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As usual, Kobayashi's strategy was to eat all the dogs first, then dunk the buns and eat them. But a pause in overtime to swallow the spongy buns meant defeat. He had handed an opening to Chestnut, who once ate 118 jalapeno poppers in 10 minutes and 7.5 pounds of chicken wings in 12 minutes. "He should've won it -- it was his to win," judge Gersh Kuntzman said of Kobayashi, 30, of Nagano, Japan. Rumors circulated all week about Kobayashi: that he had been given a spot in the contest without qualifying, and that he was too injured to compete. The 128-pound competitive eating legend, known as "The Tsunami," told a Brooklyn newspaper he had a tooth problem and sore jaw that hampered last year's performance. After this year's contest, he said his jaw was fine. Their competitors included a pizza cook from New York City, a fishmonger from Chicago and a 110-pound mother of two from Maryland. Chestnut, who clocked in at 210 pounds before the contest, downplayed his win, which carries a $10,000 prize. "I'm just a normal guy eating hot dogs on the Fourth," he said. "You can't overcomplicate it." Then he burped. He was clearly tired. The hot dogs had staggered him. No doubt he'll need recovery time, said Dr. Marc Siegel, a professor at the New York University School of Medicine. "Hot dogs are extremely unhealthy, especially when eaten at high volume. They're really processed. They have high cholesterol and too much salt," he said. And thanks to the quantities the competitors ate, they'll likely suffer nausea, bloat, headache and possibly high blood pressure for several days as the body slowly digests the food. "One is bad for you, five's worse and 50 is terrible," he said. Kobayashi says he'll be back for a rematch next year and promises he'll win in a clear fashion. But before that, the two will face off again at the Krystal Square Off World Hamburger Eating Championship on Sept. 28 in Chattanooga, Tenn. Ali-Frazier III, anyone?
[Associated
Press;
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