On this day: Born May 10, 1995:
Missy Franklin, American swimmer
Send a link to a friend
[May 09, 2020]
By Amy Tennery
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A "star in the
making" were the prophetic words of an announcer who had just
witnessed 16-year-old Missy Franklin slice up the competition at
swimming's 2011 world championships.
Franklin, who would just as soon use her 6-foot-four-inch wingspan
to hug a competitor as she would to demolish them in the pool,
harnessed an upbeat outlook that propelled her to the greatest
heights of her sport and helped her weather the crushing lows.
Rocketing to acclaim at 17, Franklin took home five medals from the
2012 London Olympics, including four golds, and set a world record
in the 200 metres backstroke, becoming a household name in the
United States despite turning down lucrative endorsements to pursue
a college career.
She became a source of hope and inspiration for the Aurora, Colorado
community during her 2012 Olympic run, as the town where she grew up
reeled from a deadly mass shooting inside a cinema, telling
reporters she wanted to make Colorado proud.
"For Missy to take time in the midst of her finest moment to think
about her hometown and how she can help in its healing is an
incredible statement about her character," Aurora Mayor Steve Hogan
said at the time.
She claimed six golds at the 2013 World Championships, the most ever
by a female swimmer at one edition.
Yet a relatively disappointing showing at the 2016 Rio Olympics,
where she took home a solitary relay gold, cut the fairytale short
as she discovered she had fallen out of love for the sport.
Franklin failed to qualify for the final in the 200m backstroke in
Rio, the event in which she had set a world record four years
previously, after qualifying for only three events at trials.
[to top of second column] |
Born on May 10, 1995: Missy Franklin, American swimmer 2016 Rio
Olympics - Swimming - Semifinal - Women's 200m Backstroke Semifinals
- Olympic Aquatics Stadium - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - 11/08/2016.
Missy Franklin (USA) of USA arrives to compete. REUTERS/Dominic
Ebenbichler/File Photo
"I felt like David facing Goliath but I didn’t have any stones in my
pocket," she told reporters in Rio.
Yet while the loss of form may have surprised some, Franklin said in
her 2016 book "Relentless Spirit" that she knew at the U.S. Olympic
Trials, long before she arrived in Rio, that it was not her year.
"I hated that the sport I’d loved so much, had given me so much, was
making me feel the way I was feeling during trials," she wrote. "So
unsure of myself. So off my game."
Franklin wrote that she resolved to stand as a different kind of
role model in defeat.
"It’s one thing to inspire all these little girls by winning a bunch
of medals. That’s easy," wrote Franklin. "But it’s another thing
entirely to be an inspiration when things aren’t exactly going your
way."
She missed the world championships in 2017 to recover from surgery
and retired in 2018, after years of pain caused by shoulder
injuries.
(Reporting by Amy Tennery; Editing by Toby Davis)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|