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Report: Kobayashi still has no contract

TOKYO -- Former world hot dog-eating sensation Takeru Kobayashi of Japan wants to compete in this weekend's annual Fourth of July contest on Coney Island but still can't agree to a contract with the organizers.

Kobayashi, one of the world's premier competitive eaters, won the contest for six years up to 2007 and then had to settle for second-place finishes behind American Joey Chestnut. He moved to New York in March so he could train with local hot dogs.

But his chances of getting revenge this weekend against Chestnut, from San Jose, Calif., seem slim because of a contract dispute with the event's organizer. Kobayashi, 32, has balked at signing an exclusivity clause with the group and can't compete unless he does.

"I really want to compete in the event," Kobayashi told Japan's Kyodo news agency.

In a report from New York on Friday, Kyodo quoted Kobayashi as saying the event "holds a special place in my heart" but added he did not agree with the conditions.

Kobayashi became a celebrity and a hero in Japan by eating his way to victory from 2001 to 2006, a feat that remains unmatched. But Chestnut has won the title for the last three years, setting a world record by scarfing down 68 hot dogs and buns in 10 minutes last year. Two years ago, Chestnut beat Kobayashi in a five-dog eat-off, after they tied at 59 franks each.

Chestnut says he still sees Kobayashi as a rival -- and a bitter one. They don't talk to each other and did not shake hands after last year's eat-off. Kobayashi lost to Chestnut last year by only 3½ hot dogs.

In May last year, Kobayashi beat Chestnut in a pizza eating contest, consuming 5¾ pizzas in six minutes. Each pizza weighed one pound. Chestnut could only manage 5½ in that time.

If Kobayashi is out of the game, Chestnut's toughest opponents may be Bob Shoudt, the world's No. 2 eater, and Patrick Bertoletti, ranked No. 4 in the world.

The 95th annual hot dog-eating contest will take place in Coney Island on Sunday. U.S. TV viewers can catch the spectacle on ESPN.

The contest has been held every Independence Day since 1916.