By PAUL NEWBERRY,
AP National Writer
Updated August 14, 2008
(AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)
BEIJING (AP)
Australia's Stephanie Rice closed a brilliant Olympics
with another world record. Kosuke Kitajima of Japan made it a double double in
the breaststroke. Alain Bernard redeemed himself for the relay. And the home
team got a chance to celebrate its first swimming gold.
For Phelps, a day with no world record, not even a gold
medal, was like taking it easy. He cruised into the finals of the 200-meter
individual medley, then hustled back to the athletes' village to rest up for his
next brush with history, qualifying for the 100 butterfly.
"I feel fine," said Phelps, already the winningest
Olympian ever and taking aim at Mark Spitz's record of seven gold medals in a
single games this weekend. "I think over the next few days the biggest thing is
going to be trying to get as much rest as I can. If I can do that, I'll be
fine."
Led by Rice, the Australians set the 18th world swimming
record of the Beijing Games in the women's 800 freestyle relay, obliterating the
previous mark by nearly six seconds to upset the United States.
The Americans had won the event all three times since it
was added to the Olympic program in 1996, but they couldn't match the Aussies'
blazing time of 7 minutes, 44.31 seconds, which shattered the previous record by
an astonishing 5.78. China held off the Americans for silver.
Rice, once again sporting large green earrings to match
her country's colors, was the closest thing to Phelps on the female side in
Beijing. She won three gold medals - all with world records.
"What a great way to finish," she said after her final
event. "For us to break the record by so far is amazing. ... I really look
forward to sitting back and cheering for the Aussies."
Then there's Katie Hoff. The 19-year-old American again
failed to win her first Olympic gold, having settled for one silver and two
bronzes in five events. She's got only one race left on her busy program, the
grueling 800 free.
"I did my best and ran out of room at the end," said
Hoff, who swam the anchor leg.
She couldn't be blamed for this one. Hoff swam the
second-fastest 200 of anyone but dove in the water too far behind to catch the
Aussies.
"It definitely gives me more motivation," Hoff said.
"I'm a little bit tired and I have a full day to recover."
The Chinese crowd roared when Liu Zige won the women's
200-meter butterfly, setting a world record of 2:04.18. Jiao Liuyang also went
under the previous best to give the teammates a 1-2 finish.
Kitajima completed a historic second straight Olympic
double with a win in the 200 breaststroke, the first swimmer to claim gold in
both the 100 and 200 at consecutive games.
Bernard was eager to make up for getting caught on the
anchor leg in the 400 free relay, and he did just that by edging Australian
rival Eamon Sullivan in the 100 freestyle. It was a bit of a letdown, though,
when the furious race failed to set a world record, which has become the norm at
the Beijing Games.
Bernard and Sullivan traded off the record in the
semifinals, the Aussie winding up with the ultimate mark of 47.05. They were
stroke for stroke throughout the down-and-back final, but it was Bernard who
touched first in 47.21. Sullivan claimed silver in 47.32, while Jason Lezak of
the U.S. and Brazil's Cesar Cielo shared the bronze.
"It's enormous," Bernard said. "I can't believe it.
After the relay I could have sunk, but I told myself that after all these years
of hard work, I can't let myself go down. My legs were shaking at the start. I
was really tense, just like the other seven guys."
Sullivan was gracious after a race in which bravado is
everything.
"To bounce back from that relay takes a lot of guts and
he showed that today," the Aussie said. "Full credit to him. He swam a better
race and the better man won on the day."
With five golds and five world records already, Phelps
merely had to get by the semifinals of the 200 IM. No problem. He won his heat
and moved on to Friday with the second-best qualifying time, 1:57.70. Fellow
American and leading rival Ryan Lochte posted the top time of 1:57.69, ensuring
they'll be side by side for the final.
Lochte had a busy morning, also qualifying for the final
of the 200 backstroke. He advanced with the second-best time, 1:55.40, trailing
teammate Aaron Peirsol's 1:55.26.
Now, Lochte faces a daunting doubleheader: He'll go
against Peirsol, the guy with whom he shares the world record in the 200 back,
then come right back to race against medley record-holder Phelps, using all four
strokes.
"I just get ready for one race," Lochte said. "The most
important thing is being able to separate (the two events) and just move on.
I've trained for it. I'm used to it. The biggest part for me in the
psychological part."
Pieter van den Hoogenband called it a career. The
30-year-old Flying Dutchman announced his retirement immediately after a
fifth-place finish ruined his hopes of winning a third straight gold in the 100
free.
"Way too fast," said Van den Hoogenband, who won three
golds and seven medals overall in two previous trips to the Olympics. "It's a
new generation and it's now time to step aside. They did a great job. I'm from
the previous generation."
Liu was stunned by her triumph in the 200 fly, though
she brushed off questions about whether the Chinese held her out of major meets
so they could spring her on the world at Beijing.
Liu's time was more than a second below the previous
record of 2:05.40 set two years ago by Australia's Jess Schipper, who could only
manage a bronze against the two Chinese.
"I didn't expect that I could swim so fast," Liu said.
"I've only improved in the last year."
Kitajima lived up to his favorite's billing in the 200
breast, winning easily in 2:07.64 but coming up 0.13 short of his own world
record, set in June. With top rival Brendan Hansen not even in the field - he
shockingly failed to qualify for the event at the U.S. trials - Kitajima
finished a half-body length ahead of silver medalist Brenton Rickard of
Australia (2:08.88) to match his two breaststroke golds in Athens four years
ago. France's Hugues Duboscq claimed the bronze.
"I was so calm that I think I could have seen each face
in this venue," Kitajima said. "I enjoyed my race."
So did Lezak, the oldest man on the U.S. swim team at
32.
After chasing chased down Bernard in the relay to make
sure Phelps stayed on course for eight gold medals, Lezak added to his tally
with the first individual medal of his Olympic career.
Four years ago, Lezak made a grievous mistake in the
preliminaries of the 100 free. He tried to conserve his energy in the
preliminaries and wound up getting eliminated.
"It's been eating at me for a long time," the three-time
Olympian said. "So to go out there and accomplish a medal is really exciting. It
doesn't top the relay medal, but it's something I've been pushing for for four
years."\
(npr.org)