"I was actually going to law school in 1972"
About this Quote
There is something disarmingly modest about “I was actually going to law school in 1972,” especially coming from Frank Shorter, the guy most people file away as “Olympic marathon champion.” The adverb “actually” does a lot of work: it’s a small word that signals correction, as if he’s pushing back against the simplified legend of the single-minded athlete. In one breath, he reintroduces contingency. He had a different track laid out, and running wasn’t the only identity available to him.
The year matters. 1972 isn’t just a date; it’s Munich, it’s the era when amateurism still hovered over Olympic sport, and it’s long before marathoners could count on endorsements, appearance fees, and influencer-style brand-building. For an American distance runner, “law school” reads like the responsible plan, the respectable ladder, the thing you tell your parents. Shorter’s line quietly exposes how recent the idea of the professionalized endurance star really is.
Subtextually, it’s also a claim about seriousness. Law school implies discipline, long horizons, delayed gratification - the same traits that make a marathoner. The sentence becomes a reminder that elite performance often sits beside ordinary ambition, not above it. Shorter isn’t romanticizing the grind; he’s puncturing the myth that greatness is destiny. It was a choice, made in a world that didn’t promise that choosing running would pay.
The year matters. 1972 isn’t just a date; it’s Munich, it’s the era when amateurism still hovered over Olympic sport, and it’s long before marathoners could count on endorsements, appearance fees, and influencer-style brand-building. For an American distance runner, “law school” reads like the responsible plan, the respectable ladder, the thing you tell your parents. Shorter’s line quietly exposes how recent the idea of the professionalized endurance star really is.
Subtextually, it’s also a claim about seriousness. Law school implies discipline, long horizons, delayed gratification - the same traits that make a marathoner. The sentence becomes a reminder that elite performance often sits beside ordinary ambition, not above it. Shorter isn’t romanticizing the grind; he’s puncturing the myth that greatness is destiny. It was a choice, made in a world that didn’t promise that choosing running would pay.
Quote Details
| Topic | Student |
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