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Michael Phelps Celebrates in Vegas at The Insider
Our boy sure knows how to get around =]
3 years ago
I don’t know how anyone can help themselves from being enamored with this guy, especially when he’s around kids!
Olympic record breaker Phelps makes splash at Redwood City youth club - San Jose Mercury News
“Even more amazing, they couldn’t believe he was right there in the clubhouse, as if he were one of them, for 60 magical minutes, just another kid with very big dreams.”
3 years agoPhelps can even raise stock market morale
The answer that got the most laughter revolved around Mr. Phelps’s well-known habit of sleeping in. Did he mind that NBC requested that the swimming events take place in the morning?
“I don’t know why I keep getting that question,” the swimmer replied. “But I gotta tell you, these are the Olympics. If you can’t get out of bed and go swim, you shouldn’t be there.”
3 years agoObviously a bit of a hoax/exaggeration, but it would be funny nonetheless.
And here’s a better article about his little stint on entourage
3 years agoThe Phelps Phenomenon, Sending Everyone Into the Pool
By Preston Williams
Thursday, September 4, 2008; Page PG12
Entering the school year, is there a so-called minor high school sport with a higher profile than swimming? It seems as though any kid who ever got a whiff of chlorine or channel-surfed last month was roused in some way by Baltimore area native Michael Phelps winning an unprecedented eight Olympic gold medals.
It’s too bad that high school swimming isn’t a fall sport, at least coming out of Olympic years, particularly this one. Because if anecdotal evidence is any indication, pools this winter will be more populated as a result of the Phelps phenomenon and dotted with swimmers more committed than ever to shaving seconds off their times (and maybe more hair off their bodies).
“There’s always a boost in [participation] after Olympic years, especially in younger kids,” said Jamie Grimes, who coaches at Walter Johnson High School and at the Rockville-Montgomery Swim Club.
A boost in interest, too.
Exhibit A: Georgetown Prep senior All-Met Brady Fox was in a Ruby Tuesday restaurant at Lakeforest Mall in Gaithersburg last Thursday when a waiter spotted Fox’s T-shirt from the Olympic trials. The waiter started a conversation about Phelps’s accomplishments. “Whenever I’ve been wearing a swim shirt, I’ve had someone mention it to me,” Fox said. “It just shows that people did see what he did, and they do take what he did seriously.”
Exhibit B: Wilson sophomore Callie Fosburgh, a second-team All-Met, watched at least one race while excitedly chatting on the phone with friend Danielle Schulkin, a Whitman swimmer. “We were just screaming to each other,” said Fosburgh, who has been inundated with swimming talk from classmates. “I’ve had maybe 30 kids come up to me [and say], ‘Oh my gosh, Michael Phelps, Michael Phelps. Sometimes I wish I was swimming,’ ” Fosburgh said. “I say, ‘Great, join the team.’ ” Fosburgh would love to see a team sign-up sheet circulated now to take advantage of that enthusiasm.
Exhibit C: Just a half-hour before Varsity checked in with Evan Stiles, who coaches swim teams at Bishop O’Connell and the Arlington Aquatic Club, Stiles had fielded a call from an intrigued mother. The woman’s son, a summer-league swimmer but not a year-round competitor, had a wingspan three inches longer than his height. She thought that maybe the boy, with proper training, would thrive in the water. He’s 10 years old. They “saw what was going on and realized that he had a similar quality that Michael Phelps had,” said Stiles, who estimates that half of the 10 to 15 daily calls he has fielded recently have been spurred by the Olympics.
Exhibit D: Robinson senior All-Met Amanda Kendall said that college coaches have mentioned to her recently how more swimmers are showing up at tryouts. “How can you not want to possibly try to swim after watching something like that?” she said.
Phelps’s dominance and thrilling Olympic swimming finals during prime time have inspired a new generation of swimmers and provided reference points for coaches once swimming season starts. One thing they’ll point to is his masterful kick off the wall.
“Even the more advanced kids see that it really works,” Grimes said. “They hear it from a coach a thousand times a day, then they see it one time … [and] it’s a better visual.”
Another reference point that Georgetown Prep Coach Matt Mongelli will use is one that transcends swimming: French 4x100 freestyle team member Alain Bernard boasting that his team wanted to “smash” the Americans, a statement that unnecessarily provided extra motivation to the American relay.
Here’s the funny thing, though: Phelps’s unorthodox finish in the 100 butterfly — he misjudged and went into the wall on a half-stroke instead of a full stroke — prompted some youth coaches to grimace, because what he did was so technically unsound. Serbia’s Milo Cavic, the runner-up by .01 of a second, also had a poor finish.
“I’m sitting there watching, going, ‘Great, great,’ ” Grimes said. “We tell our kids never, ever go half-stroke, and Michael Phelps wins a gold medal doing it.”
Even those whose only similarity with Phelps is that they consume 12,000 calories a day might see swimming differently after watching the Olympics. Fox and others say their sport is often dismissed by athletes and sports fans. The hullabaloo over Phelps, with his world records and dramatic finishes, might help underscore just how amazing his eight-pack of medals was.
“No one is going to take a sport that practices in Speedos that seriously,” Fox said. “At least that’s what people say to me.”
Phelps to use $1 million bonus to start charity
3 years agoSwimming helped me to cope with family break-up
Michael Phelps, the greatest swimmer and Olympian of all time, has emphatically backed the evening Standard charter to secure the Olympic legacy. “I know how sport can transform the lives of ordinary young people,” he says.
“I was a kid from a broken home. I had attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and was told by my teacher that i would never amount to anything. Taking up swimming at the age of seven gave me a sense of focus that transformed my life, and I would love it if the 2012 Olympics inspired more young Londoners to take up competitive sport.
“The Standard’s idea of using the 2012 Olympics as a mobilising force to encourage better sporting facilities from the grassroots level upwards and which will introduce a whole new generation to sport is close to my heart and has my full support.”
Speaking as he passed through London on his way home to Baltimore, Phelps, 23, whose haul of eight golds in Beijing made him, with Jamaican sprinter, Usain Bolt, the megastar of the 2008 Olympics, says that over the next four years, he would like to do for swimming what Michael Jordan did for basketball.
“I want swimming to become more than a once-every-four-year sport. In america, I co-founded a ‘Swim with the Stars’ programme of swimming camps for children. I will be visiting London quite a bit in the lead-up to 2012 and I would be thrilled to get involved here in a similarly practical way.”
But when Phelps, who trains morning and afternoon for five hours every day of the year, is told that the capital has only one functioning indoor 50-metre Olympic-size swimming pool, he is flabbergasted. “Only one?” he asks. “Surely there is more than that?”
The reality is that with the crystal Palace-National Sports centre pool shut for repair until December 2009, the Gurnell leisure centre in ealing is the capital’s only Olympic-size all-weather resource. London Fields in Hackney also has a 50m lido, but it is an outdoor pool. Whereas Australia has 47 Olympic pools, England has just 15, although several new ones - including the aquatics centre in Stratford, the venue for the 2012 Games - are under construction.
But Phelps has this message for London’s aspiring young swimmers: “Although it helps to have an Olympic-size pool to train in like I did, you can make it work for you in any pool.”
Phelps says becoming a champion is primarily about attitude. “For me, there are two kinds of swimmers: people who love to win and people who don’t like to lose. I’m in the latter category. The guy who likes to win shrugs off a defeat and says ‘maybe next time’, but people who hate to lose work doubly hard to make sure they don’t lose again.”
When I meet Phelps, it is hard to believe he really is the fastest man in water on the planet. At 6ft 4in, he is slightly built and thin as an ironing board. It’s only when he rolls up his tracksuit top to reveal his hydrodynamic torso, all muscle and sinew, that you appreciate that he is a bionic swimming machine.
Sponsored by Visa, Omega and Speedo to the tune of £5 million a year, and expected to make £50 million in the next five years from additional sponsorship and appearance fees, Phelps is nevertheless a reluctant hero.
I ask him about a poignant scene after he won his second gold when he dashed into the stands to embrace his sister. You could sense what it meant to them.
“”I keep my private life to myself.”
It’s probably to protect whoever he might be seeing. I wouldn’t put anything past those Phelps Phanatics. They’re crazy.”