The Shoeless Mexicans Vs. The Flying Finn (April 1974 | Volume: 25, Issue: 3)

The Shoeless Mexicans Vs. The Flying Finn

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Authors: Enrique Hank Lopez

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April 1974 | Volume 25, Issue 3

It is much too early to know who will represent Mexico in the long-distance races at the next Olympic games, but if they should finally choose one of my Tarahumara paisanos from the high sierras of Chihuahua, I am willing to bet five pesos even money that Mexico will win the marathon. As a matter of fact, I’ll raise the ante to ten pesos if the Olympic officials will kindly consent to make all competitors run in their bare feet.

The Tarahumaras will probably run barefoot anyway, because no decent, self-respecting Indio would demean himself by wearing sissified, toepinching shoes in a footrace.

In Denver, where I lived, my father had told me all he knew about the Tarahumaras. “They live in the most remote highlands of Chihuahua,” he said. “And they run through those mountains like wild deer. Most of their fiestas are climaxed by longdistance races that last several hours, vast numbers of barefoot men and women running through thick pine forests and wide-open plateaus, curiously able to inhale and exhale that sharp, thin, oxygen-scarce mountain air without keeling over.”

He told me much more about them, about their hunting and warring, about their culture, and about their strange, aloof stoicism. Since I am at least half Tarahumaran (most of us Mexicans have a considerable mixture of Indian blood), I have developed an unabashed, though admittedly chauvinistic, pride. The Aztecs, the Mayans, and the Zapotecs, all of whom I have claimed as ancestral kin on other occasions and for other reasons, were brilliant scholars, artists, and craftsmen; but none of them were ever as fleet-footed as my legendary predecessors the Tarahumaras.

My first encounter with them occurred in the late twenties when I saw a group of them competing against the great Paavo Nurmi in a 10,000meter race in Los Angeles. A local impresario had heard about the amazing running ability of the Indian mountain-dwellers and forthwith decided to stage one of those perennial race-ofthe-century extravaganzas. (I dimly remember the same impresario’s sponsorship of a ioo-yard dash between an ex-Olympic sprinter and a well-known racehorse.) In any event, he quickly contracted for the rather inexpensive services of four Tarahumara runners and then pulled what must have been a very cool coup: he persuaded Nurmi to run against them. He couldn’t have picked a more sensational opponent. The durable Finnish champion had won gold medals in the 1924 Paris Olympics (5,000 meters) and in the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics (10,000 meters), winning them with such runaway power and speed that he was soon acclaimed the number-one sports figure throughout the world.

PAAVO NURMI VERSUS
THE TARAHUMARAS!

The news spread like mild fire through most of jaded southern California (“Never heard of them other guys”), but in the shabby barrios of East Los Angeles it was the most electrifying event since the death of Pancho Villa. I happened to be visiting