Inside the Secret World of Abuse, Doping, and Deception on Nike's Elite Running Team
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"Kara Goucher grew up with Olympic dreams. She excelled at running from a young age, and though she was confronted with serious challenges including the death of her father and struggles with disordered eating, her prospects were bright. She won high school cross country championships in Minnesota, NCAA track and field championships at the University of Colorado, and when she graduated from college, Nike offered her a sponsorship deal. Alberto Salazar was a legend of American distance running. He ran at the University of Oregon, made two Olympic teams, and won the New York and Boston marathons in the 1980s. In the early 2000s he was hired by Nike as a coach to build a team that would reestablish the United States as a distance running powerhouse. Dubbed the Nike Oregon Project, it would be based at the company's spectacular headquarters near Portland. In 2004, Kara and her Olympian-runner husband, Adam, were invited by Alberto to move to Oregon and join the elite team. It seemed the opportunity of a lifetime and the start of her dreams coming true. But behind the scenes, Salazar was hiding dark secrets beneath his charming persona. Narcissistic and power hungry, he demanded complete control over his runners, pushing and then crossing the limits of anti-doping rules and even promoting a culture of abuse. Told with stunning honesty, The Longest Race is an unforgettable story and a call to action. Overcoming the powerful forces compelling her to remain silent, Kara became a key witness helping to get Salazar banned for life from professional coaching, as well as a crusader for female athletes. Ultimately, she reveals how she broke through the fear of losing everything she ever worked for, took back control of her life and career, and reclaimed her love of the sport of running."--
Reviews with the most likes.
Unfortunately, not so surprising story about how men abuse their power especially towards women and harass them in so many different ways.
And it has so many negative consequences for so many women, and lives.
The story is very interesting, especially if you are into any kind of sports.
Kara G is brave and does a good job sharing every aspect of her journey and being really vulnerable at times imho.
I can't say the same for Mary P. Meaning I assume she is the one responsible for how to tell this intriguing story in a book form and at times the book falls flat and does not take the advantage of opportunities to go deep and elevate the story with high aesthetic value.
Thank you Kara G for sharing your story.