Liberal
Internal Memos
Memory Hole
Smoking Gun
Talking Points
Uncover Iraq

Columnists
Eric Alterman
Doug Clifton
Paul Colford
Cynthia Cotts
Ian Donnis
David Folkenflik
Dan Froomkin
Mark Glaser
Harry Jaffe
Peter Johnson
Steve Johnson
Mark Jurkowitz
Mickey Kaus
Keith Kelly
Dan Kennedy
Staci Kramer
Howard Kurtz
Michael Miner
Daniel Okrent
Steve Outing
William Powers
Ray Richmond
Michael Roberts
Tim Rutten
Danny Schechter
Tom Scocca
Jack Shafer
David Shaw
Norman Solomon
Andrew Sullivan
Erik Wemple
Michael Wolff
Antonia Zerbisias

Media
Assoc. of Alternative Newsweeklies
AltWeeklies
Amer. J-Rev.
Campaign Desk
C-SPAN Media
Col. Journ. Review
Comm./Protect Journos
Current
CyberJournalist.net
E-Media Tidbits
Editor & Publisher
FAIR.org
FOLIO: Mag
Freedom Forum
IWantMedia.com
JournalismJobs.com
Journalist's Toolbox
Masthead Magazine
Maynard Institute
mediabistro.com
Media Channel
Media Matters
Media Maneuvers
Media Res. Center
Media|Watch (PBS)
MediaWatch.co.nz
Mediaweek
NYT Media
Newseum (front pages)
Newsthinking.com
Nieman Reports
Ombudsmen
On the Media
OJR
Poynter.org
St. Louis J-Review
Today's Papers
WH Press Briefings

News Sources
ABC News
AP
BBC
CBC Canada
cbs News
CNBC
CNN
CNNFN
Fox News
MSNBC
News Hour-PBS
TV Networks Directory
Air America Radio
Internet Radio for the Left
Time
Newsweek
People
US News & World Report E!
Reuters
Billboard
Entertainment Weekly
Hollywood Reporter
Inter Press Service
Google News
Mediagossip.com
Online Journal
Variety
UN
UPI

Newspapers
Todays Papers
Asia Times (HK)
Boston Globe
Chicago Tribune
Christian Science
Detroit Free Press
Globe and Mail
Guardian/Observer
LA Times
London Times
Miami Herald
Moscow Times
Mpls.StarTribune
NY Newsday
NY Post
NY Sun
NY Times
The Oregonian
Other Foreign
Phil Inquirer
Pioneer Press
Pravda (Eng.)
SF Chronicle
SF Examiner
SP Times
Telegraph U.K.
The Independent (London)
Times of India
Toronto Star
USA Today
Washington Post

Magazines
Am. Prospect
Atlantic Monthly
The Baffler
Billboard
Bust
Col Journ Review
DoubleTake
Editor & Publisher
Found
Forbes
Fortune
Harper's Index
Impact Press
In These Times
McSweeney's
Modern Drunkard
Mother Jones
New Statesman
New York
The New Yorker
Newsweek
NY Observer
Present Tense
Progressive Populist
Reason
Roll Call
The Economist
The Nation
The New Republic
The Progressive
The Thresher
Time
Variety
Wash Monthly
Weekly Standard

International
Aftenposten
Al-Jazeera
Al-Ahram
al-bab.com
Ag. France-Presse
The Guardian
Ha'aretz
The Independent
Int'l Herald Tribune
Japan's Daily Yomiuri
Kenya Daily Nation
Moscow Times
Der Spiegel
The Times of London
Toronto Star
Ha'aretz
Jerusalem Post
Israel Insider
Israel Radio & TV
IndyMedia/Israel
Maariv
Palestine Chronicle
Palestine News Agency
Palestine Media Watch
Electronic Intifada
Muslim WakeUp!
IndyMedia/Palestine
Middle East Times
WorldLink TV/Mosaic
Debka
IraqJournal.org
Electronic Iraq
Syria Times
Jordan Times
Daily Star (Lebanon)
Gulf News (U.A.E.)
Gulf Daily News (Bahrain)
Gulf Times (Qatar)
Back to Iraq
Iraq Daily
Iraqi News Agency
Iraq.net
Poll Booth
Virtually Islamic
Tehran Times
Newspaper Index
Xinhuanet

More Links
Allafrica.com
American Reporter
Am. Politics Journal
Another Perspective
Antiwar.com
Antiterroristas
Arts & Letters
Arts Journal
Bear Left!
Black Commentator
Blue Ear
Bully
Bush Files
Bush Watch
BushWhackedUSA
Capitol Hill Blue
Common Dreams
Consortium News
Corante
Cosmoetica
CrimeLynx
CulturePimp
Daily Howler
Democrats.com
Democratic Underground
Dissident Voice
Drudge Report
Drugwar.com
E-Ariana
Eat the State
Failure Is Impossible
Fifth Column
Flak
G21
The Gadflyer
Get Donkey
Getting It
History News Network
Hollywood Investigator
Identity Theory
Indy Media
Inside.com
Intervention
Intellnet
I Want Media
The Jackson Progressive
Joe Citizen
Joke-A-Day
LA Examiner
Liberal Arts Mafia
Liberal Oasis
Mac-a-ro-nies
Media Watch
MediaStudy.com
Media Whores OL
Media Workers Against War
Me Three
Military Week
Michael Moore
Moose & Squirrel
The Morning News
Narco News
Nausea Manifesto
Nerve
New California Media
News Insider
No Logo
The Note
Obscure Store
Online Journalism Review
Open Democracy
Plastic
PopMatters
Pop Politics
Press Action Progressive Review
The Rag
Rational Enquirer
Salon
Scoop
Simpleton
Skreed
Slate
Spinsanity
Smug
Socialist Worker
Sp!ked
Stink Tank
Suck
Take Back The Media
Telepolis
TeWorld.NET
The Daily Planet
The Raw Story
The Smoking Gun
ThomasMc.com
Tom Paine
Trade Alert
Truthout
Unamerican Activities
Unknown News
War in Context
What Really Happened
Wired News
Word
Working for Change
Working Stiff
World Socialists
Yahoo Media
Yellow Times
ZNet

About the Humor Gazette                    Contact the Humor Gazette: mail@humorgazette.com