You are working on Staging1

Bowe Becker Swims First Races Since August in Minnesota Tri Meet

Braden Keith
by Braden Keith 10

February 04th, 2022 News

U.S. OlympianĀ Bowe Becker swam his first races on U.S. soil since arriving home from Tokyo last summer over the weekend.

The 24-year old raced last weekend during Minnesota’s triple dual meet against Purdue and Northwestern.

He swam 19.58 in the 50 yard free and 43.10 in the 100 yard free in exhibition competition while wearing a Mizuno tech suit.

Those times are good by his standards – in his last season of college swimming, at an early-February tri meet for the Gophers he swam 19.83 and 43.07 in the 50 and 100 free. Two months later, he placed 4th in the 50 and 2nd in the 100 free at the NCAA Championships.

Becker is currently serving as a volunteer assistant coach at Minnesota. He says he’s been working as a mentor for the sprint group, and is looking forward to traveling to the Big Ten Championships with the team.

At the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games, Becker swam only on the finals relay, where he split 47.44. That was the third-fastest split by an American en route to a gold medal. It also tied for the 6th-best split in the entire field.

He swam one meet for the Tokyo Frog ings during the ISL season in the opening weekend.

Becker told SwimSwam that after the Tokyo Olympic Games, he took about 2 months off for everything before resuming some casual lap swimming. He says he really didn’t start seriously training until after Christmas.

Becker said he has been dealing with a few “minor injuries,” so he’s only been back in the weight room for about 2 weeks.

“I’m trying to get back into it and stay positive with all of the cancellations,” Becker said, referencing recent announcements that the 2022 World Championships are being pushed to 2023, and that the March Pro Swim Series meet has been canceled.

Becker was an unlikely gold medalist: at the beginning of 2021, he was waiting tables at The Lodge in Reno, Nevada. He retired from elite swimming in 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic hit, leaving his training spot at Auburn to move home to Nevada. In an interview with Sports Illustrated, he cited burnout and was out of the water for 6 months.

Less than a year after returning to training, he stood atop an Olympic podium.

In This Story

10
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

10 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Becky D
2 years ago

Iowa? Purdue? Big 10 schools are not completely interchangable.

Sam B
2 years ago

“Becker was an unlikely gold medalist” – likelihood increased as he got closer to the meet

matt
Reply to  Sam B
2 years ago

hes one of those guys that pop off when it counts

Sam B
Reply to  matt
2 years ago

Kelly? šŸ™‚

SigmaAlphaBetaMale
2 years ago

mofo literally carried usa’s 4 x 100 team to gold

Big Mac #1
2 years ago

Strangly enough, i was just thinking about him

Mr Piano
Reply to  Big Mac #1
2 years ago

Strangely enough, Iā€™m eating a Big Mac right now.

the deep end
Reply to  Mr Piano
2 years ago

Strangely enough, I’m playing Mr Piano Man right now.

PFA
Reply to  the deep end
2 years ago

Strangely enough, I just got out of the pool from the deep end for practice

Big Mac #1
Reply to  Mr Piano
2 years ago

Wait, your eating Maggie MacNeil right now? Technically human consumption by pianos is not illegal but it sure is strange.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, ā€¦

Read More »