Undoubtedly, the Phelps who has shown up in London is not the same man who set the world on fire in Beijing. The ravages of age, which appear at a more tender age for athletes, have dulled some of his speed and enthusiasm. The intervening years have been marred by a dope-smoking scandal and a comedown from the fanatical fitness regime Phelps maintains. He is now competing not because he is leaps and bounds ahead of the other swimmers but through sheer force of will. This is why we tune in to the Olympics day after day, to see history being made and watch adversity being vanquished during that one perfect moment.
Still, there is a lot more action to be played out and a lot more history to be written. Pakistanis will be fervently praying that its hockey players can snag the country’s first medal since 1992. The incomparable Roger Federer is on course to add his first tennis singles gold to a resume that includes just about every title in the sport. China and the US, in a mirror of the political jostling between the rising and fading superpower, are locked in a battle of their own for the most overall gold medals. This is, indeed, a thrilling time to be a sports fan.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 2nd, 2012.
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Give another sport 17 gold medals and you'd see many more 'greatest olympians' coming up!
brilliantly written indeed! truly there will never be an Olympian like Michael Phelps and i repeat Never!! A magical swim sweep every other time with exception of a few..but still admirable is the fact that it was A Pleasure seeing him do something which he is sooo good at!!