FOX SPORTS

Report: Kobayashi to miss Hot Dog Eating Contest

Takeru Kobayashi (Yana Paskova/Getty Images)
Takeru Kobayashi currently ranks third in the world by Major League Eating.
FOX Sports Chris Hardesty, Newscore
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With the U.S. out of the World Cup, time for some news about the other sport of the future: Takeru Kobayashi, a six-time winner of Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July Hot Dog Eating Contest, will not compete in this year’s iconic event at Coney Island, The Wall Street Journal's Metropolis blog reported Monday.

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  • If Kobayashi's career were a hot dog, it would have:
    • Mustard
    • Ketchup
    • The Works

Kobayashi, perhaps the most recognizable figure in the world of competitive eating, is currently ranked No. 3 in the world by Major League Eating (MLE), the organization that oversees the Nathan’s Famous event and dozens of other contests around the globe. Attempts to reach him were unsuccessful.

Is the slender 32-year-old from Japan too full to compete? Has he suffered another jaw injury? Nope. It’s a contractual dispute between him and MLE, according to the league.

Professional eaters sign contracts agreeing that they’ll participate in only MLE-sanctioned events; these contracts don’t guarantee pay for eaters, who instead earn money from league-approved endorsements and prize earnings. Richard Shea, the organization’s president, issued a statement Monday indicating that negotiations with the 160-pound professional eater had reached an impasse, but offered no other details. Reached in the afternoon, MLE chairman George Shea (and brother of Richard) declined to elaborate.

During his six consecutive Nathan’s wins from 2001-2006, Kobayashi seemed unbeatable until the coveted Mustard Belt was brought back to the U.S. in 2007 by California resident Joey Chestnut. Since then, Kobayashi has been defeated a number of times, and not just in the league’s premier event. This leads some eaters in the league to speculate that he may want to retire from competitive eating on a relatively high note, rather than gradually slide out of memory.

Competition on the eating circuit has increased dramatically in the past few years, and even top-ranked Chestnut (who has won Nathan’s the past three years) can be beaten. In the past year, No. 2-ranked Bob Shoudt of Philadelphia has out-eaten Chestnut in ribs, grits and chili spaghetti championships.

Read more at The Wall Street Journal.

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