Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Ryan Lochte's hard work, dedication brings success in 2011 - Sportsman of the Year - SI.com

Ryan Lochte's hard work, dedication brings success in 2011 - Sportsman of the Year - SI.com

By Kelli Anderson

Sports Illustrated will announce its choice for Sportsman of the Year on Dec. 6. Here's one of the nominations for that honor by an SI writer.

It's no surprise Ryan Lochte was the first swimmer to break a long-course world record since the high-tech buoyancy suit era ended nearly two years ago; during that time, records fell so hard and so fast that people thought it would take decades for anyone to touch them.

Lochte doesn't listen much to conventional thinking. In fact, Lochte doesn't do conventional anything. Let's put aside his pool-deck fashion sensibilities -- the blinged-out green "Martian" high-tops with "Ryan" and "Lochte" molded into the soles, which leave a distinct if ephemeral imprint as he walks the wet pool deck; the hip-hop fedoras; the t-shirts that say "hukt on fonix wurkt 4 me" or "Google me"; the pink Speedo that moved one 17-year-old fan at the June Santa Clara meet to marvel, "The guy's got swagger for days."

Consider how Lochte conducts himself IN the pool: imagine you're a professional swimmer and you get beaten in your best events, over and over again. By the same guy. And that guy is Michael Phelps, the greatest swimmer in history. You step on the blocks. Phelps' condor-length arms go through their flapping, slapping routine -- a chilling sound to most competitors -- but you don't hear it. You lock in, you race your heart out, you lose. Twenty times in seven years. After each defeat you say, "Good race," and return to your home pool to get stronger, faster, tougher.

How many people would have thrown in the towel and said, "He's the best, I'm not as good and never will be," and moved on to a path of less resistance? Plenty, it turns out. "There are a lot of people Michael has come up against who've tried a few times to beat him and found it impossible," says Phelps' coach, Bob Bowman. "And they just gave up. But not Ryan. That had to be tremendously hard to keep plugging away."

Lochte's dogged work in the pool, in the weight room, and in his trainer's garage, where he has spent hours whipping heavy ropes and tossing tractor tires, paid off this summer when he won five gold medals at the World Championships in Shanghai, beating the once invincible Phelps twice in the process. For his unfailing belief in himself, for his perseverance, and for giving us all a great storyline to look forward to at the London Games next summer, I nominate Ryan Lochte for Sportsman of the Year.

History might record that last summer was Lochte's breakout season: after losing head-to-head to Phelps in the 200 and 400 meter individual medleys 20 straight times in major long-course races over seven years, Lochte finally beat him in the 200 meter IM at last summer's Nationals in Irvine, Calif. But winning on the world stage is a different challenge.

At the world swimming championships in Shanghai, Lochte first took on an all-star 200 meter freestyle field that included Olympic champion Phelps and world-record holder Paul Biedermann of Germany. A distance swimmer by background, Lochte won the race by hanging with the faster-starting Phelps for the first 100 and powering through the final 100. Coming into the second turn in third place behind Phelps and Russian Nikita Lobintsev, Lochte burst off the wall to pull into the lead before touching in 1:44.44, .35 seconds ahead of Phelps and .44 ahead of third-place Biedermann.

Two days later, he topped that in the 200 IM, taking the lead after the butterfly leg and hanging on as Phelps closed in on the final freestyle lap. Lochte touched the wall in 1:54.00, a tenth of a second faster than the world record he set at Worlds in Rome in 2009 in a high-tech suit. Phelps, who had set the eight previous world records in the event, finished in a personal best of 1:54.16.

"I wanted to do something that everyone thought was impossible," said Lochte afterward. "Since they banned those suits, everyone thought a world record would never get touched again."

On the meet's sixth day, Lochte won two more golds, leading from start to finish in the 200 backstroke before rescuing the USA's 4x200 freestyle relay with a blazing come-from-behind anchor lap. He finished the meet by crushing the field in the 400 IM (which Phelps no longer swims), beating runner-up Tyler Clary by four seconds. That made Lochte a perfect five-for-five in finals in Shanghai. (After swimming the prelims in the 400 free relay on Day One, he watched from the stands as the U.S. came in third in the final.)

Lochte says he's not done wowing the world. Since his return from China, he has taken just one day off from training.

"I'm ready to rock this thing," he said at November's Golden Goggle awards. "Come London, I want to turn some heads."

He's clear on what makes that possible. When Lochte stepped up to the podium to accept the trophy for Best Male Race of the Year, honoring his world record swim, he, like a true Sportsman, gave credit where it was due:

"I wouldn't get this if it wasn't for Michael," he said. "He pushes me every day. And I push him. We have a great rivalry."

Stayed tuned for London. Thanks to Phelps, Lochte may soon leave a mark on the sport that's far more permanent than fading footprints on the pool deck.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

2011 AT&T Winter Nationals - December 1-3 - psych sheet

The Winter Nationals will be in LC meters this year to prepare for the Olympics. I'm a little disappointed, because I love SC meets and they are pretty rare. Still, this should be an amazing meet and it will be televised by NBC on Sunday! So set your DVR.


Ryan is in the following events:

Event 2 - 400m free
Event 4 - 200m IM
Event 8 - 400m IM
Event 12 - 200m free
Event 16 - 100m back
Event 22 - 100m free

Wonder if there will be a mini-taper? I doubt it. If there is a mini-taper, it will probably be at the Duel in a few weeks.

It's so rare for Ryan to swim a 400 IM! That alone is worth the price of admission. It's exciting for us to watch, even if if it is painful for him to swim.

I noticed that Arkady Vyatchanin is swimming in this meet. He must still be training with Ryan in Florida. Ryan has so many great training partners to push him in practice. Vyatchanin is a fantastic 200m backstroker. He won bronze in the 100m back and 200m back in Beijing.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Ryan Lochte "ready to rock this thing" | News | Team USA

Ryan Lochte "ready to rock this thing" | News | Team USA

Ryan Lochte took all of one day off after winning six medals at swimming's world championships last summer in Shanghai.

One day. For a sponsor photo shoot.

And then he was back in the pool -- gearing up for 2012, and the U.S. Trials and then the London Olympics. It's Thanksgiving, of course, this Thursday. He'll be in the pool.

"I'm ready to rock this thing," he said Sunday night before being named "male athlete of the year" -- over Michael Phelps -- at the Golden Goggles, USA Swimming's annual awards event, held in Los Angeles at the J.W. Marriott hotel at LA Live.

He added, "Come London, I want to turn some heads."

Lochte's 2011 featured two victories over Phelps in Shanghai, in the 200 free and then in the 200 individual medley. In that 200 IM Lochte touched in 1:54-flat, the first world record since the plastic suits that rocked swimming in 2009 were banned, Phelps finishing a very close second, in 1:54.16.

Lochte had himself held the prior mark, 1:54.10, set at the world championships in Rome two years ago. In Shanghai, upon setting the new mark, Lochte had said, "I wanted to do something that everyone thought was impossible."

In Los Angeles Sunday night, Lochte said, "I was happy with the outcome at world championships. But there's so much more. Definitely -- next year, a lot better."

He also said, "A couple guys might have something to say about that. They can talk all they want. I would like to see them stop me. This is my year."

Phelps, who didn't attend Sunday night's event, didn't win in any of the four categories in which he was nominated. Lochte, meanwhile, showed up dressed to the nines, in white on black, all Ralph Lauren, accented with a pair of slip-on black shoes emblazoned on top with a script "RL."

Ralph Lauren? Ryan Lochte?

The man has always had style.

And, of course, confidence.

This is the thing about Lochte. Some get on the blocks with the great Phelps and, even if they don't admit it, are if not fearful of being in the same race at least a tad wary.

It's understandable. Phelps has 16 Olympic medals, 14 gold. He famously won eight golds in Beijing. He has 33 world championship medals, 26 gold.

Lochte and Phelps are genuinely friends and, at the same time, respectful and intense rivals. They push each other. They bring out, in each other, the best.

And each knows it.

Lochte, though, fears nothing and no one.

As Lochte said Sunday night, referring to Phelps, "What he has done for the sport of swimming is amazing. I don't think anyone in the entire world can duplicate what he has done … I am honored to be in the same disciplines. To race with him, to be in the same pool, to be on the same team with him, is seriously amazing.

At the same time, he said, "I know a lot of swimmers, they see me or Michael, they go, 'Oh well, I'll go for second or third or fourth.' That's not me. I'm going there to win. I'm not going there for second or third. I'm training to win. Not to go for second or third.

And as for Phelps, Lochte said, "There's no doubt in my mind he's training really hard. He wasn't really happy with last year," meaning the 2011 worlds in Shanghai, where Phelps said repeatedly he wasn't in tip-top shape.

"I know he's training hard. That's motivating me. Because I know he's training. I want to go back in the water and train even harder than I have trained before."

Just over 200 days now until the U.S. Trials in Omaha, another few weeks beyond that to the Olympics in London, and on a rainy night in Los Angeles here was the unassailable prediction from Ryan Lochte: "It's going to be a good show."

Monday, November 21, 2011

Videos of Ryan's wins at Golden Goggles

Male Athlete of the Year


Male Race of the Year




Golden Goggles - Ryan wins Male Athlete of the Year and Race of the Year for the 200m IM





Here's an article that discusses the event: http://www.universalsports.com/news-blogs/blogs/blog=splashed/postid=567863.html#laid+back+ryan+lochte+im+bottom

Here are some photos of what Ryan was wearing, which is always the highlight of Golden Goggles:


Phelps-Lochte Rivalry Take One Million

John Lohn wrote an article for www.swimmingworldmagazine.com that talks about the Phelps-Lochte rivalry for 2012. I will admit that it is very exciting to think about, and I hope it lives up to the hype and they are both at their best in London. Here's the article:

http://www.swimmingworldmagazine.com/lane9/news/Commentary/28830.asp

Battle of the Titans Brewing: Michael Phelps vs. Ryan Lochte in 2012; Lohn Lineups for 100 Breaststroke -- November 21, 2011

Column by John Lohn, Swimming World senior writer

BASKING RIDGE, New Jersey, November 21. WE all know the biggest storyline heading into the 2012 Olympic Games in London will be the head-to-head showdowns between Michael Phelps, he of 16 Olympic medals, and Ryan Lochte, the man looking to unseat Phelps as Mr. Olympia. They're expected to clash in at least the 200 freestyle and 200 individual medley, events Lochte captured at last summer's World Championships in Shanghai.

At the recent Minnesota Grand Prix, Phelps produced some of the best November times of his career en route to five victories. Lochte, meanwhile, turned in pedestrian times by his standards. Of course, these opposite-end-of-the-spectrum performances have everything to do with where each man stands in his training cycle.


Lochte, who captured four individual gold medals at the World Champs, is hell bent on retaining the title he has held the past two years: Top swimmer in the world. He earned that honor with a flourish at the 2010 Pan Pacific Championships, then solidified his status in Shanghai. The key, though, is delivering on the biggest stage, known as the Olympics.

While Phelps and Bob Bowman are grinding out workouts in Baltimore, Lochte is undergoing his torture by Gregg Troy in Gainesville. He didn't take a break after his World Champs show, a decision Lochte is glad to have undertaken.

"I'm probably in the best physical shape of my entire career," Lochte said in an interview with Swimming World at the Eastern States Clinic. "After Worlds, I didn't take a break. I went into hard training and the practices I've been doing, I haven't done this much work since I trained distance my freshman year of college. This summer should be interesting."



In his interview with Swimming World, Lochte indicated that Troy wanted his pupil to take a break after the World Championships. Lochte, however, had other ideas. It can be said that Lochte is obsessed with 2012 and hardly concerned with what shook out during this calendar year. At the same time, it's a guarantee Phelps is as focused, intent on finishing the finest Olympic career in history – in any sport – with an exclamation point.

"It was a huge confidence boost, just the outcome there," Lochte said of Shanghai. "At the same time, that was 2011 and it's over. It's a new year and a new training cycle, and what happened there is done. Yeah, I might have won a few races, but I'm back at the bottom. Whether swimmers think I'm hunted, I think I'm the hunter. That's how I train and look at things. The training I've been doing has put me in way better shape than I was going to Shanghai, so I know the summer can be something special."

Phelps, too, has been satisfied with the work he has assigned by Bowman. Prior to the Minnesota Grand Prix, Phelps spent three weeks in Colorado Springs, training at altitude. Bowman has routinely hammered his athletes during those training sessions. Such a workload was confirmed by Phelps during the Grand Prix stop.

"The last probably three or four weeks have been the most challenging week's I've had since before Beijing," Phelps said. "So, there's been a lot of work that's getting taken care of. We're on the right path. We just have to be able to stay on this path for the next couple months."

As we prepare for the final month of 2011, the London Games creep closer. The hype will only grow and soon we'll be treated to what should be some special duels. Can't wait.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Golden Goggles Tonight - Watch Live at www.usaswimming.org

Golden Goggles starts at 8 p.m. CST. Here is the link for the live feed:


Ryan is up for several awards, including best male athlete, best swim and best relay. I watched last year and it was pretty entertaining.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Minneapolis Grand Prix - Saturday Finals/Sunday Prelims

Saturday Finals

Ryan placed 4th in the A final of the 100m back with a time of 55.80

Ryan placed 5th in the B final of the 400m free with a time of 3:58.82

Sunday Prelims

Ryan is swimming the 200m IM and the 200m back. USA Swimming has not posted the heat sheets.

Interview from Saturday night:

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Ryan Lochte interview at Minneapolis Grand Prix

Ryan speaks to the press on Day 1




Minneapolis Grand Prix - Ryan's Saturday Prelims results

100m Back

Ryan had the 5th fastest prelim time of 56.27, qualifying for the A final.

400m Free

Ryan had the 17th fastest prelim time of 4:01.53, qualifying for the C final.


Minneapolis Grand Prix - Friday Finals/Saturday Prelims

Friday Finals

200m free - Ryan finished 3rd in the B final, 11th overall with a time of 1:50.30.

100m fly - Ryan finished 8th in the A final with a time of 54.49

I haven't been able to find any videos of the finals. Will post later if I find them.

Saturday Prelims

Event #16 Men's 100m Back - Begins at 9:58 AM CST
Ryan is in Heat 6, Lane 4

Event #18 Men's 400m Free - Begins at 10:33 AM CST
Ryan is in Heat 3, Lane 7

Friday, November 11, 2011

THE BUZZ: IS IT REALLY A RIVARLY? (Phelps v. Lochte)

By Mike Gustafson

http://www.usaswimming.org/ViewNewsArticle.aspx?TabId=1&itemid=3928&mid=8712&utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

It’s like that old saying: “You can’t have one without the other.”

“Michael Phelps vs. Ryan Lochte” might go down as the greatest rivalry in the history of Olympic sports. Sportswriters might write about it for years to come. Movies made. HBO films written. It might become as important as “Bird vs. Magic” in the history of sports legend. You might tell your children’s children about that time you witnessed, first-hand, the epic battle that was “Phelps v. Lochte” the same way people talk about Ali v. Frazier or Magic v. Bird. That’s because our current two best swimmers in the world, Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte, will begin a legendary journey this weekend at the Minneapolis Grand Prix that will culminate at the London Olympics. “Phelps v. Lochte” has the type of potential to become one of sport’s greatest rivalries.

Then again, it might not.

So much has been written about the “rivalry” between Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte. To be honest, I am of two-minds. On the one hand, this rivalry should be as big as it gets. You have the Greatest Swimmer of All-Time vs. someone who has beaten his world records. You have a 16-time Olympic medalist vs. someone who COULD win 16 Olympic medals (Lochte currently has 6). They swim the same events. They are around the same age. They swim for the same country.

But is it a rivalry?

To help sift through this, I sucked down a quart of coffee. Then I constructed an internal “Point/Counter-Point” debate with myself. The hope is that by the conclusion of the monologue, I will come to a decision about this pressing question in our sport:

Is “Phelps vs. Lochte” really a rivalry?
Point: Of course it is.

Michael Phelps needs no introduction: He’s like Michael Jordan of swimming, the legend, the man with the championships. Ryan Lochte also needs no introduction: He’s like the Kobe Bryant of swimming, the “new” champion, the rising star, also with some championships. Comparing these two always seems like the typical question most sportswriters ask, “Who is better – Michael Jordan or Kobe Bryant?” You can argue all day, but the argument won’t get anywhere. Jordan and Kobe never competed against each other, in their prime, at the same time.

But there’s the thing: Phelps and Lochte ARE in their prime. They’re NOT like Jordan and Kobe; they’re like Magic and Bird. One could argue that Phelps’ prime of his career was three years ago in Beijing when he scored an unprecedented 8 gold medals. Tough to argue with that. One could also argue that Ryan Lochte’s prime is yet to come – probably in London, a few months from today. Tough to argue with that, too.

But I don’t buy it.

Here, you have the two most popular and dominant male swimmers from the past few years battling each other in the same events. The 200m freestyle. The 200m IM. Possibly the 100m or 200m backstroke. Possibly the 100m freestyle. And they are on the same team. The stakes are higher. The pressure is greater. There can only be one.

Really, it comes down to that 200m IM. The individual medley has long been known as the Ultimate Decider. The 200 IM is the litmus test that gauges who, exactly, is the Best All-Around Swimmer in the pool. Phelps has declared that he will never swim the 400IM again in a major competition. So that leaves the 200 IM as the only event these two can square off in. Meanwhile, Lochte has wrestled the 200 IM world record away from Phelps. Which means Lochte is faster. Which means, if Phelps decides he still wants to compete in the 200 IM, he HAS to be considered an underdog…

Which leads me to my point: How can “The Greatest,” competing in his prime, be an underdog?

He can’t. Can’t happen. Doesn’t make sense, logically. Which either means one of two things: 1.) Phelps is beyond his prime, or 2.) Lochte is as good as Phelps. Personally, I don’t believe Phelps his beyond his prime. Phelps will be as good in London as he was in Beijing. The only difference is that Lochte will be much, much better than he was four years ago. This must be considered a true rivalry. And it’s one that could go down as one of the greatest sports rivalries ever.

You’re saying this isn’t a rivalry? Then you need to get your head checked, Mike.

Counter-Point: Mike, you ignorant fool.

You say these two are similar to Magic and Bird? I can see that. I can buy your argument that each are in their prime and that SOMETIMES they compete against each other. Sure, Phelps lost a few races and records along the way. But he’s still in good shape, and is still young. And Lochte is also reaching his prime. These two are both near their “full potential.” This is about as close as we swim fans are ever going to get witnessing the two best swimmers in the world, each very near the prime of their respective careers. I will agree with you on that.

But just one thing.

Phelps and Lochte are on the same team.

I understand this reaches a point of philosophical debate: Is it really a rivalry if you are on the same team? That debate goes into other debates, such as if swimming is an individualistic sport vs. a team-based sport. Of course, I would argue that it is a team sport. Even though no one physically “helps” you during a race, swimming really is a team sport. Phelps doesn’t train on his own. Lochte doesn’t swim relays on his own. How many of Phelps’ Olympic gold medals are from relays? Nearly 1/3 of them. Not a ton, but significant enough. Without the help of a legendary push by Jason Lezak, Phelps might not be viewed as legendary as he is today.

So, because Phelps and Lochte are on the SAME TEAM, this will never reach a true “Ali vs. Frazier” or “Bird vs. Magic” type of rivalry. Because they share the same goals. It is very possible that Ryan Lochte and Michael Phelps will be on the same relays in London. It’s happened before. And in that question, when you have two people HELPING each other achieve goals of winning a gold, does “Phelps vs. Lochte” become a real, true, sport-changing rivalry?

Australia in the early 2000s was a rivalry. France in freestyle relays is now a rivalry. The United States and these countries competed against each other, no matter what, at all times. And it was exciting. It was thrilling. They were oppositional forces colliding for one goal. To have a solid foundation for a rivalry, two forces must be opposed against each other. For example, Ali vs. Frazier. Classic example of “mano a mano.” And right now, sure, Phelps and Lochte might compete against each other in some events, but they also HELP each other.

And that’s the difference.

How can TEAMMATES be epic, sports-changing, legendary rivals?

They are still competitive, don’t get me wrong. But there is a very big difference between friendly (or not-so-friendly) competition and a sport-changing, transcendent, legendary Olympic rivalry. We will be treated to good races. But it will be nothing like the “Miracle On Ice” or “Bird vs. Magic” other great sports rivalries. A rival competes against each other for the same job, the same goal, the same victory. The last time I checked, Phelps and Lochte both wore a “Team USA” swim cap, were both on relays, and both train together.

Conclusion: Well, I have to agree with Mike on this one. In order for this to become a great Olympic rivalry, we need one thing to happen:

They need to be on different teams.

Thankfully for us Team USA swimming fans, that ain’t gonna happen. We’re treated to two of the best swimmers in the world, who share the same goal. In my opinion, “Phelps vs. Lochte” will never become a true, real, lasting “rivalry.” And that’s OK. Sure, they will have some close, exciting, thrilling races. Sure, they are competitors and neither of them wants to lose. But ultimately, both Phelps and Lochte are Olympic veterans who understand that Team USA is bigger than any one person. Bigger than any race. Bigger than any rivalry. As long as these two friends and comrades finish 1-2 on the medal podium, then nothing else matters.

Right?

Minneapolis GP - Ryan's Friday prelim results

Results for all of this morning's prelims can be found here: http://www.usaswimming.org/_Rainbow/Documents/596f9c14-7c90-4ce1-8bd5-689678d0f107/Fri%20Prelims%20A%20Results.pdf

The results are for the A prelims only. Conceivably someone could swim faster in the B prelims and change the finals, but it is not likely.

200m free - Ryan qualified 12th to make the B final of the 200m free. His time was 1:51.37. Ryan must be pretty beat up from training because his training partners - who are all top notch 200 free swimmers - were even slower. Conor Dwyer finished 15th with a 1:51.70. Shaune Frazier was 17th with a 1:52.10. Robert Gomez was 25th with a 1:53.26. Sebastien Rousseau was 30th with a 1:54.26 and Peter Vanderkaay was 38th with a 1:55.49.

100m fly - Ryan qualified 8th to make the A final of the 100m fly. His time was 54.85.

It's disappointing not to make the A final of the 200 free, especially with so many Olympic stars in this event. Nevertheless, Ryan is in hard training now and one thing I've learned over the years is not to expect too much at the early GP meets.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Minneapolis GP: Can't Miss Race

By: Mike Gustafson

http://www.usaswimming.org/ViewNewsArticle.aspx?TabId=2056&itemid=3921&mid=10615

This is my inner-monologue, scrolling through my Can’t-Miss Race of the Weekend: “Okay, let’s look through this field.

Oh, there’s a six-time Olympic medalist. And there’s a 16-time Olympic medalist. Oh, and there’s a world champion and Olympic silver medalist. There’s a three-time Olympic medalist. There’s an Olympic gold medalist. A U.S. national champion. An NCAA champion. Another NCAA champion. An NCAA record-holder. Another Olympic gold medalist…”

Then I stopped. My head hurt.

Holy cow. This weekend’s men’s 200m freestyle is a virtual “who’s who” of swimming, a red carpet gala event, where the field is stacked with Olympians and national champions. I didn’t even go through the whole thing. I stopped short. I knew that I could make my point:

You won’t want to miss this race.

Minneapolis is your setting for the season premiere of what will be the most exciting swimming season we’ve seen in years. The Grand Prix series kicks off with a boom, bang, and explosion – the men’s 200m freestyle. Like a slew of 200m freestyles we saw last season, this event features the best-of-the-best: the biggest names, most depth, most Olympians, most firepower. True, we will see many great races this year, but this one holds special intrigue...

Why?

Well, for starters, the top 16 seeded times this weekend are FASTER than the 200 free semifinal qualifying times at the 2008 Olympic Trials. Which means: We’re going to see some fast swimming. You don’t need to be a rocket scientist to figure that out. You can’t compare times now from then, but swim fans in attendance and watching online should know just how fast these swimmers are seeded. Will we witness swimmers approach their seed times? Probably not all. Especially since we’re in the brunt of the training. But we could.

Then there are the superstars.

You have Michael Phelps. The Greatest Swimmer Ever. Anytime Phelps swims, it is a special moment. People pay attention. People DVR his races. You can tell anytime when Phelps swims: Other swimmers set down their iPhones and Droids and iPads, and they actually pay attention to the races. That’s when you know something big is happening. That’s “The Phelps Effect.” Phelps has been in the competition circuits this autumn, competing overseas at the World Cup. But he’s home now. And he’s training. And he’s getting prepared for a final run at Olympic glory.

You have Ryan Lochte. Swim fans won’t like me saying this, but he is now – and might always be – the “Robin” to the Team USA Batman & Robin duo (Phelps & Lochte). The sidekick. The cool, walk-with-a-swagger, laid-back athlete. Lochte has 10 Olympic medals to catch up to Phelps if he (or anyone else, for that matter) wants to be mentioned alongside The Greatest. On paper, it doesn’t translate. However. Lochte HAS climbed to the top of the fan favorite chart like a rocketing pop song. He signs autographs. He talks with kids. He’s goofy. He’s fun. Does he care about chasing Phelps’ record-haul? You bet. You couldn’t experience the Beijing Olympics as a competitor and not envy Phelps. But will he actually do it? This is the first race that answers those questions.

You have multiple foreign superstars. Zhang Lin, a Chinese world champion and Olympic silver medalist in the 400m freestyle. Yannick Agnel, a French teenage phenom, someone many are projecting to be the next great freestyle superstar. Ous Mellouli, the Tunesian Olympic gold medalist in the 1500m. The Fraser brothers, from the Caymen Islands, with their recent Pan Am and NCAA success. Any of these guys pose a major threat to the “Phelps and Lochte Show,” and any of them can win the race.

Finally, you have the potential upset bids. I’m talking about PVK. You know PVK as one of those fan-favorite, workhorse types of swimmers. I dubbed him “The Bruce Springstein of Swimming.” He works his butt off, every meet, every single race. He could have the ability to knock off anyone. But don’t count out other names too. Ricky Berens. Tyler Clary. Dominik Meichtry. Matt McLean. Michael Kleuh. The list goes on and on….

To be sure: There will be other great races this weekend. The women’s 200m freestyle could be as good as the men’s. Or how about Missy Franklin vs. Dara Torres in the 50m freestyle. And every single battle between Lochte and Phelps. Don’t forget about Brendan Hansen and Ed Moses potentially taking the field as a couple of 30-year-olds in the 100m breaststroke.

But the men’s 200m freestyle has the firepower. I believe it will be the best indication as to who has the fire, who has the drive, who has been training, and who is putting themselves in contention seven months before the Olympic Trials. Seven months may sound like a long time, but in the world of swimming, it is a blip on the radar, quick as a flash. Soon, we’ll be watching races unfold in Omaha, remembering the first race of the Grand Prix season, when we saw someone take command of the field, charge to the wall, and make a declarative, resounding statement.

Can’t miss it. Can’t wait.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Minneapolis Grand Prix - Nov. 11-13!!

Here's something to look forward to....the start of the Grand Prix season. First meet is the Minneapolis Grand Prix, held next weekend at the University of Minnesota. There will be a lot of Olympians at this meet, including Ryan Lochte. One big change from previous years - this meet will be long course meters. The psych sheet can be found here:


I'm going to love the Grand Prix meets during the Olympic year.

Prelims will be swum in A and B flights.

Ryan's events:

Event #2 - 200m free (Friday) - A prelims at 9:17 am CST

Is this the Minneapolis GP or last summer in Shanghai? Here is a short list of who will be swimming in this event (by seed)

Ryan Lochte
Michael Phelps
Yannick Agnel
Zhang Lin
Peter Vanderkaay
Ous Mellouli
Dominick Meichtry
Matt McLean
Conor Dwyer
...so many more

Event #6 - 100m fly (Friday) - A prelims at 10:04 am CST

Ryan is seeded 9th. Here are some others in this event:

Michael Phelps
Eugene Godsoe
Chris Brady
Ricky Berens

Event #16 - 100m back (Saturday) - A prelim at 9:58 am CST

Ryan is seeded 3rd. Here are some others, including a big surprise from Russia (at least to me):

Arkady Vyatchanin
David Plummer
Michael Phelps
Eugene Godsoe
Ben Hesen
Tyler Clary

Event #18 - 400m free (Saturday) - A prelims at 10:33 am CST

Ryan is seeded 20th. Others in this event:

Zhang Lin
Yannick Agnel
Peter Vanderkaay
Ous Mellouli
Mads Glaesner
Sebastian Rouault

Event #25 - 200m IM (Sunday) - A prelim 8:19 am CST

Ryan Lochte
Michael Phelps
Markus Rogan
Dirian Townsend
Conor Dwyer
Tyler Clary

Event #27 - 200 back (Sunday) - A prelim 8:57 am CST

Ryan Lochte
Markus Rogan
Tyler Clary
Arkady Vyatchanin
Marco Loughran


Thursday, November 3, 2011

Ryan to compete at Duel in the Pool

http://www.swimmingworldmagazine.com/lane9/news/World/28576.asp

Duel in the Pool will take place on December 16-17 at the Georgia Tech Aquatic Center in Atlanta. It will be televised by NBC! The meet will feature the U.S. vs. Europe. According to the article linked above, the Europe team will be made up of swimmers from Great Britain, Netherlands, Poland, Belarus, Denmark, Austria and Lithuania.

Between the Minnesota Grand Prix on November 11-13 (which Ryan will attend) and the Duel in the Pool on December 16-17 we finally have some swim meets on the horizon. So excited to see some racing soon.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011