I always wondered what athletes do in this situation. I figured players in team sports could run to the locker room to do their business but it doesn't sound like that's always the case as evidenced by the Seahawks player mentioned at the end of the article. As for those participating in individual sports like marathons or race car drivers, yikes...
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/news/story?id=5651802
This could be the single strangest article I've read on ESPN.com but it does bring up interesting points about how athletes are idolized into perfect beings and the deuce is the great equalizer. And yes, I say that in all seriousness and not as a joke.
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/news/story?id=5651802
AFTER RACING NEARLY 140 miles, first through the ocean, then across the blackened lava fields of Kona, Hawaii, Julie Moss crested the final hill of the 1982 Ironman Triathlon alone in front, hovering near delirium. She was also about 45 seconds from becoming, as she remembers it, "the ultimate, giant, chocolate mess."
This could be the single strangest article I've read on ESPN.com but it does bring up interesting points about how athletes are idolized into perfect beings and the deuce is the great equalizer. And yes, I say that in all seriousness and not as a joke.