Source: Futility Closet

In 1908 a 22-year-old Italian baker’s assistant arrived in London to take part in the Olympic marathon. He had no coach, he spoke no English, and he was not expected to challenge the elite runners at the top of the field. In this week’s episode of the Futility Closet podcast we’ll follow Dorando Pietri on the most celebrated race in Olympic history.
We’ll also ponder the Great Mull Air Mystery and puzzle over a welcome murder.
Intro:
In July 1968 ethologist John B. Calhoun built a paradise for mice.
Mother Goose rhymes can be hidden phonetically in French and German.
Sources for our feature on Dorando Pietri:
David Davis, Showdown at Shepherd’s Bush, 2012.
Timothy D. Noakes, “Reduced Peripheral Resistance and Other Factors in Marathon Collapse,” Sports Medicine 37:4–5 (April 2007) 382–385.
Jonathan Esteve-Lanao, Alejandro Lucia, Jos J. deKoning, and Carl Foster, “How Do Humans Control Physiological Strain During Strenuous Endurance Exercise?” PLoS One 3:8 (August 2008), e2943.
Tim Lincoln, “Mostly in the Mind,” Nature 389:6654 (Oct. 30, 1997), 911-912.
Karl Lennartz, “Some Case Studies on How Media Constructs Olympic Legends,” Timisoara Physical Education and Rehabilitation Journal 2:3 (2009), 10-19.
Markus Stauff, “The Pregnant-Moment Photograph: The 1908 London Marathon and the Cross-Media, Evaluation of Sport Performances,” Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung 43:2 (2018), 203-219.
Peter Lovesey, “Conan Doyle and the Olympics,” Journal of Olympic History 10:10 (2001), 8.
Mark Will-Weber, “Dorando Pietri,” Runner’s World 34:1 (January 1999), 42-43.
International Olympic Committee, “Dorando Pietri” (accessed Jan. 27, 2019).
“Dorando Pietri,” Arthur Conan Doyle Encyclopedia (accessed Jan. 27, 2019).
Encyclopaedia Britannica, “Dorando Pietri: Falling at the Finish” (accessed Jan. 27, 2019).
Simon Kuper, “The Original Olympic Hero,” FT.com, July 27, 2012.
“Marathon…
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