You are working on Staging1

Lochte’s Possible Final Olympic Race: Brutal Truths About Swimming

Charles Hartleya free-lance writer based in New Jersey, has written more than a thousand published sports articles. He earned Master’s degrees in Business Administration and Journalism. In addition, he was awarded his Bachelor’s degree from Wake Forest University where he majored in English and Communications.

It’s so rough, swimming.

It’s such a brutal thing.

Ryan Lochte, one of the greatest swimmers in history, competed last night in the 200 meter individual medley at the Olympic Games. Before the race it was plausible he could beat Michael Phelps. It didn’t turn out that way. Not even close.

He finished fifth.

Phelps won Gold. Again. What could have been possessed by Lochte was, yet again, snatched away by Phelps.

The tough truth is that Lochte wasn’t even close to winning a medal. It was an underwhelming performance. As talented as he is, he was beaten.

Of his many moments in his swimming career, it seems that this was one of the most disappointing. At age 32, he may never get another chance. Age beats us all down at some point.

The sport has no mercy. It doesn’t matter how many tens of thousands of hours of his life Lochte has spent in the pool toughing it out when his muscles have tightened up and he was inadvertently swallowing water and just wanting to quit the sport forever because he was sick of the repetitiveness and boredom. It doesn’t matter how many things he wanted to do but couldn’t because he had to go to swim practice or a meet. What matters is how he did last night with an Olympic Gold Medal at stake.

He didn’t come through. He didn’t swim his best race. It was sad to watch him finish fifth because we all know he’s capable of much better.

Since the race ended he may be wondering if he didn’t train hard or intelligently enough. He may question whether his turn from the butterfly to the backstroke was too slow, or his breaststroke kick wasn’t fast enough, or whether he should have taken the lead from the start and made the others chase him down.

The race may eat at him for the next several days, weeks, and years. Last night’s swim was not the way he wanted his spectacular career to end if, in fact, he retires. He said last night he might not but it is certainly plausible he will.

If he didn’t win the Gold Medal, we assumed he would get at least a Silver or Bronze Medal based on his semi-final qualifying times, the Silver Medal at the London Olympics, and his reputation as probably the second best IM swimmer in the world over the past several years.

But no, not this time, no medal.

Fifth place. Who likes to finish in fifth place?

Even Ryan Lochte, a super talented swimmer, was beaten. The sport does it to everyone. Yes, that includes Michael Phelps, the guy who almost never loses. He lost to Lochte in the 400 IM in London, finishing fourth. At those same London Olympics he lost to Chad Le Clos in the 200 meter butterfly.

This is a sport so often about how to deal with losing, not being first, and not swimming your best time. It’s so often about pure pain and loneliness.

With all this in mind, the swimming world is now wondering what is on Ryan Lochte’s mind? What will he do with the rest of his life? Will he ever compete in a swimming race again? Will he walk away from the sport and do something completely different? Skateboarding? Acting? Modeling?

Should Lochte make one more run at those Games? It’s a question only he can answer. If he pursues this, it would mean several thousand more hours in the pool training and some 1,460 days of waiting.

Is it time to move on?

When you stop doing a sport at which you have been so successful, there is a risk of losing your self-identity. In Ryan’s case, the questions could be: What else am I besides a swimmer? What else interests me? Do I have any idea what I want to do with the rest of my life?

I’ve been a swimming star for my entire life. People have been watching me and complimenting me about my swimming speed since I was eight years old. Now what? If I stop swimming, will the crowds still be cheering for me? How will my life change if I no longer swim competitively? Will I still be a star? Will people still notice me? Or will they ignore me and forget about me?

What else am I passionate about? Is there something else in life as fulfilling and meaningful as swimming? What have all these years of swimming really meant to me? So far has it all been worth it, a pile of Olympic Medals? How did I finish fifth in the IM when I am the world record holder?

Why did I have to be a great swimmer during the same era as Michael Phelps, who is by far the best swimmer ever? How many more medals would I would have won if Michael never swam? If not for him, would I be the greatest swimmer ever?

He may have been. But he isn’t and never will be. Maybe he will take one more shot at the Olympics. Maybe he won’t. Whatever he decides, it will be a tough decision. We should all hope he makes the best decision for himself because he is one tough dude, one of the best swimmers who has ever lived.

 

This article courtesy of Charles Hartley

In This Story

57
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

57 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jim
8 years ago

So is this article based on anything Lochte said, or is it just blind conjecture and rumor mongering?

Charles Hartley
Reply to  Jim
8 years ago

mostly blind conjecture

Silver Fox
8 years ago

This Olympics has been a display to the world that despite individual accomplishments of Ledecky, Manuel, & Phelps, there remains a team sport aspect where you have to rely on your teammates at any moment.

Lochte’s gold in the 4×200 was earned by him & three others. Phelps is indebted to him for his record accomplishment every bit as much as to Lezak for the gold or Conner for the swim cap. Truth is you are only as strong as your weakest link which was Golden.

This Olympics has also shown to the world an amazing lack of sportsmanship by both Lilly King &Chad LeClos.

Ruben Arevalo Galindo
8 years ago

I think it was because he can’t cheat again doing dolphing kick in breaststroke, like he did four years ago when he “get” olympic record.

Icy Hot
8 years ago

He and Thiago died hard on the second half of breaststroke and freestyle leg. Phelps felt good all the way through, beast! I really wanted all three of them to medal together as the IM trio

Carl millholland
8 years ago

There’s always Masters Swimming, which people do just for the love of the sport.

Dr.x
8 years ago

Phelps > lochte > Spitz

Greatness is measured by
Consistency and excellence according to many
Phelps scores 10 on 10 on both..
Lochte score 9 and 9
Spitz 7 and 10

Or it maybe just me..!

SwimmerFoxJet
Reply to  Dr.x
8 years ago

Spitz broke 35 World Records. Just saying. He retired at 22 years old. If Spitz wasn’t ill in 1976 and had goggles I think he could have equaled 7 golds.

Swimmomma
8 years ago

He had goggle issues. He won’t say it though…no excuses- he’s a pro. Watch him before, they weren’t right even when he was on the block.

EC Does it
8 years ago

It was a disappointing race for Lochte, no doubt on that. Only he knows what happened in that water and if he wishes to share it with the rest of us, that’s up to him. Whether he stops swimming or takes time off and trains again, will also be his decision. What that 2IM race can not do is define who Lochte is as a person. The guy has multiple Olympic and World championships and something that Phelps – regardless of his prodigious swimming talent- does not have, a college degree (yes, this reply is about education). Unlike Phelps, Lochte went to college, graduated, while swimming all 4-years. As our commentators often note, many of our Olympians took a year… Read more »

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, …

Read More »