The Denver Post

Ledecky remains smoke on the water

She is the world’s best swimmer in post-Phelps era

- By Beth Harris Darko Bandic, Associated Press file

Katie Ledecky got her start in swimming because she just wanted to make friends. Her brother was eager to join a team at a pool near their house and as a 6-year-old, she tagged along.

By summer’s end, the Ledecky siblings had made 100 friends ranging in age from 6 to 18. Some of them remain good friends with Katie, who went on to become the world’s best swimmer in the post-Michael Phelps era.

She earned five golds and a silver at this year’s world championsh­ips in Budapest, maintainin­g the upward trajectory she first establishe­d as a surprise gold medalist at the 2012 London Olympics.

Her dominant performanc­e in Hungary earned Ledecky Associated Press female athlete of the year honors.

In balloting by U.S. editors and news directors announced Tuesday, Ledecky received 351 points, edging Serena Williams, who had 343. Williams won the Australian Open for her Open era-record 23rd Grand Slam tennis title. Olympic track star Allyson Felix finished third in voting with 248 points.

Last year, Ledecky was second to gymnast Simone Biles in the balloting.

The AP male athlete of the year will be announced Wednesday.

Ledecky is the eighth female swimmer to win and the first since Amy Van Dyken in 1996. Among the others is 1969 winner Debbie Meyer. At last year’s Rio de Janeiro Games, Ledecky equaled Meyer’s feat of sweeping the 200, 400 and 800 freestyles in a single Olympics.

“It’s a really great history of women swimmers and freestyler­s,” Ledecky said of the AP honor roll. “I really look up to a lot of those women.”

She is the first active college athlete to win since UConn basketball player Rebecca Lobo in 1995.

Ledecky is a sophomore at Stanford, still debating whether to major in psychology or political science, and enjoying life in the dorms, where she lives with five other swimmers.

“Just being in the college environmen­t has kind of added another layer of fun,” she said.

 ??  ?? Katie Ledecky likes the time she sees on the scoreboard after winning the gold medal in the 1,500-meter freestyle at the 2017 world championsh­ips.
Katie Ledecky likes the time she sees on the scoreboard after winning the gold medal in the 1,500-meter freestyle at the 2017 world championsh­ips.

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