Phelps hoping Rio swansong hits the right notes
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[July 23, 2016]
By Steve Keating
TORONTO (Reuters) - Having ended his
career once in London on what he considered a sour note, Michael
Phelps enters the Rio de Janeiro Olympics pool for his second
swansong determined to bow out on his own terms.
Inspired, motivated and sober, Phelps heads to Rio with the chance
to add to his record total of 22 medals and to pen the happy ending
he feels he denied himself four years earlier.
At the 2012 London Olympics, which he also declared would be his
last, Phelps won four gold and six medals but walked away filled
with the regret that he simply went through the motions rather than
embracing the moment.
"Going into '12, I just didn't want to do it," the 31-year-old said
at the U.S. Olympic swim trials in Nebraska last month.
"I tried to fake it. I wanted to get in and out as fast as I could
and really wanted nothing to do with it.
"That haunted me for a while.
"I came back because I wanted to. I wanted to do this for me. I'm
enjoying the moment and I'm embracing the moment and taking it one
step at a time.
"Being able to fall in love with the sport again is something that
I've always wanted to do again and I did it on my terms."
Like many athletes, when his career finished, Phelps appeared lost
and unprepared.
He talked of becoming a professional golfer but eventually found
himself testing the waters of a swimming comeback.
That return was interrupted by a second drunk driving arrest in 2014
and a stint in rehab, which laid the foundation for his
transformation from party boy to family man.
He reconnected with his estranged father, who was in the stands at
the U.S. swimming trials watching his son qualify for a fifth
Olympic team, and in May his fiancée Nicole gave birth to their son
Boomer.
TEAM CO-CAPTAIN
While Phelps has been a hero for a generation of American swimmers,
he has now finally become something of a mentor and elder statesman
of the U.S. team.
At each Olympics the U.S. swimming team picks a captain and until a
July training camp in San Antonio, it had remained one of the very
few honors not bestowed on Phelps.
Now, chosen as co-captain of the men's team for the first time, he
is eager to assume the leadership mantle in Rio.
"This time around, I just want to be able to help some of the
younger guys," said Phelps.
[to top of second column] |
Michael Phelps (C) of the U.S. swims the butterfly stroke during his
team's victory in the men's 4x100 meters medley relay at the
National Aquatics Center during the Beijing 2008 Olympics August 17,
2008. Picture taken with underwater camera. REUTERS/Wolfgang
Rattay/File photo
"Just being able to help them just kind of stay in their relaxed
zone, not get worked up because it is the Olympics."
The growing maturity has not diminished the fierce competitiveness,
however.
Having qualified for Rio in three events, the 100 and 200 meters
butterfly and 200 individual medley, he will also be a candidate for
the relays as he looks to add to his astonishing tally of 18 gold
medals.
Phelps has made the 100 fly and 200 medley gold medals his personal
property at the last three Olympics and he could join discus thrower
Al Oerter (1956-68) and long jumper Carl Lewis (1984-1996) as the
only athletes to win gold in the same individual event at four
consecutive Games.
While still an undeniable force, Phelps no longer competes with the
aura of invincibility that once surrounded him.
He conceded that his times at the U.S. trials would have to
dramatically improve for Rio, but is confident his longtime coach
Bob Bowman will have a plan to get him to the wall first.
"I do understand that I have to swim faster to have a chance to win
the gold medal," said Phelps. "I've trusted that man since I was 11
years old, and it's not going to stop.
"I'm sure he's already come up with some kind of plan to figure out
what we're going to do.
"I'm not going to put a limit on myself of what I can or can't do."
(Editing by Greg Stutchbury and Nick Mulvenney)
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