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First a Shark, Now McGregor? Phelps Tweets About Racing the UFC Champ

In one of those “is it April Fools Day?” moments, Michael Phelps tweeted earlier today, playfully (or not?) suggesting that he and UFC Lightweight Champion Conor McGregor take it to the pool and race. Phelps didn’t actually mention a pool, or water of any kind, though he did photoshop a cap and goggles onto a photo of McGregor.

Both Phelps and McGregor have been in primetime this summer, with Phelps having raced a (hologram) shark and losing (sad) during Shark Week and McGregor taking on boxer Floyd Mayweather in a professional boxing match and losing (expected).

Not surprisingly, Phelps’s taunting set Twitter ablaze, and the tweet itself has accrued more than 25,000 RT’s and 60,000 favorites as of this post’s publication (11:40pm central time).

This wasn’t the only story that has put Phelps in headlines, as he and his wife Nicole Johnson today announced that Johnson is pregnant with baby number 2.

Phelps has already raced a celebrity before, as he and former NBA player Shaquille O’Neal had a televised race on O’Neal’s show “Shaq Vs” in 2009. Phelps actually taunted O’Neal about racing him again earlier this month:

Don’t go screaming “Phelps 2020!” though, as he has another child on the way and there’s no indication that he’s ever returning to the sport of swimming competitively again, but we could see him racing some public figures in the future. After all, he has something to prove after losing to a (hologram) shark.

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sven
7 years ago

I would rather see Phelps try to fight McGregor. Did not care at all about May/Pac or Mayweather/McGregor, but I might actually pay to see someone fight Phelps.

On that note, I’m tired of watching people compete at things they’re good at. Give me a show where every episode is them taking athletes way out of their comfort zone. Swimmers fighting, powerlifters figure skating, curlers playing full-contact football, etc. Have a big ol’ wheel that decides the sport, make a whole thing of it, it’ll be great.

DLswim
Reply to  sven
7 years ago

This comment reminds me of an episode of “The Big Bang Theory” where Sheldon Cooper and Barry Kripke have to duke it out and they decide to do something that they are both bad at, namely, sports (specifically, basketball).

Becky D
Reply to  Braden Keith
7 years ago

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superstars_(US_Version)
Wow. I feel old.

Obstacle Number 2
7 years ago

Please stop making a mockery of swimming! Please!

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Obstacle Number 2
7 years ago

thats pretty true as well

CROOKED HILLARY
Reply to  Obstacle Number 2
7 years ago

Wouldn’t you put this in the same class as a celebrity golf tournament or basketball game? It’s not like this would be an unprecedented event. When he raced Shaq did it cause harm to swimming?

Murica
Reply to  Obstacle Number 2
7 years ago

Good for swimming for public to see bad swimmers. Shows how hard it really is

Uberfan
7 years ago

Race a simulated Mcregor

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Braden Keith
7 years ago

lol lovely

crooked donald
7 years ago

MP — how ’bout a donation to the those displaced in the Houston swimming community? Contact SwimSwam.

Swimmer?
Reply to  crooked donald
7 years ago

How do you know he hasn’t donated already?

crooked donald
Reply to  Swimmer?
7 years ago

You’re right. It was in the same batch with DJTs.

CROOKED HILLARY
Reply to  crooked donald
7 years ago

What business is it of yours if he donates? How about you go to Houston and help out with the relief efforts?

G.I.N.A
Reply to  CROOKED HILLARY
7 years ago

I remember one of those 1980s African disasters & Americans donated high heels . Now Flotus is criticised for wearing high heels (across the WH lawn ) Outrage ! At this very moment Housewives of Houston are scouring the charity bins for those stilletos .

Just because you are a flood victim does not mean you lose your shoe aspirations .

Justin Thompson
Reply to  crooked donald
7 years ago

Whatever you do, don’t contact the Clinton Foundation. That didn’t go so well with Haiti.

crooked donald
7 years ago

Move on from the gimmicks. Start coaching.

Harry Dresden
Reply to  crooked donald
7 years ago

Lol. I love Phelps and always have but he would make a terrible coach

crooked donald
Reply to  Harry Dresden
7 years ago

What else is he going to do then?

Harry Dresden
Reply to  crooked donald
7 years ago

Blow money and bang his model wife while reflecting on the fact that he’s the greatest swimmer of all time? Sounds like an awesome life to me.

Bigly
Reply to  Harry Dresden
7 years ago

Until he ends up as a greeter at some club when he’s 60. Love the foresight, the contributions, and the giving back. SMH.

CROOKED HILLARY
Reply to  Bigly
7 years ago

He’ll be fine. His marketability will live on as long as he holds the records for most golds in an Olympic games and overall. I can tell you that coaching salary isn’t going to prevent him from being a greeter.

sven
Reply to  Harry Dresden
7 years ago

Agreed. Athletes with that level of natural talent in their sport rarely get anywhere near the same level of coaching ability. They tend to have trouble relating things to kids for whom it isn’t just going to click. Sergio is a notable exception. Pablo is doing okay, but Nebraska isn’t exactly a power player.

Phelps does seem like a pretty analytical guy with decent communication skills, so maybe he’s able to break down techniques and movements well for swimmers, but there’s also a good chance that he gets frustrated because swimmers don’t get things that seem very intuitive to him.

crooked donald
Reply to  sven
7 years ago

I wouldn’t say “rarely,” because few have actually tried it as a legit career. There are several world’s best or Olympic medalists (or in Demont’s case, should’ve been) who are/have been pretty brilliant coaches — if not legends: George Breen, Jim Councilman, Jack Nelson, Buddy Baarcke, Mitch Ivey (with an asterisk), Anthony Nesty, Sergio (as you mentioned), The Rocket, Tom Jager, Matt Vogel, Gary Hall, Sr., Mike Bottom, Jeremy Linn, and now Aaron Peirsol and Brendan Hansen. Larry Bird, Larry Brown, Doug Collins all were great basketball coaches. Plenty of examples in track and field, hockey, gymnastics, diving.

sven
Reply to  crooked donald
7 years ago

I’m not talking about former top swimmers who just make a living coaching. That’s a list of swimmers who have coached, yes, but how many of them have made serious contributions to the field of coaching that are anywhere near their accomplishments in swimming? The easy targets from your list would be Peirsol and Hansen, as I’m sure they’re good coaches but I think it’s too early to really tell what impact they’ve made. I didn’t realize Mike Bottom qualified for the 1980 Olympics, that’s very cool and I’ll admit he’s definitely one of the greats. Rick Demont too. I’m glad to hear that Tom Jager has a head coaching gig, but being a coach at a school that got… Read more »

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  crooked donald
7 years ago

exactly my thoughts . well done

Swimmer?
7 years ago

Lol, once he races, he’ll come out of retirement

H1H2
7 years ago

Nah, not swimming again. Take him on in the Octagon, Phelps.

NotASwimmer
Reply to  H1H2
7 years ago

How about a MMA fight in a caged pool the size and shape of a UFC octagon?

NickB
Reply to  NotASwimmer
7 years ago

Congratulations. You’ve invented water polo.

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, …

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