The Columbus Dispatch

We have a wiener!

- By Ali Swenson

Chestnut eats 71 hot dogs to win eating title once more

NEW YORK — Joey “Jaws” Chestnut ate 71 wieners and buns to secure his 12th title at Nathan’s Famous annual July Fourth hot dog eating contest Thursday, just a few hot dogs shy of breaking the record he set last year.

In front of a crowd of fans and facing 17 opponents, the California native far exceeded his nearest competitor­s, but he didn’t quite make or pass the 74-dog mark he reached in 2018.

When asked how he felt after the contest, Chestnut, 35, said “I feel like I should eat a couple more.

“I knew it was going to be close. I was trying hard and I was overstuffi­ng my mouth, and it wasn’t going down,” he said. “I just needed to find a way to move a little bit faster. I think it’s getting harder the older I get.”

Miki Sudo had already won the women’s competitio­n by chomping down 31 hot dogs.

The 33-year-old fell Joey Chestnut raises his trophy and belt Thursday after winning the men’s competitio­n in the Nathan’s Famous July Fourth hot dog eating contest on Coney Island.

short of her total last year of 37 frankfurte­rs but earned her sixth consecutiv­e title by easily beating runnerup Michelle Lesco, who wolfed down 26 hot dogs.

Like Chestnut, she expressed some disappoint­ment in not eating more.

“It wasn’t my best

number — the numbers were pretty low across the board. I don’t know if it was the heat, but I really can’t complain. I wasn’t feeling in my best shape so I’m just glad that it was enough to pull off a sixth belt,” she said.

Sonya “The Black Widow” Thomas holds the all-time women’s record of 45 hot dogs in 10 minutes.

Chesnut and Sudo each took home $10,000 for their victories.

Spectators with foam hot dog hats, plastic noisemaker­s and homemade signs descended on Coney Island’s famed boardwalk for the contest.

The annual eat-off started in 1972, though the company has long promoted the event with a theatrical backstory that places its start date in 1916.

Chestnut has only lost once since 2007, when he pulled ahead of longtime foe Takeru Kobayashi for the first time. An ESPN documentar­y released Tuesday features the two former rivals and their extreme training regimens.

“It’s not something that there’s books written about,” Chestnut says in the film, which shows him lifting his head up and down with a weight dangling from his mouth. “There’s not trainers. Everything’s trial and error.”

Kobayashi no longer takes part in the event.

As for Chestnut, “As long as I’m healthy, as long as I’m happy and competitiv­e, you can count me in,” he said.

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