LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 25: Ryan Lochte of the United States swims backstroke during a training session ahead of the London Olympic Games at the Aquatics Centre in Olympic Park on July 25, 2012 in London, England. (Photo by Adam Pretty/Getty Images)
4 Total Updates since July 28, 2012
10 months ago Update 0 comments
The Michael Phelps vs. Ryan Lochte battle never materialized on Saturday as the latter breezed to an easy win in the 400 IM while the former missed out on a medal. It was weird, in a way, and not, all at the same time. The 400 IM is, after all, the event Phelps was all-too-happy to retire from after the 2008 Olympics, only to pick it back up before this year's Olympic Trial.
But still, even with the layoff, Phelps was good at the 400 IM. He finished second to Lochte at the Olympic Trials, sure, but still turned in a solid time -- one that would've netted him a silver medal on Saturday. Instead, Phelps fell way off the pace and finished in fourth, surprising everyone.
This was his reaction:
And this one was altered, but it totally works (look behind Phelps):
After the race, Phelps tried to figure out what went wrong. It was a "crappy race" he said, but seemed to be confused by his own performance. His coach, Bob Bowman, was also at a loss, struggling to figure out whether it was fitness, rust or something else.
But here we are, with Phelps going without a medal in a race for the first time since 2000 and failing to win a gold in an Olympic race he entered for the first time since 2004.
As Phelps tried to wrap his head around what just happened, Lochte received his gold medal, popped his grill in and had a good old time. The two were on opposite ends of the spectrum for one day, not nearly as close as most thought they'd be in the 400 IM.
Does it matter a ton, though? By itself, probably not -- the shock of him failing to win a medal in the event notwithstanding. But if Phelps falters on Sunday, then it's time to wonder if his training was off or if he's not peaking at the right time.
If nothing else, whether Phelps can bounce back is another fun storyline to keep an eye on, in addition to his battle with Lochte that we've all been anticipating.
10 months ago Update 0 comments
Ryan Lochte dominated the field and won the gold medal in the Men's 400m IM finals on Saturday, challenging the world record for much of the swim. Michael Phelps finished a disappointing, and surprising, fourth place.
Lochte finished in a time of 4:05.18, more than three seconds ahead of the silver medal winner, Brazil's Thiago Pereira. Japan's Kosuke Hagino took home the bronze.
It's the first time Phelps (4:09.28) has not finished an Olympic final with a medal since the 2000 Summer Games.
Lochte led after the first 100m as they transitioned into the backstroke, his best discipline. He pulled away from the field in those 100m and then continued to separate himself from the rest of the field in the breaststroke. By the time it got to the freestyle, the final 100m, it was just a matter of whether or not he'd break the world record.
Phelps, who still owns the world-record, won the gold medal in the 400m IM in both the 2008 and 2004 Olympics. The London Games were expected to be a passing of the torch of sorts, from Phelps to Lochte, and early results seem to indicate that will be the case.
10 months ago Commentary 3 comments
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American swimmer and Olympic favorite Michael Phelps nearly missed the Men's 400m IM Finals, finishing eighth in qualifying.
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10 months ago -SWRT Read More