Chestnut crowned July 4 hot-dog champ
again but can't top his own record
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[July 05, 2019]
By Gabriella Borter
NEW YORK (Reuters) - This year's Nathan's
Famous hot-dog eating contest proved a mild disappointment to Joey
Chestnut, the Fourth of July event's perennial champ, even though he
handily won the annual display of gastronomical excess for the 12th time
this year.
Chestnut took the crown in the annual U.S. Independence Day competition
by downing 71 dogs and buns in 10 minutes. But the 35-year-old
"competitive eater" from San Jose, California fell short of his
record-setting performance of 74 at last year's contest, staged for
decades on the beachfront in New York City's Coney Island.
"I came out fast and then I slowed down faster than I would have liked,"
Chestnut said after the contest. "I tried to adjust, I tried to chew
more, make it easier for my throat to swallow, but I was just slowing
down."
Thousands of holiday makers crowded around the eating stage set up along
the boardwalk in the Brooklyn neighborhood to witness Chestnut and a
handful of other eaters choke down dozens of hot dogs and buns in a
voracious 10-minute eating frenzy.
Chestnut told ESPN he had eaten 75 dogs in practice, but could not
repeat the performance for this year's July 4th competition.
He holds eating records in several food categories, including two 2013
records of eating 141 hard boiled eggs in eight minutes and 121 Twinkies
in six minutes.
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Joey Chestnut reacts after wining the Nathan's Famous Fourth of July
International Hot Dog-Eating Contest at Coney Island in Brooklyn,
New York, U.S., July 4, 2019. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
The favorite on the women's side, Miki Sudo from Tucson, Arizona,
also came out on top on Thursday, claiming her 6th Nathan's title
with 31 hot dogs.
The competition is partly a marketing event and partly a tribute to
Americans' love of hot dogs, a staple on barbecue grills on the U.S.
Independence Day holiday.
The National Hot Dog and Sausage Council estimates that Americans
consume 20 billion hot dogs each year, and about 150 million on the
Fourth of July alone.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter in New York; Editing by Frank McGurty)
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