This is a copy/paste post, the source is HERE!
Is winning all that counts? Are you absolutely sure about that?
Two weeks ago, on December 2, Spanish athlete Iván Fernández Anaya
was competing in a cross-country race in Burlada, Navarre. He was
running second, some distance behind race leader Abel Mutai - bronze
medalist in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the London Olympics. As they
entered the finishing straight, he saw the Kenyan runner - the certain
winner of the race - mistakenly pull up about 10 meters before the
finish, thinking he had already crossed the line.
Fernández Anaya quickly caught up with him, but instead of exploiting
Mutai's mistake to speed past and claim an unlikely victory, he stayed
behind and, using gestures, guided the Kenyan to the line and let him
cross first.
"I didn't deserve to win it," says 24-year-old Fernández Anaya. "I
did what I had to do. He was the rightful winner. He created a gap that I
couldn't have closed if he hadn't made a mistake. As soon as I saw he
was stopping, I knew I wasn't going to pass him."
Fernández Anaya is coached in Vitoria by former Spanish distance
runner Martín Fiz in the same place, the Prado Park, where he clocked up
kilometers and kilometers of training to become European marathon
champion in 1994 and world marathon champion in 1995.
"It was a very good gesture of honesty," says Fiz. "A gesture of the
kind that isn't made any more. Or rather, of the kind that has never
been made. A gesture that I myself wouldn't have made. I certainly would
have taken advantage of it to win."
Fiz says his pupil's action does him credit in human if not athletic
terms. "The gesture has made him a better person but not a better
athlete. He has wasted an occasion. Winning always makes you more of an
athlete. You have to go out to win."
Fiz recalls that at the 1997 World Championships in Athens he was
followed by his countryman Abel Antón the whole way. In the final meters
Antón attacked and easily won the race, having exploited all Fiz's hard
work. "I knew that was going to happen. [...] But competition is like
that. It wouldn't have been logical for Antón to let me win."
Fernández Anaya trains in the Prado every day, putting in double
sessions three times a week - when his vocational studies allow. Experts
say he is one step away from entering the elite of Spanish
cross-country running. His goal this year is to at least make the
Spanish team for the world cross-country champions.
But according to his coach, the pressure gets to him. "He doesn't
know how to overcome the pressure, which is what differentiates
champions. If he did, he would have been at the recent European
championships," Fiz notes.
"In the Burlada cross-country race there was hardly anything at stake
[...] apart from being able to say that you had beaten an Olympic
medalist," says Fernández Anaya.
"But even if they had told me that winning would have earned me a
place in the Spanish team for the European championships, I wouldn't
have done it either. Of course it would be another thing if there was a
world or European medal at stake. Then, I think that, yes, I would have
exploited it to win... But I also think that I have earned more of a
name having done what I did than if I had won. And that is very
important, because today, with the way things are in all circles, in
soccer, in society, in politics, where it seems anything goes, a gesture
of honesty goes down well."