Eric 'Badlands' Booker ready for Nathan's hot dog eating contest
Eric "Badlands" Booker prepares to eat before Nathan's Famous Hot Dog Eating Competition Tuesday, July 4, 2006, in Coney Island, New York. (SETH WENIG, Associated Press / July 4, 2006)
"Badlands" will have less acreage when he returns to the Super Bowl of competitive eating Friday, nearly two years after retiring from the game.
Eric Booker, better known by his nickname, has shed 90 pounds since he competed in the 2006 Nathan's Famous International Hot Dog Eating Contest at Coney Island. Now down to 380 pounds, the Long Island resident and No. 7 train conductor says he is ready to give star eater Takeru Kobayashi and last year's champ, Joey Chestnut, a better fight.
"I just stopped eating all that McDonald's and all that Chinese food," Booker said, adding that he's also hitting the gym regularly. "It helped a lot. Just the fact that I feel lighter, and my capacity has grown a lot since then."
The former burrito- and matzo ball-eating champ has also released four competitive-eating-themed hip hop albums and will rap before Friday's contest.
Overcoming 98-degree heat last weekend in Camden, N.J., "Badlands" downed 27½ franks in 10 minutes to win a qualifier. His career best at a single contest is 30½ in 12 minutes.
What: 93rd Annual Nathan's Famous International Hot Dog Eating Contest
Where: Coney Island
When: Noon Friday
TV: ESPN
Last year: Joey Chesnutt won by eating a record 66 dogs
Copyright © 2008, AM New York
Photos
Popular stories
- Achoo! Your cat knew the sneeze was coming ...
- Last chance to see NY's manmade waterfalls Monday
- Hot dog chowdown champ takes NY pizza-eating title
- 'W' a prime candidate for Oliver Stone
- Blood reserves slipping in NYC area
Special Packages
View the latest multimedia offerings from amNY.com.
Endangered New York Read about historic buildings and areas and efforts to preserve them.
Flash | Photos
WTC Relics See video and photos of steel and other artifacts sifted from ground zero.
Complete Coverage
Recent Multimedia
Mad Men and the City: Catch-up edition
Is it foolish to be bullish? Some money gurus advise it's time to start buying stocks
As New York debate looms, concerns grow over hateful rhetoric on campaign trail
Quinn backs Bloomberg's term-limit overhaul; "billionaires" rejoice
Mad Men and the City: Catch-up edition
Is it foolish to be bullish? Some money gurus advise it's time to start buying stocks
As New York debate looms, concerns grow over hateful rhetoric on campaign trail
Quinn backs Bloomberg's term-limit overhaul; "billionaires" rejoice
Joey Chestnut conquers New York pizza, too
Joey Chestnut conquers New York pizza, too




