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Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest Results: Patrick Bertoletti, Miki Sudo prevail
By Joe Rivera and Josh Peter, USA TODAY,
4 hours ago
The 2024 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest kicked off at the corner of Surf and Stillwell in Coney Island, New York. While the tournament is all the same, a major player – and an American icon – won't be present.
This year, Joey Chestnut wasn't be part of the contest due to a contractual dispute with Major League Eating, leaving him on the sidelines and away from an opportunity at a 17th Mustard Belt. That opens the door (and the esophagus) for Geoff Esper, who was the runner-up in 2023.
On the women's side, it was Miki Sudo and the field: Sudo is now a 10-time winner of the Ketchup Belt and has finished at the top of the heap in every contest she's performed in.
Sun's out, buns out: Here's how to kick off your Fourth of July festivities with a bang with the Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest.
"I just can’t believe it," he said on ESPN's telecast, noting he always finishes second or third when he competes at Nathan’s. "I lost some weight. Just lots of work. There’s an urgency.
"With Joey not here, I knew I had a shot. I was able to unlock something that I don’t know where it came from."
Patrick Bertoletti, 39, of Illinois won the Mustard Belt by eating 58 hot dogs and buns in a back-and-forth battle among a handful of eaters. It was the first time someone other than Joey Chestnut has won the contest since 2015, when Chestnut lost to Matt Stonie.
Bertoletti rallied from an early deficit and broke his personal record of 55 hot dogs.
"I wasn’t going to stop eating until the job was done," he said moments after the competition.
Geoffrey Esper of Massachusetts finished second with 53 hot dogs.
Patrick Bertoletti wins the men's title with 58 hotdogs at Nathan's Annual Hot Dog Eating Contest. Adam Gray, Getty Images
Intros for the men’s competition are underway as only George Shea, the inimitable emcee can handle them. Ricardo Corbucci of Brazil takes the stage wrapped with a half-American, half-Brazilian flag. He’ll be making his Nathan’s debut as, according to Shea, the No. 1 competitive eater in Brazil. (Haven’t had a chance to double-check those rankings.) Several international competitors on hand. Representing Japan, the Czech Republic, England and Australia.
The X account for Major League Eating (MLE), which essentially banned Chestnut from competing at Nathan’s this year, has become a gathering place for Chestnut (mostly) supporters. Popular hashtags: #FreeJoey and #LetJoeyEat.
MLE’s official announcement about Chestnut’s status June 11 triggered 296 comments, including:
“The 30 for 30 about the downfall of the Nathan’s hot dog eating contest is gonna be lit."
"This is like Caitlin left off the USA team. I mean who is in charge over there. Watch the viewer drop 50%."
"Strip his old victories and records away from him, too."
What, you thought she’d stop after consuming 51 hot dogs and buns?
"I’ll probably look for something cold and refreshing," she told ESPN’s Tiffany Greene about an hour after her triumphant victory. "Maybe some fruit or soft serve."
ESPN is kicking off its next segment of the Nathan’s contest with a replay of Sudo’s record-breaking performance of 51 hot dogs and puns. Almost as impressive on replay as live.
Eric "Badlands" Booker etched his name in competitive eating (and drinking) history when he chugged a gallon of Nathan’s Famous lemonade in 21 seconds. Yeah, the Lemonade Chugging Contest is a thing.
Sudo had another pink championship slung across her shoulder after shattering the women’s contest record with 51 hot dogs and gun – more than any other competitor but Joey Chestnut ate last year.
"I mean, I finally did it," Sudo told ESPN’s Tiffany Greene. "We finally beat 50. So much of this is thanks to (second-place finisher) Mayoi Ebihara, who was pushing me so much. Obviously I prepared even more because I knew she was going to bring it."
Sudo ate 51 hot dogs and buns, becoming the first woman to break 50-dog threshold and eclipsing her personal record of 48. She crushed her competitors and won her 10th pink championship belt.
Ebihara finished second with 37.
Emcee George Shea raising the possibility of Sudo outeating the men in the 10-minute competition.
Sudo once experimented with Joey Chestnut-style: two dogs at a time. Not today. She’s putting them down one at a time and has a four-dog league at the six-minute mark. ... Well, check that. On the fly, Sudo starts shoving the hot dogs down her gullet two at a time.
Clutching a pink championship belt, Sudo takes the stage. So has her most serious challenger, Mayoi Ebihara, a 5-foot-1 eater from Japan. Last year Ebinara wolfed down 33.5 hot dogs and buns during her contest debut at Nathan’s.
Intros underway. Miki Sudo, and the 13 competitors she’s about to beat for her 10 th title in 11 years. Jocelyn Young? Thanks for coming. Tandra Childress? Good to have you here. Katie Prettyman, take your place on the platform. But, let’s face it, Sudo is the big favorite.
Well, no massive boycott in Coney Island for the ban of Joey Chestnut. Massive crowd gathered for the contest, which begins with the women's competition at 11 a.m. ET.
What time is the Hot Dog Eating Contest?
Women's competition start time: 10:45 a.m. ET
Men's competition start time: Noon ET
Miki Sudo and the women get the Nathan's Famous festivities underway at 10:45 a.m. ET. Geoff Esper and the men take the stage around noon.
Chestnut will not be competing in the 2024 Nathan's Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest due to a contractual dispute with Major League Eating, the organization that sanctions the event.
In June, Chestnut signed an endorsement deal with Impossible Foods to sponsor a new, meatless hot dog. Representing a rival brand is something that gave MLE and Nathan's Famous more than a bit of indigestion, leading to him not being at the event this year .
The ban, though, isn't permanent, according to MLE, which wants Chestnut to compete at future events.
"Joey Chestnut is an American hero. We would love nothing more than to have him at the Nathan’s Famous International Hot Dog Eating Contest, which he has dominated for years. We hope that he returns when he is not representing a rival brand," MLE said in a statement.
Joey Chestnut is out of the competition, but not out of the loop. In an interview with USA TODAY Sports, he offered thoughts on who might win the men’s contest this year.
"There’s Geoff Esper," Chestnut said. "He’s an amazing eater and he just hasn’t been able to have a good contest on the Fourth of July. But he’s capable of 57. James Webb, he’s new and he’s getting better. So I can see his technique and eventually I think he’ll be in the 60s. He’s just getting started. Pat Bertoletti, I think he did 55 years ago (actually 49) and he started training a lot harder once he realize there was a chance (Chestnut would not complete).
In 2021, Joey Chestnut set the world record for hot dogs and buns eaten with 76. Chestnut set the world record twice in the prior three contests: In 2018, he shattered the world record, devouring 74 hot dogs and buns, and in 2020, he again set the standard, eating 75 hot dogs and buns.
On the women's side, Miki Sudo is the top dog (eater), munching 48 ½ hot dogs and buns in 2020.
Chestnut holds the record for most Mustard Belts, winning the contest 16 times. On the women's side, Miki Sudo has been an unstoppable eating force, winning nine of the last 10 Ketchup Belts.
Though he's not eating hot dogs on the Fourth of July, Chestnut will return to the competitive eating spotlight in a big, big way in 2024, by facing an old rival.
"Through all of my years in competitive eating, Kobayashi stands out as my fiercest rival," Chestnut said in a statement. "Competing against him pushed me to be so much better. I know that fans have waited a long time for another chapter of our rivalry and I can't wait for our massive showdown live on Netflix!"
Kobayashi and Chestnut last jawed off in 2009, with Chestnut chewing out the six-time Mustard Belt winner.
Who won the Hot Dog Eating Contest last year?
No surprises here: Joey Chestnut won a rain-soaked event that was threatened to be canned by Mother Nature. But the show went on, and so did Chestnut: He won the event by downing 62 dogs and buns, with Geoff Esper coming in second with 49 dogs and buns.
A "glizzy" is a slang term for a hot dog. The word has unknown origins, but some trace it back to handguns: A "Glizzy" is a slang term for a Glock handgun. The word then evolved to mirror the magazine of a handgun, which is approximately the length of a hot dog.
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