The New Zealand Herald

Even dog knows this father’s had his day

Era of sporting domination over son ends in humiliatin­g defeat

- Matt Heath

My son humiliated me last week. It ended an era of sporting dominance I will never relive. When you become a dad, you know your son will one day surpass you. Holding your beautiful baby boy for the first time, you think two things: “I’ve never loved something so much in my life” and “this guy is here to take my place”.

That’s why a father works hard to impress his son early.

You throw dangerousl­y high balls at him hard and carry the shopping in from the car in one go. It is also essential you run faster than your offspring. My son and I started jogging together when he was 10. I’d put serious distance on him. I’d set a strong pace early and then destroy him in the last kilometre. The trick is to get home far enough ahead you can hide your puffing.

I’d round the final corner, gun it

Dads know the years will catch up with them and they won’t be champion of the house forever. home, hit the recovery position for a minute, compose myself and then calmly check the mail as he stumbled in.

Boy, was he impressed: “Dad, you’re not even breathing hard.”

One day he'll find out you're a complete loser.

Until then, give the boy something to aspire to. A good dad smashes his kids at board games, stone skimming and burps while he still can.

I’ll do anything to impress my kids. I eat whole apples in two bites. I break wind into their bedrooms from the hallway and shut the door on them.

Dads need to do higher bombs, wear fewer clothes in the cold and order spicier food than anyone else in the family. Unconditio­nal love and pretending to

be excellent are the cornerston­es of good parenting.

Of course, It’s only a matter of time before you get found out.

In the past year, my son has surpassed me in height, defeated me in a press-up competitio­n and eaten two family pies in one sitting. Worse still, our dog Colin has started following him around the house instead of me. My boy has also been winning our bi-weekly runs. Luckily I’ve had a calf injury, so it doesn’t count.

My leg came right last week, so I decided to make a stand and challenge my boy to a 5km race. Not a friendly jog, a time trial. We would run around the block until our apps told us 5km was up. This ultimate race for family superiorit­y was scheduled for 8pm last Monday.

When the time came, it was a bit cold and rainy, so I requested a postponeme­nt. After being labelled a chicken and losing the toss, I headed off into a thundersto­rm. My pace was good; my form excellent. Lightning crashed, and thunder rumbled as I powered through the torrential rain to a solid 25-minute 5k finish. Back home, I yelled “game on” before collapsing in the hallway gasping for air.

My son calmly downed his fourth post-dinner toasted sandwich and headed out into the wet.

I waited and waited for him to return, and then the unexpected happened. I won. Twenty-five minutes rolled around, and my boy wasn’t back. I celebrated the victory by sitting upright for the first time. He finally finished in a pathetic 34 mins. Victory dad. Not that he seemed to care. He simply gave me a hug, grabbed a plate of cereal and headed off to his room, leaving his phone on the table.

Something didn’t seem right. This win was too good to be true. How had I beaten him by 10 minutes?

I checked his Strava running app. The idiot had it set to miles instead of kilometres. He had been running 1.6km for every one kilometre of mine. He ran 8km instead of 5km at an impressive 4 mins 20 a kilometre. Much further and much faster than me, and he didn’t even notice he was doing it. He wasn’t even puffing.

The boy had well and truly surpassed me. Our dog Colin was right to follow him.

The years had caught up with me. It was time to do the right thing — retire unbeaten, never to race him again.

Listen to Matt Heath on the Radio Hauraki Breakfast.

6am-9am weekdays.

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