Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Ryan Lochte not happy with early results in effort to make fifth Olympic team.

36-year-old disappoint­ed by times at first major meet in U.S. since mid-march

- By Beth Harris

Ryan Lochte is mad, and that’s rare. The 12-time Olympic medalist known for his goofy smile and laidback attitude was ticked off about his performanc­es in the pool at the U.S. Open, the first major meet in America since the coronaviru­s pandemic shut down sports in mid-march.

Lochte finished third in the 200meter individual medley with a time 2:01.05 on Friday — well behind winner Chase Kalisz in 1:59.72. He was 26th in the 200 freestyle and 51st in the 100 backstroke. Lochte swam the 200 back on Saturday and dropped the 100 free. Times from all nine meet sites were combined to determine overall placement.

“This is probably going to go down as my worst meet that I’ve ever had,” he said. “I do not like swimming this bad. When I get back (home), I’m going to start turning it up again.”

At 36, Lochte is taking aim at making a fifth U.S. Olympic team. He’s easily the oldest swimmer on deck, surrounded by youngsters who he jokes were in diapers when he won his first gold medal at Athens in 2004.

Time is not on his side. Lochte figures he’s competed in just seven meets since 2016. He only resumed training about five weeks ago, his plans disrupted in part by closures

and restrictio­ns put in place because of the coronaviru­s. Future competitio­ns are up in the air, depending on the pandemic. The U.S. Olympic trials are next June, about a month before the reschedule­d Tokyo Games.

“I need to be racing at least once a month with really good competitor­s,” he said. “I don’t want to lose that confidence.”

Lochte is eager to replace the debacle that was the 2016 Rio Olympics with better memories before calling it a career. He grabbed internatio­nal headlines after claiming he and three teammates were robbed by armed men with police badges in Rio. Brazilian authoritie­s denied Lochte’s version of events. Eventually, he apologized for lying about the incident that cost him sponsors and a 10-month suspension.

In 2018, he was suspended for 14 months after posting a photo of himself receiving a vitamin injection at a dosage over the allowable limit. The repeated hits to his good-guy image were incalculab­le.

“I feel like inside I want to prove everyone wrong,” he said. “I want to do it for myself. I guess this year is way more important than any I’ve ever had.”

Lochte has been going hard in practice, logging between 7,000-8,000 yards a day — more than he did ahead of the 2012 London Games.

“I don’t know if I’m mentally tired. I know I’m physically tired,” he said. “I love getting on those blocks and racing again.“

Dara Torres was the first U.S. swimmer to compete in five Olympics, including two different appearance­s eight years apart. She was 41 in 2008 when she won silver medals in all three of her events in Beijing.

Lochte is back with Gregg Troy, his old college coach at Florida who guided him throughout his long rivalry with Michael Phelps.

Lochte said he’s still in touch with Phelps, who retired after Rio.

“He’s always good for giving me advice,” Lochte said.

Lochte looks around the pool deck at his young competitor­s and admits not knowing their names and who is the fastest.

“They all come up to me for questions because I’ve been in swimming forever,” he said. “I help out the younger generation. It’s still fun.”

 ?? Julio Aguilar / Getty Images ?? Ryan Lochte looks to the time display after winning heat 2 of the 200 individual medley at the U.S. Open Championsh­ips on Friday afternoon in Sarasota, Florida.
Julio Aguilar / Getty Images Ryan Lochte looks to the time display after winning heat 2 of the 200 individual medley at the U.S. Open Championsh­ips on Friday afternoon in Sarasota, Florida.

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