Special
coverage - Michael Phelps: I'm the
One!
Process
- Phelps fulfills historic eight-gold goal
Sidelight
- Phelps shares joy of victory with mom, sisters
Kaleidoscope - Netizen: Who is Phelps' rumored
girl
By Sportswriter Chang Ai-ling
BEIJING, Aug. 17 (Xinhua) -- Beijing's bubble-shaped
Water Cube will long be remembered as the birthplace of an epic story - Michael
Phelps and eight Olympic gold medals.
Nine days, 17 races. American superfish Phelps
carefully measured every step and went through his Beijing adventure with
flawless performance, placing eight gold medals under his name.
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U.S. swimmers Michael Phelps (R) and
Aaron Peirsol celebrate after their team winning the men's 4x100m medley
relay final at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games in the National Aquatics
Center, also known as the Water Cube in Beijing, China, Aug. 17, 2008.
U.S. swimmers set a new world record of the event in a time of 3 minutes
29.34 seconds and won the gold medal. (Xinhua/Fan Jun) Photo
Gallery>>> |
By doing so, Phelps beat legendary Mark Spitz'
seven-gold mark, and also became the most prolific Olympic gold medalist beyond
Spitz, Carl Lewis, Paavo Nurmi and Larysa Latynina, who won nine Olympic golds
each in their career.
"I went from hitting my head on the wall to win by
one hundredth of a second to doing my best time in every event. It's been
nothing but an upwards roller coaster. It's been nothing but fun," Phelps said,
adding "the biggest thing is nothing is impossible and all it takes is an
imagination."
Phelps started his campaign with a victory in the
first final of the meet last Sunday, the 400-meter individual medley, cruised
through the 200-meter medley, 100-meter and 200-meter butterfly, 200-meter
freestyle and both the 4x100m and 4x200m freestyle relays, and concluded his
campaign with the 4x100-meter medley relay on Sunday.
His epic victory put an end to the pool competition
here in Beijing, where 98 medals were shared by 19 countries.
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U.S. swimmers Michael Phelps, Brendan
Hansen, Jason Lezak and Aaron Peirsol (L to R) listen to national anthem
during the awarding ceremony of men's 4x100m medley relay at the Beijing
2008 Olympic Games in the National Aquatics Center, also known as the
Water Cube in Beijing, China, Aug. 17, 2008. U.S. swimmers set a new world
record and won the gold medal in the event with 3 minutes 29.34 seconds.
(Xinhua/Fei Maohua) Photo
Gallery>>> |
The United States and Australia continued to be the
dominant forces in the pool with the former taking away 12 gold medals and the
latter possessing six. But more countries, frequently seen as relying on one
swimmer, joined the gold battle and had their names written on the medal
table.
Japan's Kosuke Kitajima successfully defended his
titles in men's 100-meter and 200-meter breaststroke, becoming the only swimmer
who has won four Olympic breaststroke gold medals, two in Athens and two in
Beijing. His medals together with three bronze ones won by teammates put Japan
high on the medal tally, only after the United States and Australia.
Britain, who for a long time, stayed far below on the
medal tally, jumped to the fourth place thanks to a 19-year-old girl Rebecca
Adlington.
Adlington, whose previous record was almost not worth
mentioning, emerged as a "dark horse" in Beijing, bringing home two golds in the
women's 400-meter and 800-meter freestyle.
As if that was not enough, the Olympic debutante made
history by cutting the oldest standing world record in swimming set by Janet
Evans of the United States in the 800-meter freestyle in 1989, the year she was
born.
Germany's Britta Steffen joined the double title club
by defeating Australia's world record holder Libby Trickett in women's 100-meter
and 50-meter freestyle, crowning the new sprint queen.
Zimbabwe's "national treasure" Kirsty Coventry also
had her country's anthem played at the Olympic arena. Coventry, by herself,
pocketed one gold and three silvers in Beijing, placing her country among the
swimming powers.
The Chinese also joined the gold jubilation last
Thursday when 19-year-old swimmer Liu Zige smashed Australian Jessicah
Schipper's world record in the women's 200-meter butterfly Thursday, snatching
host China's first swimming gold at the Beijing Olympic Games.
Liu, who seemed to have come out of nowhere, took the
gold in a stunning two minutes and 04.18 seconds, chopping off Schipper's
previous record by more than one second. Her teammate Jiao Liuyang, aged 18,
also beat Schipper in the last lap, finishing second in 2:04.72. Schipper was
third in 2:06.26, well off her personal best.
Along with China, France, Italy, South Korea, Brazil,
the Netherlands and Tunisia all had their golden moment at the Water Cube.
As the pool at the Water Cube quieted down, a total
of 25 world records have been bettered at the venue, exceeding the total marks
set in both Athens and Sydney.
Swimmers were seen smashing world records in heats
and more than 70 percent of the gold medals were won by swimmers swimming under
the world record pace. Michael Phelps alone grabbed contributed four individual
world records.
The record-breaking spree has stirred up massive
speculations, ranging from pool, water and swimsuits. People tried to find out
what made swimmers go faster in Beijing.
"We are calling it the 'swimming temple" of the
world," said Cornel Marculescu, executive director of aquatic sport governing
body FINA. "The venue is without any doubt one of the best in the world. But the
pool (designed according to FINA rules) has no difference from others."
The FINA official accredited the increase of speed to
the advances in training methods and perfection of swimming techniques. "Michael
Phelps's win in men's 100m butterfly race is a perfect example."
The official also said that the roles of the new swim
gears like the much hyped Speedo LZR Racer suits can't be overstated. "Athletes
wearing different brands of suits can get up and win medals. Phelps,
breaststroker Kitajima and Park Tae-hwan (South Kora's 400m freestyle winner)
all wore trousers, instead of the much hyped full-body suits," Marculescu
said.
Although Beijing sees a bigger wave of broken records
than the past Olympics, it has become a rule for swimming records to be
regularly broken when athletes gear themselves up for the major meets. Fourteen
records were shattered in the 2000 Sydney Games alone, while the swimming
records were downed 33 times in the whole year.
"People have been looking for reasons why
performances have been so good. The real reason is that swimmers are swimming
really well and the coaches are coaching really well," said Australian head
coach Alain Thompson, on Thursday.