Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

They’re back in familiar waters

U.S. swimmers ready for Olympics-type atmosphere at trials after year of doubt.

- By Nathan Fenno

OMAHA — Caeleb Dressel arrived at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials nine years ago as an awestruck, gangly teenager who was the youngest male competitor at the pressurepa­cked event.

Now his larger-than-life picture covers the front of the CHI Health Center alongside giant pictures of fellow standouts Katie Ledecky and Simone Manuel.

Dressel, the 24-year-old sprint sensation from Florida who owns a handful of world records, has joined them as one of the faces of U.S. swimming. Not that he’d ever admit it.

“It’s just weird for me because I still feel like that 15year-old sitting up in the nosebleed seats,” Dressel said.

The path to the eight-day trials that start Sunday after a yearlong pandemic delay hasn’t been easy for Dressel or any other competitor. Carefully calibrated routines were blown apart. Swimmers scrounged for space to train, settling for backyard pools, socially distanced workouts or, in the case of Lilly King, the defending Olympic gold medalist in the 100-meter breaststro­ke, an Indiana pond.

But they didn’t know if they’d actually get the opportunit­y to compete for spots at next month’s Tokyo Games as the pandemic continues to roil the world.

“Parts of the road to Tokyo have been bumpy, smooth, missing, downhill, uphill, and winding but every part worth it,” Dressel wrote on Instagram.

In many ways, swimming is the straightfo­rward part of the next eight days.

“I think the kids are dying to race,” said Ray Looze, the Indiana University swimming coach who trains King and others. “Like, I hear this on deck, ‘We can’t wait for this meet to start.’ … I think there’s going to be some world records that go down because there’s been some people that have had to go through a great deal and they really, really want it bad.”

Dressel will be the favorite in the 50 freestyle, 100 freestyle and 100 butterfly. And Ledecky, the five-time Olympic gold medalist who is a world-record machine, looks to dominate her usual program of the 200 freestyle, 400 freestyle, 800 freestyle and, held for the first time at the women’s Olympic level, the 1,500 freestyle.

As always, Ledecky is unassuming about it all.

“I think I’m not the face of USA Swimming,” Ledecky said. “I think Simone is as well. I think Caeleb. I think of Lilly. I think of [backstroke­r] Ryan [Murphy]. I could just rattle off about 10 or 15 names and I think that just shows the depth we have as a team.”

With foreign fans barred from attending the Games in Japan, it’s the last time family and friends of Olympians will be able to cheer them on in person.

About 90% of the national team members have received a COVID-19 vaccine. They include King, Ledecky and Manuel. Dressel joked that he’s on “Team Moderna.” Ryan Lochte, the 12-time Olympic medalist trying to make his fifth Games at age 36, demurred when asked if he had been vaccinated.

“That’s a personal question, so I’m not going to answer that,” he said.

The challenge remains to get through the trials and Games without COVID-19 derailing anyone’s health — or anyone’s opportunit­y.

“We’ve put in a lot of work. … And it would be a shame if the opportunit­y to see all that work pay off was deprived at the last minute, regardless of what the reason is,” said Gregg Troy, who coaches Dressel and Lochte. “But it’s a pretty big world. There’s lots of things going on...”

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