Site Map   Subscribe   search   About Us   Contact Us 

International Living

Home
Current Print Issue
Free E-letters
Free Reports
IL Retirement Index
Quality Of life Index
What Can IL Offer You?
Subscription Services
IL Print Issue Archive
VIP Services
Publishers Roundtable
Panama Roundtable
World Club 
Lifetime Society
Bookstore
In-country Support
Argentina
Croatia

Ecuador

Europe: Paris

Honduras

Mexico
Nicaragua
Panama
Expat Advice
Events
Property for Sale & Rent
Classifieds
Add IL to Your Website
Advertise with IL
Discussion Forum
IL Blog New
Search IL
Make a Difference

Mexico Politician Stripped of Marathon Title for Taking Shortcut

October 15, 2007
Mexico City


madrazo

Roberto Madrazo on a less controversial day

Naughty, naughty. AMexican politician is taking a ribbing from the global press for apparently cheating in an international sporting event. He says he didn't-but like Shakespeare's lady, he seems to protest too much…

Roberto Madrazo, 55, "won" for his age group at the September 30 Berlin Marathon. However, judges later stripped him of his title after electronic monitors showed that he'd cut about nine miles off the race.

Madrazo, who ran a distant third place in Mexico's presidential elections last year, says he never claimed to have won the marathon. He says he dropped out of the race about halfway through, and was directed to the finish line to collect his things. Curiously, however, he approached the finish line running with the other competitors and raising his arms over his head as though in victory-and all of it was caught on film. Madrazo didn't mention to judges at the time that he'd dropped out of the competition.

A race photographer noted that Madrazo crossed the finish line in a jacket and long pants-but barely sweating after the 26-mile race. Officials opened an investigation and eventually disqualified Madrazo's first-place win.

The German press has lambasted Madrazo as "Speedy González"-his race time was clocked at two hours 41 minutes. The Mexican press, after first touting the victory, is now having a field day lampooning him. It says Madrazo applied old-school political dirty tricks to the realm of international sports.

Madrazo belongs to the Partido Revolucionario Institucional (Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI), a party famous for rigging elections during its 71 years in power. The PRI's control of the Mexican presidency ended in 2000, when Vicente Fox's election put rival Partido Acción Nacional (National Action Party, or PAN) in power.

Madrazo, a longtime amateur marathon runner, says that the attacks are politically motivated, and are meant to discredit his sporting career and a foundation he plans to launch called Marathon: A Foundation for Competition. Does anyone appreciate the irony of that?

Best Regards,

Suzan Haskins
Latin America Editorial Director
International Living

P.S. I'll be the emcee at the International Living Global Business Opportunities Workshop in Denver next month. We'll be talking about how to identify and act on opportunities that will help you finance your new life overseas. I hope you will join me there. Learn all about it.


Invest * Live * Travel * Buy Real Estate
Overseas

Discover how to make your international dreams come true with International Living's FREE Daily Postcard e-letter


Print this page

Affiliate Program

   Advertise   Write for Us   Privacy Policy        Classifieds

©2006 Agora Ireland Publishing and Services