Baltimore Sun Sunday

Recalling greatest feat in swimming

-

like no shot.”

It’s been 10 years since Phelps authored his signature chapter by winning a record eight gold medals over a remarkable week in Beijing. When he takes stock, the passage of time strikes the former Rodgers Forge resident as “bizarre.”

“Because it’s like for me, thinking back to 2008 and where I was — just the good, bad and ugly of what I was back then — and now being able to come back and look at something that was so special and so meaningful, I see how much change can happen,” he said. “It’s maturity, it’s growing up, it’s going through life-changing experience­s at a young age, good ones and very bad ones.”

For all the grand and touching moments that would follow, along with the missteps and times of impenetrab­le despair, the Beijing Olympics remain essential to Phelps’ story.

He eclipsed the great Mark Spitz and culminated his boyhood quest to do something unpreceden­ted in the sport that had consumed his days and his dreams.

At the same time, he began a pivot toward adulthood that would see him fall out of love with the pool, reach suicidal depths and ultimately rediscover himself as a more complicate­d but more contented man.

Beyond those broader narrative strokes, Beijing offered terrific sporting theater. Phelps did not win his races clinically — he needed a teammate’s desperate relay comeback, a blind swim and an impossible surge to the wall to pull it off.

The meet of his life paid off a plan he and his coach, Bob Bowman, had devised over 12 years, starting when Phelps was in grade school.

It did not start as a quest to chase down Spitz’s record of seven gold medals won at the Munich Olympics in 1972. In fact, Bowman laughs recalling a news conference Phelps gave in 2001, when he’d just broken his first world record at age 15.

“Who is this Mark Spitz guy and why do they keep asking me about him?” the teenager asked.

Phelps did not care about surpassing Spitz, per se, something he said repeatedly in the runup to Beijing. His goal was more abstract, to push his sport to a new realm of possibilit­y. It just so happened that if he completed his program as planned, the eight golds would provide a tasty hook for those telling the story.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This combinatio­n of photos shows Michael Phelps holding each of his eight gold medals after the 400-meter individual medley, 4x100 freestyle relay, 200 freestyle, 200 butterfly, 4x200 freestyle relay, 200 individual medley, 100 butterfly and the 4x100 medley relay at Beijing in 2008.
ASSOCIATED PRESS This combinatio­n of photos shows Michael Phelps holding each of his eight gold medals after the 400-meter individual medley, 4x100 freestyle relay, 200 freestyle, 200 butterfly, 4x200 freestyle relay, 200 individual medley, 100 butterfly and the 4x100 medley relay at Beijing in 2008.
 ?? MARK BAKER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Michael Phelps celebrates after winning gold in the final of the men's 100-meter freestyle during the Beijing 2008 Olympics.
MARK BAKER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Michael Phelps celebrates after winning gold in the final of the men's 100-meter freestyle during the Beijing 2008 Olympics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States