Friday, August 21, 2020

How Do You Play the Game?

The purpose of this blog is to turn your Shabbat conversation into a gold medal event... Please print and share...
Today is Rosh Chodesh Elul - that means we're now how many days until the big day?


DunfeeToday, a third summertime theme, on the tail of last week and two weeks ago.

Since the Olympics were supposed to be happening right now, here's an inspiring Olympics story from four years ago, maybe one of the greatest of all time.

First, 2 questions for your table:

1. What's the hardest Olympics event?
2. Who's the greatest Olympics athlete?

Let's start with #1, the hardest event.

In my humble opinion, the 50K walk has to be up near the top of the difficulty list.

That's how many miles?

50 ÷ 1.6 = 31 miles.

That is 5 miles longer than a marathon.

The top walkers completed it in 3:40.

(If there is a math whiz at the table, ask them what average mile that makes.)


3:40 ÷ 31 = an average mile of 7:10.

That means that they did a marathon in three hours, then walked another five miles.

Think about that.

(In the men's 20K/12.5mi race walk, the winner's average speed was a 6:31 mile. Think about that.)

Now let's look at the top four walkers in the 50K event:


Matej Tóth, Slovakia, 3:40:58
Jared Tallent, 
Australia, 3:41:16
Hirooki Arai, 
Japan, 3:41:24
Evan Dunfee, 
Canada, 3:41:38


Poor Evan Dunfee. He finished only 14 seconds behind Arai, but because he finished fourth - no medal - in the eyes of the media and corporate sponsors, he's a nobody.

Some say he should have beat him — here's what happened:

With only 1 km to go, Dunfee was in third place, mere seconds behind Tóth and Talent and possibly positioned for a win.

Arai tried to pass him, and bumped him enough to throw Dunfee off-balance.


That bump disqualified Arai and give Dunfee the bronze.

But Arai's team appealed and won.

Olympics rules allowed for Dunfee to appeal as well.

But he chose not to.

Here's why:

"Not many people can understand the pain athletes are in three and a half hours into such a grueling race. I believe that both the Japanese athlete and myself got tangled up but what broke me was that I let it put me off mentally and once I lost that focus, my legs went to jello. Contact is part of our event, whether written or unwritten and is quite common, and I don't believe that this was malicious or done with intent. Even if an appeal to CAS were successful I would not have been able to receive that medal with a clear conscience and it isn't something I would have been proud of. I will sleep soundly tonight, and for the rest of my life, knowing I made the right decision. I will never allow myself to be defined by the accolades I receive, rather the integrity I carry through life."

Wow. He gave up being a "somebody" (a medalist) for the sake of some high-falutin' idea of integrity. 

Question for your table: Did he do the right thing?

(By the way, earlier in the race, world-record-holder Yohann Diniz was in the lead, with Dunfee a close second. Diniz had to stop due to severe pain, and while any other racer would have gladly sailed ahead for the lead, Dunfee slowed down and encouraged Diniz to continue, sharing the lead spot with him.)

Dunfee and Diniz

So now you know my choice of the greatest Olympic athlete, possibly of all time: Evan Dunfee.

Question for your table: What do you say?

Shabbat Shalom



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