Hartford Courant

No Phelps, no problem for the US

- By Paul Newberry

TOKYO — Michael Phelps was up in his broadcast seat, a mere observer rather than the driving force of U.S. swimming.

No need to fret about what he left behind. The Americans are off to a flying start at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre.

Displaying their trademark depth, the U.S. earned six of 12 medals Sunday on the first morning of finals, showing no signs of slipping even without the most decorated athlete in Olympic history.

From Chase Kalisz’s gold in the 400-meter individual medley to Kieran Smith pulling out a bronze in his first major internatio­nal competitio­n, there was plenty of red, white and blue on the medal podium in the largely empty arena.

“We were in the warmup pool seeing people get a gold medal, get second, get second and third. It was crazy,” said Abbey Weitzeil, who was part of the 4x100-meter freestyle relay team that claimed a bronze in the final event of the session.

Kalisz got things rolling with his victory in the grueling medley, making up for a second-place showing at the 2016 Rio Games. Jay Litherland rallied on the final leg to give the Americans a 1-2 finish that set the tone for the rest of the morning.

“I really kind of do feel like I let the U.S. down in ‘16 even though I swam a lot faster than here,” Kalisz said. “The USA has a proud legacy of the 400 IM — (Tom) Dolan, Phelps, (Ryan) Lochte. This was my redemption story.”

At 27, he knew it might be his last chance to win the race that includes all four strokes.

“It was tough last year with the Olympics kind of getting pulled out from under us and really having so much uncertaint­y whether it was going to happen,” Kalisz said. “Five years of preparatio­n for this one moment, and it’s not like I was getting any younger.”

Kalisz and Litherland caught a huge break when home-country favorite Daiya Seto shockingly failed to advance from the preliminar­ies, making a huge strategic error by attempting to conserve his energy for the final.

The Americans took advantage. Kalisz pulled away on the breaststro­ke, his best leg, and Litherland rallied on the closing freestyle to claim the second spot.

Turns out, the Americans were just getting started.

Smith, who emerged from obscurity with a breakthrou­gh performanc­e at the U.S. trials last month, proved he was no fluke by finishing third in the 400 free.

“I sprinted my butt off the last 50 like it was a 50 free,” Smith said.

Japan’s Yui Ohashi took gold in the women’s 400 IM — making up a bit for Seto’s flop — but two Americans were right on her heels. Olympic rookie Emma Weyant grabbed the silver, while 27-yearold Hali Flickinger took bronze for her first career medal.

“After we saw (Kalisz and Litherland win medals), we kind of looked at each other and said, ‘It’s our turn,”’ Weyant said. “I think that really got our team going.”

They weren’t done, either.

While no one had any chance of beating the mighty Aussies in the 4x100 free relay — indeed, they set the first swimming world record of these games — a quartet anchored by Simone Manuel managed to hang on for third.

Katie Ledecky was among those pumped up by the U.S. performanc­e.

“I can definitely feel the energy,” said Ledecky, a five-time gold medalist and expected to be one of the biggest U.S. stars in Tokyo.

During Phelps’ record-breaking career, which encompasse­d five Olympics, the Americans never won more than five medals on the first day of finals.

Without him, they did one better. It looks like the team is still in good hands.

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