
Suga appeared to limp at times during BTS’ Sunday performance at Stanford Stadium. The limp was not from a performance injury, but from running San Francisco’s Bay to Breakers earlier that morning. Fellow members revealed on a Tuesday livestream that Suga regularly runs 10K daily and entered the race after hearing about it. He woke at 6 a.m., ran the 12K course, and returned to Palo Alto to prepare for the evening show. Fans found evidence in race photos and videos, including his placement among early runners. Race results list him under his real name, Min Yunki, with a 1:04:43 finish time and an 8:41 min/mile pace. During sound check and parts of the show, he stretched and limped into dance positions. A camera clipped to his cap suggests possible vlog footage. Members also spent the week sightseeing around the Bay Area.
"Rapper Suga walked with a noticeable limp at times during BTS' Sunday show at Stanford Stadium. But the issue wasn't due to a performance injury - unbeknownst to the sellout crowd of 50,000, he'd run San Francisco's Bay to Breakers race earlier that morning."
"RM mentioned Suga regularly runs 10K a day and, when he heard about the famous San Francisco race, decided to enter. Suga apparently woke up at 6 a.m., ran the race, then returned to Palo Alto to prepare for the evening's show."
"Race results, under his real name Min Yunki, show he finished the 12K course, which winds through San Francisco's hills to end at Ocean Beach, in 1:04:43, averaging a 8:41 min/mile pace. He was 1,022 overall among all finishers. But none of the other runners had a two-hour, high intensity concert a few hours later."
"During Sunday's sound check, Suga kept stretching, and at times during the show, he limped into dance positions. For fans hoping to see more of Suga's race day, there might be footage coming. A camera can be seen clipped to the front of his baseball cap - he also wore it during Sunday's sound check - so a Bay to Breakers vlog may be in the works."
Read at SFGATE
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]