Runners do not tolerate cheaters at all but the way this was handled was ridiculously unacceptable. Since there's no penalty for humiliating someone to death, for the press it's even profitable, so of course that's what ends up happening.
Also, anyone who runs knows that website they mention is one of the most toxic places on the internet, not just for running but everything and anything. ala "4chan" (8chan?) It's hundreds, thousands, of teenagers and 20-something boys with complete anonymity and nothing but free time. The website owners do not moderate. So once they get ahold of something to attack, they are going to bully it to death, in this case literally.
No, they don't have such a right, but everyone has the right to call him out publicly. The key point, for me, is that vengeance is evil. Cheaters should be exposed but not destroyed. Go the full mile to get cheaters banned from competitions and make sure that the record is set straight. Make sure that past winnings and glory is returned and nullified, and leave it at that.
I'd argue they absolutely do have that right. A doctor is in a position of immense power and trust, and you need to know that your doctor will be honest if they make mistakes and not try to cover them up. This is a matter of character.
Do his patients also get access to his tax records and medical records?? How does cheating at running a marathon translate to professional candor? I cheat in single player computer games, is my body of professional work now under enhanced scrutiny for a completely unrelated activity?
Well, what profession are you in? If you're a lawyer, or a financial advisor, or, yes, a doctor, then your revealed character absolutely has a bearing over whether you're a fit and proper person to be in a position of trust.
Hard to know if this guy was guilty or not, but online harassment forums are so toxic and yet there's no laws to really stop them. Reminds me of Near's sad death after years of harassment from kiwifarms (https://kotaku.com/the-brilliant-snes-emulator-creator-known...)
The dude was 100% cheating, but the internet vigilantism around this was awful. One of the many unfortunate side effects of the largest (english?) running forum being a glorified 4chan run by 2 idiots, one of whom then gets interviewed for this story with next to no discussion of how he enabled it
I remember when I read this story, I think it was on Wired, my first impression was that the guy literally chasing Dr. Meza had at least as many problems as someone cheating and doubling down on his cheating, if not more. Maybe it's because during my active days I was part of a different sports community, but the few self-declared guardians of purity of the sport we had were either ignored or they functionaries. In the latter case, everyone was happy to have someone to organize tournaments, and then they were ignored for the most part.
All that was before the internet really took of, so. But those "guardians" of whatever cause are among the most toxic and worst people I know.
Oh, did I hate some referees. I wasn't referring to referees, so. But the people, either practitioners or not, that have some "higher" goal of keeping whatever sport "pure". Usually not necessarily group consensus, always driven by personal opinion and usually turning into crusades of sorts because, of course, those guardians are right. Referees are just making sure rules are followed.
Those crusaders driven by personal opinion and turning into crusaders of sorts, those "self-righteous" guys, those are the people that decide to become refs. It's the same thing. That drive can be genuine.
Real people went to real crusades at one point. Contemporary Jihadi terrorist organizations refer to American missions in the Middle East as crusades right in their names, you can find it in the CIA's world factbook. It's an accusation-of-accusation word in the media, "conspiracy" is another one, newscasters attempt to discredit people by accusing them of accusing others of conspiring. This happened to George Carlin, for one, who turned it around on the newscaster and the whole crowd cheered him.
EDIT: now that I'm reading your posts again I recall the ref who did a truly gross thing, declare a penalty in the 1998 World Cup between Italy and Chile. Turns out he really had been given a crazy bribe. Just so disgusting.
None of the refs I encountered was like that. It was usually amateur practitioners that filled the role, with some doing it full time. Those, rare, cases of those self-righteous asses I encountered were either trainers (a rare few), functionaries (usually to get to control their own tournaments and promote their favorites) and mostly very, let's say, enthusiastic amateurs with more ego than actual skill and success.
Why was it awful? It seems it's the only thing that could stop cheating. It's a good example of social pressure working as intended. He got a lot of chances to stop it along the way but he continued to cheat even after multiple bans. He deserved the exposure and the humiliation. It's a shame he chose to kill himself instead of living with the consequences of his actions but don't blame his victims for fighting back.
So socially pressuring someone, regardless of reason, into suicide and ruining not just his sports career but also his overall reputation and private life, is a feature of society???? What's wrong with you?
A general point regarding cheating: Do you have any idea how many amateur athletes are doping? And never get caught or called out?
It wasn't without a reason. He was cheating, some pressure appeared, he cheated more, more pressure was applied. He still continued cheating to get his name at the top of world records - even more pressure. He still refused to admit the wrong doings or even stop committing more.
>>A general point regarding cheating: Do you have any idea how many amateur athletes are doping? And never get caught or called out?
Sure. Most top guys at 40+ are on something. Some are caught and banned. Often their names are published with a little syringe next to results.
Most aren't caught. What does it have to do with anything?
It shows how hypocritical it is to ruin one guys life, when just banning him from official records and then ignore him is enough, when those others (not that I consider doping, especially in professional sports, cheating when most top athletes are doing it one way or the other) are never subject to so much pressure. Heck, a lot of professional athletes even had come backs after being caught doping.
The fact that, you, and others, don't see a problem when someone commits suicide after a prolonged bullying campaign, regardless of that persons action, is really, deeply troublesome.
People are assuming that they did not die because the report of US citizens who died outside of the US did not mention them. IMO this is kind of a weak justification, bureaucratic mistakes are not that uncommon. I that people are missing the point with the whole situation, they important thing is that they were heavily harassed for years, so much that now the free software and emulation communities ended up losing one of their brightest members.
This was such a sad story - everything I read at the time said Dr Meza was a charitable, successful member of the community in LA (running coach, founded programs towards Latino students, etc.).
The LetsRun forum is such a wild place - it's a really strange mix of great running news discussion, 4-chan / bodybuilding.com conspiracy theories, and (IMO) a lot of teenage / college male runners who have a lot of angst, and something to prove because they are in an unpopular sport. Moderators/owners (rojo / pojo? or something) don't do anything / actively encourage this.
Bodybuilding.com misc & 4chan are super toxic communities.
I look back at my teenage years and realised how hazardous they are to mental health. My curiousity & engagement on those communities was limited to infrequent lurking.
I now understand why alt-right/q anon movement popped up so quickly.
A big issue with these boards is that the ownership can't overmod because these communities are a big drawcard, even if they're financial negatives.
I dunno, I just had a weird incident happen last week where a family member of mine received a ton of cyber bullying on Twitter because she’s an actress and has an unusual surname. When I reported stuff Twitter said it wasn’t against their policies.
> FB/Twitter are not one community, they are a million different communities
You can apply the same arbitrary granularity to bodybuilding.com (different subforums) and 4chan (different boards) too, and say 'such and such subforum isn't as toxic as these other ones...'.
The point is that all four platforms spread and foster toxicity. And given that Twitter and Facebook are magnitudes bigger, they also do so much more than 4chan or bodybuiding.com.
One person can click to see different subforums on those sites, and often does.
One FB/Twitter, you can only see stuff posted by your friends, friends of friends, specific people whose names/usernames you know and have searched for, groups you have chosen to join, and ads they show you. The other 99.99% of content is invisible to you.
> Bodybuilding.com misc & 4chan are super toxic communities.
There’s that word. The world is super “toxic”. The aforementioned sites allow people to speak freely, which can result in negativity, but they’re also bastions of freedom and creativity and everyone’s thoughts being equally visible.
One can easily argue that that’s far less toxic than Reddit’s style of everyone being the church mom that silences and admonishes everyone that says something “problematic” or what the congregation considers unacceptable. Where’s the fun in that?
There’s definitely a certain group of people who hate not being able to silence others, since if they can’t silence and censor their opponents, their arguments don’t really hold up.
You freedom ends where my nose begins, or something like that. The freedom to voice your opinions, even unpopular ones, is good. It stops being good once it turns to online harassment, IMHO even before that.
And by the way, just because there is no active moderation doesn't mean that every voice is equally heard. Or did any one on running.com listen what Dr. Meza had to say?
Man, Dr. Meza was an obvious chatear who refused to stop.
He could have silenced it all by running with a GPS way before it snowballed to what you call harassment.
He deserved to have his reputation ruined. You're just blaming victims (the ones cheated) for doing something about it. You can't have a world where the cheater keeps his profits from cheating and his victims are not hurt by it. It's not a positive sum game, something gotta give. Don't blame the victims.
They did that! One marathon banned him, many ordered him to run with an observer, he was told to cut the shit over and over, and he violated those rules. He was banned, don't say he wasn't.
So, he wasn't competing anymore. What ever times he "ran" didn't matter anymore. People could have left it there, why didn't they? And why would any of that justify the online bullying campaign against him?
If he wasn't competing he could have just raced without a bib, or just run around town on his own at 5am, nobody would have cared about his teleporting. He called that attention to himself and kept cheating until the absolute second he got called out and demanded to run with an observer to put up or shut up.
4chan is a bastion of free speech in the same way that Somalia is a bastion of the free market. Being the only place in the world to do something "freely" means you mostly attract people that want to "freely" do all the things that other places have rules against.
The previous comment was using the word "free" as if it had a clear and self-evident meaning. But of course it does not - theres a huge grey area where individual liberty conflicts with the rights of others. Where is appropriate to draw the line in this area is culturally dependent. But most cultures agree that there is a line somewhere - for example even the US has certain laws regulating hate speech, and prevents individuals from having the "freedom" to enslave other humans. In this sense, everyone except an extreme few is in favour of censorship. It's just a matter of degree.
"The only freedom which counts is the freedom to do what some other people think to be wrong. There is no point in demanding freedom to do that which all will applaud. All the so-called liberties or rights are things which have to be asserted against others; who claim that if such things are to be allowed, their own rights are infringed or their own liberties threatened. This is always true, even when we speak of the freedom to worship, of the right of free speech or association, or of public assembly. If we are to allow freedoms at all there will constantly be complaints that either the liberty itself or the way in which it is exercised is being abused, and, if it is a genuine freedom, these complaints will often be justified. There is no way of having a free society in which there is not abuse. Abuse is the very hallmark of liberty."
>Bodybuilding.com misc & 4chan are super toxic communities.
They're places that provide access to actual human beings though. So many other online communities - especially ones with wide readership - are astroturfed into oblivion.
My take on it is that having to deal mentally with lunatics howling at the moon and screaming about the upcoming Great Replacement is the price you pay for access to actual opinions. That screaming horde is what keeps the astroturfers and consent manufacturers out.
But you only see opinions of people who are willing to tolerate the torrent of abusive posts. You won't see the opinions of the silent majority who see the stupid flamewars and decide they'll spend their time elsewhere.
Some 4chan forums are completely hopeless (/pol for example) but on others you can find a lot of interesting stuff. As a general rule: as long as it's not politics the discussion is often interesting but then again, it's the case about everywhere.
> There's value to be gleaned from /pol/ if you can stand the lunatics.
While I don’t particularly deny this
> 4chan is currently the best place for realtime ukraine war footage and analysis
Is most definitely a no.
Oddly enough, Reddit seems to be the best for footage, with Telegram likely coming second.
As for analysis, Twitter without a doubt. Is there a load of absolute horse shit? Of course. If you don’t know how to detour that, you shouldn’t care much in the first place.
The only good thing that has come out of 4chan regarding this war is the cope cage. That is indeed hilarious.
There's a certain amount of irony that leaks from a thread talking about how depraved 4chan is that devolves to someone rating the best place to find war footage. I served in a war and I don't think I've watched a minute of footage outside of two documentaries.
I'm not saying that I enjoy watching war footage, I'm saying that there's a severe dearth of it in conventional media, to the extent that for the first three days of the war I was saying to myself 'is this war really happening, apparently the tanks are rolling in, where's the footage?'
You're acting like the opinions on these forums are strongly held and like there aren't a significant minority of people 'trying on' personas or personality traits in order to see how others respond to them. I don't see how that's a meaningful distinction from people who have made the color beige their sole personality trait and strongly believe in manufacturing consent at the cost of all other goals.
>I don't see how that's a meaningful distinction from people who have made the color beige their sole personality trait
I'm not really sure how to respond to that. It's intrinsically different. It's getting responses from people who don't care what their neighbour thinks about them vs getting responses from people who care in the utmost what their neighbour thinks of them. One is intrinsically likely to be more unfiltered than the other.
If you want to know what sentiment a community actually holds you have to seek out all types of opinions.
It's always fun to see someone use the word "chit" for shit, and think "Oh hey that copypasta leaked out of bodybuilding".
These forums seem to collect the most problematic people from every political group and subculture, put them all together, and then teach them their own unique manosphere philosophy that is currently one of my least favorite things about all of mankind.
It's some kind of primitivist thought combined with a screenshot of a Nietzsche quote about strength and power, some pretentious militant atheism, a bit of eugenics, a lot of intelligence-worshipping, and a heavy dose of still believing in cringe culture.
Way bigger than just alt right, there seems to be a variant for every affiliation. It's almost mainstream.
It's terrible that people were harassing this man, and that those communities formed a mob mentality against him. But I don't feel particularly sorry for him; he cheated, denied it, threatened to sue people, and then eventually took his own life after his reputation was ruined.
Perhaps if he had stopped competing after the first blog post exposing him, things would have de-escalated. Instead, he doubled down on his lies, and made things worse for himself.
By all accounts (including a friend of mine) he was a wonderful person, mentor, coach, etc. back in the day. It sounds like maybe he developed some mental issues that eventually led to both the cheating and suicide.
There are lots of cheaters (and worse) out there with "wonderful" reputations.
I feel sorry for Meza — even when self-inflicted, pain is pain — but I'm glad he didn't get away with it. I wish that our world did not reward cheating so regularly and handsomely, and I wish Meza had not chosen to cheat.
I do feel sorry for him, and I think you are being too forgiving to the trolls here.
This was not a mere "ruined reputation", but rather a persistent, coordinated mobbing assault big enough that not even a professional PR firm could do anything.
Did he cheat? Likely yes. Did he deserve being banned from marathons? Sounds like it. But did he deserve "the pressure, attention, emailing, even trolling" that he got? No, he did not.
If I were in his position, I would have also tried to sue.
"Journalists" being paid to get every last bit of scrap on a person, sometimes even going through people's rubbish, breaking laws that protect citizens too, are far more nasty
Some people can and do make vigilanteism into their identity. I know two cases where people have had their employment affected in some way as result of one or more vigilantes trying to punish or blackmail them respectively.
If you want to call that trolling, I guess you could. The word has changed a lot since I first encountered it over two decades ago.
Trolls can keep it up forever. It’s a labor of love for them, a hobby. I know folks who’ve had multi-year trolls and at least one that escalated to in-person stalking.
> But did he deserve "the pressure, attention, emailing, even trolling" that he got?
What made his conduct outrageous is how he was clinging to his side. He could have just said: “yup, you got me. I had a rough day and made a bad decision.” They would have disqualified his result, maybe banned him in the future races and nothing more would have come from it.
You can’t keep maintaining the unmaintainable and expect people to loose interest. He liked the prestige while he was on the good side of it, and when he turned out to be a cheater he wanted suddenly none of the attention.
You said that a professional PR firm couldn’t help him. Sure enough, turns out it is very hard to rebuild a house while it is actively burning and the owner is pouring more gasoline on it every so often.
People that break the social contract and then try to gaslight the rest of society when discovered instead of admitting their actions are some of the lowest kinds of people.
They corrode social trust.
I have no sympathy for this person, they're a snake.
Presumably some point before harassing a man to the point where he commits suicide. I don't think anyone has ever answered "where do you draw the line?" the the satisfaction of anyone who has asked the question. It is unanswerable.
People are more complicated than that. It sounds like he was an incredibly generous and loving person, there were queues of people saying how much he had helped them.
That in no way justifies what he did, at all, but it's not the case that he was an unremitting lowlife. It's a real conundrum, that otherwise wonderful people can sometimes do terrible things.
In related news, Jussie Smollett was sentenced to jail today for faking a race/sex orientation hate crime. (He also claimed the imaginary attackers were politically motivated.)
Many expected him to escape jail time, but he did not. The judge cited Smollett's refusal to accept responsibility (and the resulting harm to society) in making the decision to mandate jail time.
>But did he deserve "the pressure, attention, emailing, even trolling" that he got? No, he did not.
cheating like this denies other participants fruits of their hard labor of many years, just flushes all their effort down the drain. Compare that to just having "the pressure, attention, emailing, even trolling".
> big enough that not even a professional PR firm could do anything.
What an odd take. Just because throwing money at something doesn’t make it go away does not mean it’s a “big attack” or even that people calling him out are in any way in the wrong. As OP stated the big problem seems to be that he persistently tried to regain his old good reputation instead of accepting defeat.
When a cheater wants to continue cheating, it doesn’t matter how much money he throws at PR firms, it’s still fair to call out his cheating.
Right. People have had their lives and reputations blown up for all sorts of reasons, meanwhile this guy cheated to run
>the fastest marathon ever recorded for someone in his age group of 70 to 74
A bit ridiculous then to say people were attacking him for no reason, or his daughter not understanding why anyone cared.
Dude was literally claiming to be the world marathon champion in his age group while cheating for years.
I'm pretty sure only online cheating detectives pay much attention to unusually low marathon times for older age groups in amateur events, especially if the person doesn't actively seek to promote themself - not because there's a lot of people skipping the course, but because it tends to be dominated by younger people illicitly using their older relatives' race numbers after the original runner had to drop out (events tend to restrict refunds and transfers).
Well I just don't get your comment. Did you read the article at all?
>I'm pretty sure only online cheating detectives pay much attention to unusually low marathon times
It would be a world record in his age group if the LA marathon was a proper IAAF course.
When people started getting suspicious his name and picture came out on the cover of the Los Angeles Times.
>specially if the person doesn't actively seek to promote themself
maybe next time cheat a few minutes slower then the world record! ridiculous!
> because it tends to be dominated by younger people illicitly using their older relatives' race numbers
I can't say I've seen evidence of that being a massive problem specifically, though people running under other people's names is an issue more generally.
> (events tend to restrict refunds and transfers)
That isn't just to be difficult. It can affect their insurance, there can be genuine health & safety concerns, and is often enforced by running bodies that the events associate with. Not implementing such restrictions could mean the difference between an event being able to run or not.
Transfers are also an admin faf for the organisers, even ignoring that.
> I'm pretty sure only online cheating detectives pay much attention
I would suggest that this story is a reason to reconsider how sure you are about that?
If nothing else, consider that it being important enough for someone to cheat suggests it is important enough that other people don't want their achievements to be diminished by cheaters.
There are many things in life that only matter to a minority of people, that doesn't mean it is right for someone to stomp over that something for some perverse sense of self-satisfaction. While the trollish mob bullying is going too far by a massive margin, it is not wrong for people to care when someone cheats.
If anything from reading this article it feels like the running and marathon communities are hugely self-righteous and have a colossally overblown sense of self-importance.
It's just a fucking race mate, this man teaches people and heals people - if you run a marathon, it should be about your own sense of achievement, why care so much about what some other person has done?
This is my big takeaway. I think running and biking can be really fun, but I've lost friends into the morass that is LetsRun. It almost always boils down to 'That person did something I think they can't do, they must be cheating, whose with me?' levels of mob justice... in the running community, no less???? It's enough to make you think that it's the sport itself that breeds the toxicity.
This isn't some guy who is faking his way into the middle of the pack, he was accepting record times. How can a community maintain fraudulent high water marks?
That's why I never got much into my finishing position in a race. All I cared about was running a PB if possible. I knew that no matter how hard I trained, how well I built up to a healthy diet, that someone out there was better than me. Or trained harder, had a better pair of shoes, or better coaching. Or had a rabbit to help them stay on pace.
But people have an unhealthy competitive urge. I saw the same thing when I played basketball. Pickup games where people took things way too seriously, like the outcome of the game meant they'd get a call from an NBA scout, when most of the players were juco level at most.
> If anything from reading this article it feels like the running and marathon communities are hugely self-righteous and have a colossally overblown sense of self-importance
In general that is far from the truth. Running communities tend to be very helpful and welcoming groups in my experience. Yes, there are a few alpha-cock types out there and one or two online forums where they manage to dominate (mainly because they leave other groups where being an arse is actively unappreciated), but that sort of prick appears in all walks of life and running seems to have fewer than its fair share.
A lot of the noise that you do hear comes from outside the running groups sometimes. For instance most people making jokes belittling joggers compared to runners neither run nor jog, they just like taking the mick out of a recognisable target. It is like the people who hardly ever leave their couch unless they need to go get another beer going on about how Cantona should have taken a particular shot differently (yeah, my football knowledge is that up-to-date!).
> if you run a marathon, it should be about your own sense of achievement
I would agree there. Though if there are awards for best-in-class or otherwise they should go to the people who genuinely earn them.
> why care so much about what some other person has done?
People don't generally like a cheat in any area, If someone else missed out on a best-in-class or other result because of a cheater they are perfectly justified in being irritated and many will be irritating on their behalf.
The man didn't deserve bullying by an online mob, he needed mental help not harassment and the ban from other events should be sufficient counter action, but that doesn't mean we should dismiss cheating as a victimless action that we shouldn't care about because it doesn't directly affect us.
with his systematic cheating and refusal to accept the reality and take the responsibility magically confined only to marathons ... The guy was an executive and moral integrity isn't that execs are known for. Cheating, outright denying of proven facts, legal threats and hiring PR company - that is a typical exec behavior, and public/community campaign is frequently the only way to stop them.
Instead, he doubled down on his lies, and made things worse for himself.
I don't know how anyone who has lived through the baseball PED scandal thinks doubling down helps. Bonds & Clemens fought tooth and nail against allegations. They'll never get into the hall of fame. Compare this to someone like David Ortiz, who got voted into Cooperstown this year. Ortiz didn't even really apologize. He just didn't double down.
I feel like this happens with other celebrity scandals, too, where the people who don't publicly argue stuff like this seem to have their public image less tarnished, if at all.
I have a hard time understanding both cheating at a marathon and killing yourself over being discovered to have cheated in marathons. I wonder if there is a relation between the two in terms of the psychology required - an intense desire for public approval.
Same personality that is attracted to a profession with built-in prestige, say doctor or lawyer. This story would be way less believable if he were an artisan of any sort.
Lol, I just saw some dude trying to sell Mate cups at crazy prices. They were good cups, though...so I suppose you cheat by selling something that looks like bronze when it's really not? Just sell crap quality.
> I have a hard time understanding both cheating at a marathon and killing yourself over being discovered to have cheated in marathons.
No, it wasn't because he was discovered. It was because he was being harassed by folks and media. To make it worse, people harassed his employers so much that they distanced themselves from him. I'm not surprised somebody wasn't able handle an Internet and media mob.
When your whole sense of identity (in this case running marathons) is ripped away from you (whether or not you cheated) you no longer have a reason to live. Unless you have other things to live for family, work, whatever. Other senses of identity and self.
I'm not clear on the suicide. Usually when men commit suicide, it is not survivable. I don't see how jumping into an an empty LA river channel would be considered "unsurvivable." Standing at the brink, I'd expect someone like him to realize, "this is no good... I might survive." Isn't it possible he was pushed? He did have future plans to deliver lunch to his wife.
> I don't see how jumping into an an empty LA river channel would be considered "unsurvivable."
The bridge is maybe 18 feet above ground level and the river bed is maybe 35 feet below ground; about 53 feet of total fall, on to concrete. That's a very big fall, and his advanced age makes it even more dangerous.
I don't think the theory that male suicides are rationally evaluating success probability is especially sound. But even under that theory, it's a hard fall.
> I have a hard time understanding both cheating at a marathon and killing yourself over being discovered to have cheated in marathons.
I think, generally, the abuse that's occurring here is that people willfully raised the profile of a perceived wrong. Lobbying the people who run the races or local papers that ran stories about him to correct those things is appropriate. The national media showing up and people trying to bully or harass him crosses over into ethically bankrupt behavior under the guise of "justice".
I'm just wondering if technically and economically we're at the point where we can use drone for each runner from start to finish? Or at least for people who wants it. ("I'm not a cheater, I'll show you")
I think the tech for self-navigating drone that follows a person is already mature?
The number of participants in many/most marathons would make this an economic and safety nightmare - better would be more checkpoints (perhaps every 1Km) with good video coverage of the runners passing them.
Definitely. I can imagine the sky above a major race almost turning dark as 40,000 drones hover overhead. Sounds very unrealistic (and horrible). More static cameras would suffice. And GPS watch data where available.
Drones are still expensive. There is an easier way though, just run with a GPS watch provided by someone else. That's what an honest runner with results too hard to believe would do.
"Ok guys, I get why you don't believe my results, it's natural to be suspicious. Please give me a GPS tracker, I will run with it to prove nothing shady is going on" is not that hard to arrange unless you're actually cheating.
I'm an older runner (50+), live in LA. I feel in some sense this story might be near to me, but it might as well be in a parallel universe. I never run in organized events. I specifically run by myself, so I can enjoy my time, free from social pressure. I don't understand any of the players in this whole drama. Most of the time I just feel like an alien from the whole thing, then I go running and feel better.
What a wild story. Everybody is taking these amateur events way too seriously. Not just Meza, who went through all the trouble of doing that, and all for social media points. These Internet patrol guys also seem a bit pathetic, like Derek Murphy. They've got way too much time on their hands. Are they also going to report kids that cheat on board games soon?
> Are they also going to report kids that cheat on board games soon?
Perhaps, if those kids start breaking board game records. Fewest number of turns to Monopoly millionaire? Most items placed on the Buckaroo horse? Chess and go games would be better examples.
But more seriously, how seriously should people take these events? For those that are actually runners (and not just trolls), running may be there passion and doing well in these (pricey) events might be the highlight of their year. And then they hear others are cheating and I can imagine some would get very angry about that. Same with absolutely anything you invest your resources in.
Absolutely not. No child should be publicly outed for anything whatsoever. Perhaps quietly disqualified, but I will never find it acceptable to "out" children who make poor decisions.
That Murphy guy behind "MarathonInvestigation" claims to be objective and about the facts, but his Twitter looks like a doxxing blog. You would think this wouldn't be appealing, but he seems to have quit his day job as a financial analyst in order to run his website. Is this content really that profitable?
It's also telling that, in the article, the only thing he suggests he might have done differently is ask people to register on the site. Like user registration was the thing that people were concerned about. Oh and of course, he bears no responsibility. Naturally.
A lot of comments focus on how he was "harassed to death".
I see it differently. He cheated, didn't admit it when caught, continued to compete and cheat. This is a common situation. You either lose your reputation or continue to deny it and hope it goes away. Every time you cheat you hurt other people. People care about their little competitions, it's often significant part of their lives. If you come there and cheat hurt them. You continue hurting them every time you do it. You build your reputation at the cost of theirs. Courts/law enforcement are a useless avenue when it comes to cheating in sports or games. The only mechanism that works is reputation.
He deserved his reputation to be ruined, he deserved to be exposed and humiliated. He could have stopped it all by not competing anymore or you know, at least not cheating. His reputation was more important to him than his life. I respect the choice but it's only his. The community he tried to cheat employed the only defense mechanism that actually works.
You learn it's the only mechanism that works if you dealt with bullying, cheating at gambling, cheating in small business deals, cheating in sports, especially amateur ones. There is nothing else you can use to fight cheating/abuse. It's true the abuser often never admits wrongdoing until they are exposed publicly and humiliated. They hope it never gets to that point and they are often right. The same way the school bully doesn't face consequences, someone who stole something small from a friend doesn't or someone who cheated you in a poker game.
When they do get exposed they often blame their victims - true bully style. When I read the article I think about the victims. People who competed with him just so ego of a cheater could be satisfied and who beared the frustration of being helpless and officials ignoring their concerns for too long.
The article also mentions one of the most common and naive mistakes people make when accessing character:
"Everyone who knew him testified to his generosity, modesty, and sense of justice."
It's very easy and common for successful people to be generous and offer "sense of justice" to the community. I've seen this tens of times in the gambling world. You're successful, you are admired, you share your knowledge with others, help them, are asked to help when resolving disputes. You're well respected and feed of it. Then a day comes when things turn around. You either got caught cheating or the one edge you have becomes known and it's no longer there. Your results suffer and then it starts: you scam someone in a deal, you stop picking up calls from people who lend you money, you are suddenly involved in more and more shadiness.
It's just very difficult to judge someone's character when things are going well for them. Even violent drug dealer were often loved in their communities. It's just how people behave. It's easy, it's rewarding. It doesn't say much about your character.
It's a long rant about something I have dealt a lot with during my life from early years to adulthood. In business, in gambling, in sports, in little in group competitions for status. I know the community usually sides with the abuser/cheater. They are the popular one and it's just easier. He deserved his reputation to be ruined. For him it was more important than his life. Please don't blame the victims for his choices.
No sadistic bully will ever admit "I harass this man because I get a charge out of inflicting cruelty", maybe not even to themself. No. It will always be "because he deserved it". It helps if there is a mob of other sadistic bullies egging each other on, reassuring each other that it's fine. That this is justice.
You know there are other people who "deserve to be exposed and humiliated" even more than elderly marathon cheaters, right? Putin, for instance? Taliban? But they are out of reach, and too powerful. Too dangerous to keyboard warriors, to be honest.
Much easier to go after elderly marathon cheaters. Don't you agree?
Absolutely not, no one deserves this. If he didn't admit it, then so what? It doesn't change the fact.
He should have been banned from races if there was sufficient proof he cheated and his times revoked - he can claim he didn't cheat all he wants, but he isn't going to be in any races so what does it matter?
I'm a runner who races, and if someone cheats that's bad but it isn't taking away anything from others - most racers are mostly racing against themselves anyway. I'm not thinking I want to beat the person in front, I'm thinking that I want to beat my personal target time.
I get that people always say positive things about people who have died, but take it with a grain of salt, right?
The spin they put on this is incredible. Doesn't talk about all his disqualifications and that the Marathon declared his times objectively impossible. Guy cheats like crazy, crazy bad, objectively. The article puts a different spin on it but it was objective, not accused of cheating, cheater. Oh, oh, but he's a doctor. Doctor's don't cheat, they're super honest, the community, gives away money, good person good person!
They don't even do that much to get at him, they just ask him to prove it. I don't see it as harassment. He put himself in the spotlight when he ran those crazy times. Keep in mind, if this guy actually had actually run even one of his times for real, it would have been an opportunity to challenge the best. Just run one more marathon, or not even, just 5K at that same speed. A chance at the bigtime!
This happened with the Wright Brothers, the press actually did harass them in that case, but everyone said they were "Flyers or Liars". It was an opportunity! Well the Wright Brothers were Flyers. Frank Meza was a liar. And when the Wright Brothers did fly in front of all those journalists they became the most famous people in the world!
Meza had so many opportunities to admit he cheated.
And he had the choice (obviously not but hypothetically) of running like he said he did! They gave him that out!
Nobody looks at the people he cheated, he didn't cheat the marathon, he cheated other runners, real people came in one slot later, there was a real 70-74 year old who actually had merit that could have come in first and made the news, except for Frank Meza. It's just not the same to be declared a winner after the fact, by disqualification especially if the cheater never admits it. And runners just hate the cheaters, this is so much worse than steroids, teleporters ruin the sport on another level. And never admits it, with so much proof! Like he tried running even half as fast as he said he did and he ends up cardiac problems!
Headline should say "Marathon Cheater Frank Meza Kills Himself to Avoid Admitting It".
There's life after death. In a parallel universe, he respawned in like a psych ward (typically) and it's twice as bad, I guess they treat him better in the ward because he's a doctor but he still lives his life out in shame as a fraud. Probably then his life really does fall apart, people going through everything he's done with a fine-toothed comb, and find all sorts of stuff. Nobody cheats exclusively in the cases they're caught.
He just spent his whole life asking people to kiss up to him, well where he respawned I can tell you there is absolutely none of that.
A careful reading, especially to the end, shows that the writer is certain that Meza cheated. And yet respects and has empathy for him and his family, despite that.
Meza was much more than his worst moment, as are we all.
I read other sources too, one in Spanish about it. It should not take a careful reading to conclude the guy cheated, it's plain as day, the marathons declared him a cheater, in this article it says Meza's times were practically but not literally impossible when others declared it wasn't practically but rather literally impossible.
Maybe I'm being too hard on him in reaction to how soft the article is, it might have been senility.
In the end, you're arguing in favor of removing people from society, forcefully if needed, if they are suspected of or have cheated at running a marathon without any other considerations. And like, is that what you're really wanting to argue?
> should not take a careful reading to conclude the guy cheated, it's plain as day
By "careful reading" I meant "not careless reading". No one who paid reasonable attention while reading the article would leave with anything other than the "plain as day" conclusion that Meza cheated.
He was literally disqualified multiple times from races before that including a lifetime ban from a marathon he cheated at...
then he went to LA marathon where he wasn't banned, but had to run with an observer, and still ran without an observer to set the world record in his age group...
Where does it mention hard evidence of cheating before his death? Suspicious splits are not evidence. Not running with an observer is just that.
I get that people get mad at cheaters but without evidence it's unfair to harrass people. Even asking them to "prove" their ability is harrasment. That's all.
He was literally supposed to run with an observer(because he's a cheater and can't be trusted) and he didn't, several times. How is that not cheating?
>In 2015 the L.A. Marathon must have noticed something fishy because officials asked him to run with an observer in the future. But when he returned in 2017, he ran alone, the observer idea apparently forgotten. He also ran solo in 2018 and 2019.
>So Murphy and the LetsRun crew grumbled when the L.A. Marathon announced in early June that it would not disqualify Meza from the 2019 race.
>Instead, officials would ask him—again—to run with an observer next time around. “This is the best solution for all,” they told Murphy.
They're literally begging the guy to stop cheating so they don't have to ban him, and the guys does a world record. It's beyond ridiculous.
Instead of admitting it, he kills himself.
I'm sorry, the whole story is tragic, but obviously this guy's problems went far beyond evil posters on letsrun, as awful as that site is.
It's easy to miss, but the top photo on the article shows a photo of Meza in a track suit running a marathon, and a blurry photo of someone who looks like Meza wearing the same outfit riding a bicycle. The caption includes "photos of Frank Meza’s 2014 San Francisco Marathon run purport to show him on a bicycle during the race".
From the article: On July 3 a LetsRun user posted a photo with the comment: “Frank on a bike?” The image, taken by an official photographer during the 2014 San Francisco Marathon, showed a blurry figure riding a bicycle down the sidewalk. His face was obscured, but his outfit—a black cap, a gray long-sleeve shirt, Nike Zoom Marathoners, green socks—resembled what Meza was pictured wearing at the end of the race. When I sat down with the family and we examined the photo together, they denied that it was Meza. “It looks like someone photoshopped this,” Lorena said, pointing to the shoes. Plus, this man was wearing black athletic pants with a white stripe. “You don’t run a marathon in sweats,” Tina said.
From the final paragraph: Late on July 4, while word of Meza’s death was starting to circulate, a LetsRun user posted one last series of photos from the 2014 San Francisco Marathon. In each the Golden Gate Bridge looms in the background. And there is Meza, unmistakably, hanging out by a timing mat as other runners blow past him. He wears a familiar outfit: the hat, the shoes, the socks—and long black pants with a white stripe.
It's oddly non-prominent, but I think the article does present direct evidence of his cheating. It's not logical proof, and I don't know if it's the right standard, but with the right prosecution lawyer I think it probably would be enough to convince a jury in court.
I did notice those but still don't think it's good enough. 1st photo is a blurry figure with obscured face. Wow. 2nd photo found only after his death, so way too late and clearly wasn't grounds for the harrasment. Nevermind...
Unless he stopped for over 6 minutes to piss on the doorstep of a Hooters, he cheated
- - -
Why act like there is a day-by-day timeline of evidence found and presented in the article's flowery writing. Its obviously skipping out on some aspects make telling the story easier, so its daft to use it as a base to understand the situation fully, but you act like you have become well informed somehow.
As a mid-40s marathoner, this is really interesting to me. I don't feel sorry for him; other than that he lived life with an ego condition allowing him to do this. That is sad, but he earned the scrutiny and outing.
Right now, I'm running 50+ miles a week training for a marathon. That is really hard and a major commitment. I won't set any records, but I have a good shot at placing in my age group. I don't run to win anything or achieve a certain place, but I would be somewhat pissed off if some idiot like this cheated and beat me.
I enjoy most of the time that I spend running, but to get to this level, you have to go through a pretty difficult level of training which makes all of your life a lot more stressful during the periods of intense training. Right now, I'm staying in a job that I don't like because the schedule is very flexible and allows me to spend around 15 hours a week training.
As the article pointed out - there was no concrete evidence beyond doubt. The stupidity of the community is to blame: you think someone is cheating and you dead set on proving it? Fine let him run next time and get real evidence. Get a drones up with some friends. Get someone to run next to him.
Anything else is just our human brains looking for patters and finding it even if it’s not there.
So anytime someone thinks something is dubious, their brain is "looking for patters and finding it even if it’s not there". I disagree, sometimes your brain makes connections and often (but not always) those connections are correct. To most dedicated runners (such as the LetsRun group); this case is pretty obvious. The last paragraph of the article reads pretty conclusive of his guilt.
This reminds me of Lance Armstrong. Prior to his outing, I believed Lance Armstrong was innocent of doping. But many serious cyclists told me there was no way he was not doping, and they were right. Expertise is often useful.
The evidence is very concrete if you are vaguely familiar with competitive running. You can't set record times with 33%+ 5k split-to-split variance; if you can set a record time doing that, you could go literally minutes faster with even pacing. The folks at the front are chasing marginal seconds and this guy was leaving minutes on the table and smoking everyone.
As a runner I love that running is a true meritocracy. Sure, some people can afford better recovery tools etc but performance is the true test.
Someone cheating sucks, but nobody deserves to be mobbed and totally ruined.
It’s usually people at the “local elite” level as well. The pros who actually make a living running could never get away with it… it’s just people being vain, who in most cases have legitimate talent but feel so much pressure to perform.
Nobody is getting rich by cheating. They are primarily cheating themselves. Driving them into the ground helps nobody.
It’s usually people at the “local elite” level as well.
Reminds me of the start of Icarus before it turns into being about international politics. Cyclists spending tons of money on top of the line bikes and tons of doping just to try to win the tri-county cycling race.
I wouldn’t say running, even amateur running, is entirely meritocratic. You get a lot of the same behavior, just less outlets for it. (E.g. you can buy this Nike shoes with the carbon fiber panel in them, but besides shoes there is not much you can do to push your performance besides). E.g. You do get people with mysteriously very low times compared to their last race or age group. I don’t think you should be drug testing local races and marathons because it just seems pointless and overkill for what is supposed to be a friendly community competition, but I would say the exact same thing about people who want to win said community competition at all cost.
I agree that drug testing local races is overkill.... its easy to pick out the few dopers in a community because they ONLY do the small local races (and therefore are extremely limited in what prize money they can win).
People wanting to win that local level at all costs are definitely cheating the other clean/non-cheating athletes who would've been on a podium but the scope is limited to those in contention (though still wrong).
For the most part, people are competing against themselves and trying to get a qualifying time for another event or just set a PR.
> It’s usually people at the “local elite” level as well. The pros who actually make a living running could never get away with it… it’s just people being vain, who in most cases have legitimate talent but feel so much pressure to perform.
haha yes. I mean "if you run fast, you ran fast". Can't be taken from you if you're out of shape now... if you're in great shape but didn't run fast... you didn't run fast.
> Someone cheating sucks, but nobody deserves to be mobbed and totally ruined.
It's tragic that the cheater killed himself. But if marathon running is a "true meritocracy" where "performance is the true test", the public interest and outcry over violating the sport's core tenets is really not to blame, especially given a significant cheating problem.
> They are primarily cheating themselves.
This implies that there's nothing at stake for the non-cheaters, or that it's not important to them or the sport itself.
There is outrage, stripping someone of their ill-gotten-titles etc... and then there is further shaming that person... all just to verify that they feel as badly as you want them to.
I agree with you completely that people who participate in online mobs are awful. My response was addressing the parent commenter who primarily blamed the mob instead of the victim, who seemingly had multiple opportunities to disengage.
A friend who at the time ran a charity that sponsored marathon runners asked me if there was a technological solution to tracking runners more closely than just the mats that read runner shoe or bib RFID tags. The issue was she wanted to do at the New York City Marathon and frankly I was concerned there would not be enough cell tower availability for real-time monitoring. These days the answer is run any of 100 cellphone tracking and location sharing apps like Glympse and carry on since every time we go up (3g->4g->5g) we get more and more towers in smaller and smaller coverage areas. But at the time I was envisioning a peer-to-peer network of esp8266 devices all sharing location data and passing along updates via whatever open wifi access points they could find.
I hate to say race organizers should demand people load a phone app just so they can get an official result, but maybe we're back to needing dedicated hardware or enough tracking mats that spoofing the system becomes impractical.
The professional runners are monitored so closely cutting is not a realistic option.... and they're the ones actually getting prize money... obviously they're tested for doping etc... Everything else is really just personal achievement... and if you're cheating at that level you're just depriving yourself of legitimate accomplishment. It isn't a race organizers responsibility to keep you from doing so....
When it comes to something w/ limited availability like a Boston etc... that is different.... if you cut a course (or cheated via other means) in order to submit a qualifying time you're legitimately affecting others as well. I have to admit it does get murky here and there.
My perspective on this is a bit different. I used to be a race director for ultra-marathons. I ended up having a serial cheater show up to a couple of my events, and end up winning.
The biggest scam was that I comped him a free entry for winning to come back, which happened twice. So that means the legit winner lost out on that, a token amount, maybe $150, but it still, 6+ years on, pisses me off that I was duped.
For me it was a huge "Why??" we were a small, regional race, didn't have any status as a qualifier or anything. By all accounts and the subsequent magazine article about the cheater revealed what in hindsight would be some serious mental health issues on his part.
I've never heard of the "Boston Marathon", so I looked it up. It appears to be a non for profit event people run in and often raise money for charities.
So my question is, why? Who cares? Why harass this man, actively try and destroy his life and livelihood because he might have cheated. Maybe he did. So what? How does it affect you?
The saddest thing here is that people don't have better shit to do than punish this man who likely contributed more to the world than them for a victimless crime.
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[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 67.0 ms ] threadAlso, anyone who runs knows that website they mention is one of the most toxic places on the internet, not just for running but everything and anything. ala "4chan" (8chan?) It's hundreds, thousands, of teenagers and 20-something boys with complete anonymity and nothing but free time. The website owners do not moderate. So once they get ahold of something to attack, they are going to bully it to death, in this case literally.
This article leaves out a lot of his disqualifications, too.
EDIT: And I fail to see any materially objectionable, insulting harassment, meaning beyond calling him out for cheating, which he totally deserved.
"Meanwhile, on LetsRun, some users had posted contact information for Meza’s employers. A handful of people left negative online reviews for him."
All that was before the internet really took of, so. But those "guardians" of whatever cause are among the most toxic and worst people I know.
Real people went to real crusades at one point. Contemporary Jihadi terrorist organizations refer to American missions in the Middle East as crusades right in their names, you can find it in the CIA's world factbook. It's an accusation-of-accusation word in the media, "conspiracy" is another one, newscasters attempt to discredit people by accusing them of accusing others of conspiring. This happened to George Carlin, for one, who turned it around on the newscaster and the whole crowd cheered him.
EDIT: now that I'm reading your posts again I recall the ref who did a truly gross thing, declare a penalty in the 1998 World Cup between Italy and Chile. Turns out he really had been given a crazy bribe. Just so disgusting.
A general point regarding cheating: Do you have any idea how many amateur athletes are doping? And never get caught or called out?
>>A general point regarding cheating: Do you have any idea how many amateur athletes are doping? And never get caught or called out?
Sure. Most top guys at 40+ are on something. Some are caught and banned. Often their names are published with a little syringe next to results. Most aren't caught. What does it have to do with anything?
The fact that, you, and others, don't see a problem when someone commits suicide after a prolonged bullying campaign, regardless of that persons action, is really, deeply troublesome.
https://news.yahoo.com/respected-developer-died-suicide-expe...
The LetsRun forum is such a wild place - it's a really strange mix of great running news discussion, 4-chan / bodybuilding.com conspiracy theories, and (IMO) a lot of teenage / college male runners who have a lot of angst, and something to prove because they are in an unpopular sport. Moderators/owners (rojo / pojo? or something) don't do anything / actively encourage this.
I look back at my teenage years and realised how hazardous they are to mental health. My curiousity & engagement on those communities was limited to infrequent lurking.
I now understand why alt-right/q anon movement popped up so quickly.
A big issue with these boards is that the ownership can't overmod because these communities are a big drawcard, even if they're financial negatives.
Yes, but so are Facebook and Twitter.
There is a difference though as those platforms have larger moderation resources though.
You can apply the same arbitrary granularity to bodybuilding.com (different subforums) and 4chan (different boards) too, and say 'such and such subforum isn't as toxic as these other ones...'.
The point is that all four platforms spread and foster toxicity. And given that Twitter and Facebook are magnitudes bigger, they also do so much more than 4chan or bodybuiding.com.
One FB/Twitter, you can only see stuff posted by your friends, friends of friends, specific people whose names/usernames you know and have searched for, groups you have chosen to join, and ads they show you. The other 99.99% of content is invisible to you.
There’s that word. The world is super “toxic”. The aforementioned sites allow people to speak freely, which can result in negativity, but they’re also bastions of freedom and creativity and everyone’s thoughts being equally visible.
One can easily argue that that’s far less toxic than Reddit’s style of everyone being the church mom that silences and admonishes everyone that says something “problematic” or what the congregation considers unacceptable. Where’s the fun in that?
There’s definitely a certain group of people who hate not being able to silence others, since if they can’t silence and censor their opponents, their arguments don’t really hold up.
And by the way, just because there is no active moderation doesn't mean that every voice is equally heard. Or did any one on running.com listen what Dr. Meza had to say?
Pour encourager les autres.
"The only freedom which counts is the freedom to do what some other people think to be wrong. There is no point in demanding freedom to do that which all will applaud. All the so-called liberties or rights are things which have to be asserted against others; who claim that if such things are to be allowed, their own rights are infringed or their own liberties threatened. This is always true, even when we speak of the freedom to worship, of the right of free speech or association, or of public assembly. If we are to allow freedoms at all there will constantly be complaints that either the liberty itself or the way in which it is exercised is being abused, and, if it is a genuine freedom, these complaints will often be justified. There is no way of having a free society in which there is not abuse. Abuse is the very hallmark of liberty."
They're places that provide access to actual human beings though. So many other online communities - especially ones with wide readership - are astroturfed into oblivion.
My take on it is that having to deal mentally with lunatics howling at the moon and screaming about the upcoming Great Replacement is the price you pay for access to actual opinions. That screaming horde is what keeps the astroturfers and consent manufacturers out.
But you only see opinions of people who are willing to tolerate the torrent of abusive posts. You won't see the opinions of the silent majority who see the stupid flamewars and decide they'll spend their time elsewhere.
There's value to be gleaned from /pol/ if you can stand the lunatics. The skychan threads sometimes yield some interesting conjecture.
4chan is currently the best place for realtime ukraine war footage and analysis, in my opinion.
While I don’t particularly deny this
> 4chan is currently the best place for realtime ukraine war footage and analysis
Is most definitely a no.
Oddly enough, Reddit seems to be the best for footage, with Telegram likely coming second.
As for analysis, Twitter without a doubt. Is there a load of absolute horse shit? Of course. If you don’t know how to detour that, you shouldn’t care much in the first place.
The only good thing that has come out of 4chan regarding this war is the cope cage. That is indeed hilarious.
I'm not really sure how to respond to that. It's intrinsically different. It's getting responses from people who don't care what their neighbour thinks about them vs getting responses from people who care in the utmost what their neighbour thinks of them. One is intrinsically likely to be more unfiltered than the other.
If you want to know what sentiment a community actually holds you have to seek out all types of opinions.
These forums seem to collect the most problematic people from every political group and subculture, put them all together, and then teach them their own unique manosphere philosophy that is currently one of my least favorite things about all of mankind.
It's some kind of primitivist thought combined with a screenshot of a Nietzsche quote about strength and power, some pretentious militant atheism, a bit of eugenics, a lot of intelligence-worshipping, and a heavy dose of still believing in cringe culture.
Way bigger than just alt right, there seems to be a variant for every affiliation. It's almost mainstream.
Perhaps if he had stopped competing after the first blog post exposing him, things would have de-escalated. Instead, he doubled down on his lies, and made things worse for himself.
I feel sorry for Meza — even when self-inflicted, pain is pain — but I'm glad he didn't get away with it. I wish that our world did not reward cheating so regularly and handsomely, and I wish Meza had not chosen to cheat.
This was not a mere "ruined reputation", but rather a persistent, coordinated mobbing assault big enough that not even a professional PR firm could do anything.
Did he cheat? Likely yes. Did he deserve being banned from marathons? Sounds like it. But did he deserve "the pressure, attention, emailing, even trolling" that he got? No, he did not.
If I were in his position, I would have also tried to sue.
"Journalists" being paid to get every last bit of scrap on a person, sometimes even going through people's rubbish, breaking laws that protect citizens too, are far more nasty
If you want to call that trolling, I guess you could. The word has changed a lot since I first encountered it over two decades ago.
Trolls can keep it up forever. It’s a labor of love for them, a hobby. I know folks who’ve had multi-year trolls and at least one that escalated to in-person stalking.
What made his conduct outrageous is how he was clinging to his side. He could have just said: “yup, you got me. I had a rough day and made a bad decision.” They would have disqualified his result, maybe banned him in the future races and nothing more would have come from it.
You can’t keep maintaining the unmaintainable and expect people to loose interest. He liked the prestige while he was on the good side of it, and when he turned out to be a cheater he wanted suddenly none of the attention.
You said that a professional PR firm couldn’t help him. Sure enough, turns out it is very hard to rebuild a house while it is actively burning and the owner is pouring more gasoline on it every so often.
They corrode social trust.
I have no sympathy for this person, they're a snake.
Absolutely. It's a lazy, disingenuous way to just try to shut down discussion.
If you really practice this in life, you're going to be taken advantage of.
You're right, discussing it is just stupid. My mistake.
That in no way justifies what he did, at all, but it's not the case that he was an unremitting lowlife. It's a real conundrum, that otherwise wonderful people can sometimes do terrible things.
In related news, Jussie Smollett was sentenced to jail today for faking a race/sex orientation hate crime. (He also claimed the imaginary attackers were politically motivated.)
Many expected him to escape jail time, but he did not. The judge cited Smollett's refusal to accept responsibility (and the resulting harm to society) in making the decision to mandate jail time.
cheating like this denies other participants fruits of their hard labor of many years, just flushes all their effort down the drain. Compare that to just having "the pressure, attention, emailing, even trolling".
What an odd take. Just because throwing money at something doesn’t make it go away does not mean it’s a “big attack” or even that people calling him out are in any way in the wrong. As OP stated the big problem seems to be that he persistently tried to regain his old good reputation instead of accepting defeat. When a cheater wants to continue cheating, it doesn’t matter how much money he throws at PR firms, it’s still fair to call out his cheating.
>the fastest marathon ever recorded for someone in his age group of 70 to 74
A bit ridiculous then to say people were attacking him for no reason, or his daughter not understanding why anyone cared. Dude was literally claiming to be the world marathon champion in his age group while cheating for years.
>I'm pretty sure only online cheating detectives pay much attention to unusually low marathon times
It would be a world record in his age group if the LA marathon was a proper IAAF course. When people started getting suspicious his name and picture came out on the cover of the Los Angeles Times.
>specially if the person doesn't actively seek to promote themself
maybe next time cheat a few minutes slower then the world record! ridiculous!
I can't say I've seen evidence of that being a massive problem specifically, though people running under other people's names is an issue more generally.
> (events tend to restrict refunds and transfers)
That isn't just to be difficult. It can affect their insurance, there can be genuine health & safety concerns, and is often enforced by running bodies that the events associate with. Not implementing such restrictions could mean the difference between an event being able to run or not.
Transfers are also an admin faf for the organisers, even ignoring that.
> I'm pretty sure only online cheating detectives pay much attention
I would suggest that this story is a reason to reconsider how sure you are about that?
If nothing else, consider that it being important enough for someone to cheat suggests it is important enough that other people don't want their achievements to be diminished by cheaters.
There are many things in life that only matter to a minority of people, that doesn't mean it is right for someone to stomp over that something for some perverse sense of self-satisfaction. While the trollish mob bullying is going too far by a massive margin, it is not wrong for people to care when someone cheats.
It's just a fucking race mate, this man teaches people and heals people - if you run a marathon, it should be about your own sense of achievement, why care so much about what some other person has done?
But people have an unhealthy competitive urge. I saw the same thing when I played basketball. Pickup games where people took things way too seriously, like the outcome of the game meant they'd get a call from an NBA scout, when most of the players were juco level at most.
In general that is far from the truth. Running communities tend to be very helpful and welcoming groups in my experience. Yes, there are a few alpha-cock types out there and one or two online forums where they manage to dominate (mainly because they leave other groups where being an arse is actively unappreciated), but that sort of prick appears in all walks of life and running seems to have fewer than its fair share.
A lot of the noise that you do hear comes from outside the running groups sometimes. For instance most people making jokes belittling joggers compared to runners neither run nor jog, they just like taking the mick out of a recognisable target. It is like the people who hardly ever leave their couch unless they need to go get another beer going on about how Cantona should have taken a particular shot differently (yeah, my football knowledge is that up-to-date!).
> if you run a marathon, it should be about your own sense of achievement
I would agree there. Though if there are awards for best-in-class or otherwise they should go to the people who genuinely earn them.
> why care so much about what some other person has done?
People don't generally like a cheat in any area, If someone else missed out on a best-in-class or other result because of a cheater they are perfectly justified in being irritated and many will be irritating on their behalf.
The man didn't deserve bullying by an online mob, he needed mental help not harassment and the ban from other events should be sufficient counter action, but that doesn't mean we should dismiss cheating as a victimless action that we shouldn't care about because it doesn't directly affect us.
with his systematic cheating and refusal to accept the reality and take the responsibility magically confined only to marathons ... The guy was an executive and moral integrity isn't that execs are known for. Cheating, outright denying of proven facts, legal threats and hiring PR company - that is a typical exec behavior, and public/community campaign is frequently the only way to stop them.
I don't know how anyone who has lived through the baseball PED scandal thinks doubling down helps. Bonds & Clemens fought tooth and nail against allegations. They'll never get into the hall of fame. Compare this to someone like David Ortiz, who got voted into Cooperstown this year. Ortiz didn't even really apologize. He just didn't double down.
I feel like this happens with other celebrity scandals, too, where the people who don't publicly argue stuff like this seem to have their public image less tarnished, if at all.
https://dallasfood.org/2015/12/mast-brothers-what-lies-behin...
No, it wasn't because he was discovered. It was because he was being harassed by folks and media. To make it worse, people harassed his employers so much that they distanced themselves from him. I'm not surprised somebody wasn't able handle an Internet and media mob.
When your whole sense of identity (in this case running marathons) is ripped away from you (whether or not you cheated) you no longer have a reason to live. Unless you have other things to live for family, work, whatever. Other senses of identity and self.
https://www.mdis.edu.sg/blog/four-types-of-suicides
I'm not clear on the suicide. Usually when men commit suicide, it is not survivable. I don't see how jumping into an an empty LA river channel would be considered "unsurvivable." Standing at the brink, I'd expect someone like him to realize, "this is no good... I might survive." Isn't it possible he was pushed? He did have future plans to deliver lunch to his wife.
The bridge is maybe 18 feet above ground level and the river bed is maybe 35 feet below ground; about 53 feet of total fall, on to concrete. That's a very big fall, and his advanced age makes it even more dangerous.
I don't think the theory that male suicides are rationally evaluating success probability is especially sound. But even under that theory, it's a hard fall.
I think, generally, the abuse that's occurring here is that people willfully raised the profile of a perceived wrong. Lobbying the people who run the races or local papers that ran stories about him to correct those things is appropriate. The national media showing up and people trying to bully or harass him crosses over into ethically bankrupt behavior under the guise of "justice".
I think the tech for self-navigating drone that follows a person is already mature?
"Ok guys, I get why you don't believe my results, it's natural to be suspicious. Please give me a GPS tracker, I will run with it to prove nothing shady is going on" is not that hard to arrange unless you're actually cheating.
Video/ photo every xkm would be better. Especially as eta (at a checkpoint) can be fairly accurately er...estimated.
Perhaps, if those kids start breaking board game records. Fewest number of turns to Monopoly millionaire? Most items placed on the Buckaroo horse? Chess and go games would be better examples.
But more seriously, how seriously should people take these events? For those that are actually runners (and not just trolls), running may be there passion and doing well in these (pricey) events might be the highlight of their year. And then they hear others are cheating and I can imagine some would get very angry about that. Same with absolutely anything you invest your resources in.
If its in a public competition, yes, kids should be outed for cheating.
Less publicly...how many families get into it when someone gets caught cheating?
If i play cards for pennies with my friends, and one cheats, should nothing be said?
Absolutely not. No child should be publicly outed for anything whatsoever. Perhaps quietly disqualified, but I will never find it acceptable to "out" children who make poor decisions.
He deserved his reputation to be ruined, he deserved to be exposed and humiliated. He could have stopped it all by not competing anymore or you know, at least not cheating. His reputation was more important to him than his life. I respect the choice but it's only his. The community he tried to cheat employed the only defense mechanism that actually works.
You learn it's the only mechanism that works if you dealt with bullying, cheating at gambling, cheating in small business deals, cheating in sports, especially amateur ones. There is nothing else you can use to fight cheating/abuse. It's true the abuser often never admits wrongdoing until they are exposed publicly and humiliated. They hope it never gets to that point and they are often right. The same way the school bully doesn't face consequences, someone who stole something small from a friend doesn't or someone who cheated you in a poker game.
When they do get exposed they often blame their victims - true bully style. When I read the article I think about the victims. People who competed with him just so ego of a cheater could be satisfied and who beared the frustration of being helpless and officials ignoring their concerns for too long.
The article also mentions one of the most common and naive mistakes people make when accessing character:
"Everyone who knew him testified to his generosity, modesty, and sense of justice."
It's very easy and common for successful people to be generous and offer "sense of justice" to the community. I've seen this tens of times in the gambling world. You're successful, you are admired, you share your knowledge with others, help them, are asked to help when resolving disputes. You're well respected and feed of it. Then a day comes when things turn around. You either got caught cheating or the one edge you have becomes known and it's no longer there. Your results suffer and then it starts: you scam someone in a deal, you stop picking up calls from people who lend you money, you are suddenly involved in more and more shadiness.
It's just very difficult to judge someone's character when things are going well for them. Even violent drug dealer were often loved in their communities. It's just how people behave. It's easy, it's rewarding. It doesn't say much about your character.
It's a long rant about something I have dealt a lot with during my life from early years to adulthood. In business, in gambling, in sports, in little in group competitions for status. I know the community usually sides with the abuser/cheater. They are the popular one and it's just easier. He deserved his reputation to be ruined. For him it was more important than his life. Please don't blame the victims for his choices.
You know there are other people who "deserve to be exposed and humiliated" even more than elderly marathon cheaters, right? Putin, for instance? Taliban? But they are out of reach, and too powerful. Too dangerous to keyboard warriors, to be honest.
Much easier to go after elderly marathon cheaters. Don't you agree?
He should have been banned from races if there was sufficient proof he cheated and his times revoked - he can claim he didn't cheat all he wants, but he isn't going to be in any races so what does it matter?
I'm a runner who races, and if someone cheats that's bad but it isn't taking away anything from others - most racers are mostly racing against themselves anyway. I'm not thinking I want to beat the person in front, I'm thinking that I want to beat my personal target time.
I get that people always say positive things about people who have died, but take it with a grain of salt, right?
They don't even do that much to get at him, they just ask him to prove it. I don't see it as harassment. He put himself in the spotlight when he ran those crazy times. Keep in mind, if this guy actually had actually run even one of his times for real, it would have been an opportunity to challenge the best. Just run one more marathon, or not even, just 5K at that same speed. A chance at the bigtime!
This happened with the Wright Brothers, the press actually did harass them in that case, but everyone said they were "Flyers or Liars". It was an opportunity! Well the Wright Brothers were Flyers. Frank Meza was a liar. And when the Wright Brothers did fly in front of all those journalists they became the most famous people in the world!
Meza had so many opportunities to admit he cheated.
And he had the choice (obviously not but hypothetically) of running like he said he did! They gave him that out!
Nobody looks at the people he cheated, he didn't cheat the marathon, he cheated other runners, real people came in one slot later, there was a real 70-74 year old who actually had merit that could have come in first and made the news, except for Frank Meza. It's just not the same to be declared a winner after the fact, by disqualification especially if the cheater never admits it. And runners just hate the cheaters, this is so much worse than steroids, teleporters ruin the sport on another level. And never admits it, with so much proof! Like he tried running even half as fast as he said he did and he ends up cardiac problems!
Headline should say "Marathon Cheater Frank Meza Kills Himself to Avoid Admitting It".
There's life after death. In a parallel universe, he respawned in like a psych ward (typically) and it's twice as bad, I guess they treat him better in the ward because he's a doctor but he still lives his life out in shame as a fraud. Probably then his life really does fall apart, people going through everything he's done with a fine-toothed comb, and find all sorts of stuff. Nobody cheats exclusively in the cases they're caught.
He just spent his whole life asking people to kiss up to him, well where he respawned I can tell you there is absolutely none of that.
Meza was much more than his worst moment, as are we all.
Maybe I'm being too hard on him in reaction to how soft the article is, it might have been senility.
The article mentions 3 or 4 things it could have been. We will never know, because this man is dead, and cannot say.
By "careful reading" I meant "not careless reading". No one who paid reasonable attention while reading the article would leave with anything other than the "plain as day" conclusion that Meza cheated.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Are you serious?
Did they ever run along to actually verify? Nah, too lazy, just blame him and see what happens.
then he went to LA marathon where he wasn't banned, but had to run with an observer, and still ran without an observer to set the world record in his age group...
Did posters just stopped reading articles on HN?
Where does it mention hard evidence of cheating before his death? Suspicious splits are not evidence. Not running with an observer is just that.
I get that people get mad at cheaters but without evidence it's unfair to harrass people. Even asking them to "prove" their ability is harrasment. That's all.
>In 2015 the L.A. Marathon must have noticed something fishy because officials asked him to run with an observer in the future. But when he returned in 2017, he ran alone, the observer idea apparently forgotten. He also ran solo in 2018 and 2019.
>So Murphy and the LetsRun crew grumbled when the L.A. Marathon announced in early June that it would not disqualify Meza from the 2019 race. >Instead, officials would ask him—again—to run with an observer next time around. “This is the best solution for all,” they told Murphy.
They're literally begging the guy to stop cheating so they don't have to ban him, and the guys does a world record. It's beyond ridiculous.
Instead of admitting it, he kills himself. I'm sorry, the whole story is tragic, but obviously this guy's problems went far beyond evil posters on letsrun, as awful as that site is.
But in itself, running without an observer is not cheating when it comes to finish time. It may be a violation of the race rules, but that's it.
Suspicious? Yes. Ridiculous? Yes. Direct evidence of cheating before his death? Nope. I don't see that in the article.
My dislike of the accusations and harrasment basically come down to this: would this hold up in court? I think it would not.
From the article: On July 3 a LetsRun user posted a photo with the comment: “Frank on a bike?” The image, taken by an official photographer during the 2014 San Francisco Marathon, showed a blurry figure riding a bicycle down the sidewalk. His face was obscured, but his outfit—a black cap, a gray long-sleeve shirt, Nike Zoom Marathoners, green socks—resembled what Meza was pictured wearing at the end of the race. When I sat down with the family and we examined the photo together, they denied that it was Meza. “It looks like someone photoshopped this,” Lorena said, pointing to the shoes. Plus, this man was wearing black athletic pants with a white stripe. “You don’t run a marathon in sweats,” Tina said.
From the final paragraph: Late on July 4, while word of Meza’s death was starting to circulate, a LetsRun user posted one last series of photos from the 2014 San Francisco Marathon. In each the Golden Gate Bridge looms in the background. And there is Meza, unmistakably, hanging out by a timing mat as other runners blow past him. He wears a familiar outfit: the hat, the shoes, the socks—and long black pants with a white stripe.
It's oddly non-prominent, but I think the article does present direct evidence of his cheating. It's not logical proof, and I don't know if it's the right standard, but with the right prosecution lawyer I think it probably would be enough to convince a jury in court.
Unless he stopped for over 6 minutes to piss on the doorstep of a Hooters, he cheated
- - -
Why act like there is a day-by-day timeline of evidence found and presented in the article's flowery writing. Its obviously skipping out on some aspects make telling the story easier, so its daft to use it as a base to understand the situation fully, but you act like you have become well informed somehow.
Right now, I'm running 50+ miles a week training for a marathon. That is really hard and a major commitment. I won't set any records, but I have a good shot at placing in my age group. I don't run to win anything or achieve a certain place, but I would be somewhat pissed off if some idiot like this cheated and beat me.
I enjoy most of the time that I spend running, but to get to this level, you have to go through a pretty difficult level of training which makes all of your life a lot more stressful during the periods of intense training. Right now, I'm staying in a job that I don't like because the schedule is very flexible and allows me to spend around 15 hours a week training.
Anything else is just our human brains looking for patters and finding it even if it’s not there.
This reminds me of Lance Armstrong. Prior to his outing, I believed Lance Armstrong was innocent of doping. But many serious cyclists told me there was no way he was not doping, and they were right. Expertise is often useful.
Someone cheating sucks, but nobody deserves to be mobbed and totally ruined.
It’s usually people at the “local elite” level as well. The pros who actually make a living running could never get away with it… it’s just people being vain, who in most cases have legitimate talent but feel so much pressure to perform.
Nobody is getting rich by cheating. They are primarily cheating themselves. Driving them into the ground helps nobody.
Reminds me of the start of Icarus before it turns into being about international politics. Cyclists spending tons of money on top of the line bikes and tons of doping just to try to win the tri-county cycling race.
I wouldn’t say running, even amateur running, is entirely meritocratic. You get a lot of the same behavior, just less outlets for it. (E.g. you can buy this Nike shoes with the carbon fiber panel in them, but besides shoes there is not much you can do to push your performance besides). E.g. You do get people with mysteriously very low times compared to their last race or age group. I don’t think you should be drug testing local races and marathons because it just seems pointless and overkill for what is supposed to be a friendly community competition, but I would say the exact same thing about people who want to win said community competition at all cost.
People wanting to win that local level at all costs are definitely cheating the other clean/non-cheating athletes who would've been on a podium but the scope is limited to those in contention (though still wrong).
For the most part, people are competing against themselves and trying to get a qualifying time for another event or just set a PR.
Pros cheat and get away with it often enough.
It's tragic that the cheater killed himself. But if marathon running is a "true meritocracy" where "performance is the true test", the public interest and outcry over violating the sport's core tenets is really not to blame, especially given a significant cheating problem.
> They are primarily cheating themselves.
This implies that there's nothing at stake for the non-cheaters, or that it's not important to them or the sport itself.
I hate to say race organizers should demand people load a phone app just so they can get an official result, but maybe we're back to needing dedicated hardware or enough tracking mats that spoofing the system becomes impractical.
The professional runners are monitored so closely cutting is not a realistic option.... and they're the ones actually getting prize money... obviously they're tested for doping etc... Everything else is really just personal achievement... and if you're cheating at that level you're just depriving yourself of legitimate accomplishment. It isn't a race organizers responsibility to keep you from doing so....
When it comes to something w/ limited availability like a Boston etc... that is different.... if you cut a course (or cheated via other means) in order to submit a qualifying time you're legitimately affecting others as well. I have to admit it does get murky here and there.
The biggest scam was that I comped him a free entry for winning to come back, which happened twice. So that means the legit winner lost out on that, a token amount, maybe $150, but it still, 6+ years on, pisses me off that I was duped.
For me it was a huge "Why??" we were a small, regional race, didn't have any status as a qualifier or anything. By all accounts and the subsequent magazine article about the cheater revealed what in hindsight would be some serious mental health issues on his part.
So my question is, why? Who cares? Why harass this man, actively try and destroy his life and livelihood because he might have cheated. Maybe he did. So what? How does it affect you?
The saddest thing here is that people don't have better shit to do than punish this man who likely contributed more to the world than them for a victimless crime.