Canadian Dunfee finds solace in
race walking
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[February 08, 2020]
By Frank Pingue
TORONTO (Reuters) - Canadian Evan
Dunfee grew up dreaming about competing in the Olympics but was not
good at sports and looked unlikely to fulfill his ambition until a
desire to prove schoolyard bullies wrong led him to race walking.
Dunfee describes his younger self as the quintessential kid to pick
on given his curly red hair, thick-rimmed glasses and lack of
coordination, but he found solace in a sport that itself is often
the butt of jokes.
"I got into race walking because I wanted to be good at something
and because I wanted to shut my bullies up. A sort of "I'll show
you' type of mentality", world championship bronze medallist Dunfee
told Reuters.
"Then you go to high school as a race walker and that shuts nobody
up. So you develop a thick skin pretty quickly."
Dunfee, 29, said his motor skills were really delayed which meant as
a child he would routinely get hit in the face while playing sports
like baseball and dodgeball.
So when his older brother tried race walking as a way to stay fit
while not tearing stitches following an appendectomy and finished
third in his first competition, Dunfee figured it must be easy and
gave it a try.
At his first race a competitor looked down at Dunfee, aged 10, and
asked what time he was targeting. Since Dunfee had not given it much
thought, he blurted out that he was hoping to finish the 800 metres
race in five minutes.
"He was like, 'you'll never do that on your first try'. Well I beat
that kid, won the race and I went 4:58 and I was hooked," Dunfee
recalled. "I was like: race walking, this is what I am going to do."
'COMPLETELY BLEW UP'
Dunfee won bronze at the world championships last September in Doha
where the men's 50 kilometre walk was held in extremely hot and
humid conditions.
The Canadian said he lacked confidence and miscalculated his race,
issues he hopes to have sorted out for this year's Tokyo Olympics
where he wants to avenge a near miss at the 2016 Rio Games.
[to top of second column] |
Canada's Evan Dunfee poses as he celebrates winning bronze
REUTERS/Aleksandra Szmigiel/
Dunfee crossed the finish line of the 50km walk in fourth place but
was upgraded to bronze after Japan's Hirooki Arai was disqualified
for bumping the Canadian late in the race.
Arai won an appeal, however, sending Dunfee back to fourth and he
opted against a counter-appeal.
For a period after the Games, Dunfee lost trust in the process.
"I was just focusing on results," said Dunfee. "After Rio I was like
I am now top four in the world so let's focus on medals and I would
go to these races being like medal, medal, medal and I would
completely blow up."
Dunfee's quest for an Olympic medal will take place in Sapporo
instead of Tokyo because the International Olympic Committee (IOC)
moved the marathon and walking events 800 kilometres outside the
capital due to heat concerns.
The decision irked Dunfee, who has suggested the IOC is just trying
to preserve its reputation after the women's marathon at the world
championships in Doha produced shocking scenes as many competitors
dropped out in the sweltering heat.
Dunfee also wonders why other Olympic events that could be affected
by the heat have not been relocated and is upset that residents of
the host city will not be able to attend the free endurance events.
"I can usually separate sport from outspokenness and standing up for
what I believe in," said Dunfee.
"But this one, everything blended together and emotionally this one
took a lot out of me and I know that now I need to start building
myself back up and putting it aside and getting clearly focused on
what my goals are for Tokyo."
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto, editing by Ed Osmond)
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