Is there any merit behind the phrase Slow and steady wins the race? Show an example with two contestants in a footrace: The first contestant runs at a constant speed throughout the race. The second contestant runs at twice the speed of the first contestant for half the distance of the race, and half of the first contestant's speed for the remaining distance.
The phrase slow and steady wins the race suggests that maintaining a consistent, efficient pace leads to success, rather than going all out quickly and risking exhaustion or being unable to finish strong.

In the footrace example:

Contestant 1 (slow and steady): Runs at a constant 5 mph for the entire 10-mile race. Finishes in 2 hours.
Contestant 2 (fast start): Runs at 10 mph for the first 5 miles (30 minutes). Then runs at 2.5 mph for the remaining 5 miles (2 hours). Finishes in 2 hours 30 minutes.

So despite the fast start, Contestant 2 ends up losing to Contestant 1 who maintained a steady and efficient pace throughout the race. This demonstrates the core idea behind slow and steady wins the race - consistent progress and avoiding excessive speed that can't be sustained leads to better outcomes than rapid bursts of effort. The steady competitor has more energy and resilience to finish the full distance or task.
Could you rewrite this without using complicated words and metaphors to make it teachable to children?