Michael Phelps' triumph in 200m fly completes sweet revenge

31-year-old won his 20th and 21st gold medals in quick succession on Tuesday


Afp August 10, 2016
Michael Phelps (USA) of USA poses with his gold medal at 2016 Rio Olympics victory ceremony of Men's 200m Butterfly at Olympic Aquatics Stadium, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on August 9,2016. PHOTO: REUTERS

RIO DE JANEIRO: Michael Phelps is soaking it all up in his Olympic swansong, as he is enjoying some of the sweetest moments of his illustrious career after winning his 20th and 21st gold medals in quick succession on Tuesday.

Avenging one of the rare defeats of his staggering career, the 31-year-old who is participating in his farewell tournament, the America swimmer won the men's 200m butterfly at Rio, then anchoring the United States to victory in the 4x200m freestyle relay.

Nike's new ad features transgender athlete


The crowd at the Olympic Aquatics Centre revelled in one of the last few chances to see Phelps swim, and the American egged them on, straddling the lane ropes with his arms raised in the air then planting a big made-for-TV sloppy kiss on his baby son, Boomer. "I honestly I don't know at this very moment where that stands," Phelps said when asked how it compared to some of his other great nights in the pool.

"It's kind of been a crazy last couple days. I know that was probably one of my most challenging doubles. That being my very first Olympic event, to be able to win it at my fifth Olympics is pretty special."

For Phelps, winning the 200 fly was one of the sweetest moments of his life. A lung-bursting event that most swimmers hate, it has always been his favorite race, but one in which he still thought he had a point to prove.

Djokovic faces early Olympics exit after second defeat


Phelps qualified for his first Olympics as a 15-year-old at Sydney in 2000 in the 200 fly. He set his first world record in the same event a year later.

He won the gold medal at Athens in 2004 and again in Beijing in 2008 but suffered a shock defeat to South Africa's Chad le Clos at London in 2012 when he misjudged his final lunge to the wall.

Phelps retired after London with 18 gold medals in his collection - twice as many as any other athlete in any sport - but his loss in the 200 fly kept eating away him and he announced a comeback for Rio, telling his life-long coach Bob Bowman the 200 fly was his priority. "I was pretty fired up after that race," he said. "It kind of stuck with me and I really wanted that one back."

From the moment he stepped on the pool deck, it was clear Phelps wanted revenge. He took the lead at the halfway mark and had le Clos covered from the start. But, at 31, he started to wobble in the last few metres and had to hold off a fierce late challenge from Japan's Masato Sakai to get his hands on the wall first in a time of one minute 53.36 seconds.

Sakai, 10 years younger than Phelps, took silver, just 0.04 seconds, or half a fingernail, behind. The bronze went to Hungary's Tamas Kendersei in 1:53.62, just ahead of the fading le Clos. "That event is kind of like my bread and butter and that was the last time I'll ever swim it. Having that come to an end, it's weird, it's crazy to think about," He added.

"There wasn't a shot in hell I was losing that race and if I did I was leaving everything in the pool. Just being able to see the one by my name again, one more time in the 200 fly. Couldn't have scripted it any better."

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ