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- <text id=92TT1798>
- <title>
- Aug. 10, 1992: Swimming:An End to Domination
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 10, 1992 The Doomsday Plan
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- OLYMPICS, Page 54
- 1992 SUMMER GAMES
- SWIMMING: An End to Domination
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Americans feel the ripples of change as a new wave of swimmers
- make their marks in the pool
- </p>
- <p>By Margot Hornblower/Barcelona
- </p>
- <p> Catch those Stars and Stripes fluttering through the
- crowd. Listen for the splash. Blink into the sun and--whoops!
- In 22 seconds the race is over. But when the bubbles clear, it
- is not The Star Spangled Banner playing over the Bernat
- Picornell Pool but the strains of another anthem. And the man
- who lays claim to being the new Johnny Weissmuller, the new Mark
- Spitz, the new Matt Biondi, is a fellow from Volgograd named
- Popov, winner of the 50-m free and the fastest swimmer of the
- XXVth Olympiad.
- </p>
- <p> In the dizzying array of backstroke, breaststroke,
- butterfly, freestyle--62 Olympic races in all--the
- long-dominant Americans especially expected to excel in the
- individual free sprints, the glamour events, as if they were a
- birthright. The favorite: Biondi, the 1988 five-gold champion
- who earns six figures posing for Ray Ban sunglasses and drinking
- Evian water. And should the California torpedo fail, there would
- be ample backup on the U.S. team, including Tom Jager, the 1988
- silver medalist who earns a living swimming against Biondi in
- exhibition races. Los tiburones yanqui--the Yankee sharks--the Spanish sportswriters dubbed them.
- </p>
- <p> But as the strains of the Russian anthem faded, veterans
- Biondi with a silver medal and Jager with a bronze found
- themselves looking up at the 6-ft. 6-in., 192-lb. frame of
- Alexander Popov, a fresh-faced 20-year-old who was virtually
- unknown in swimming circles until last year. Popov's gold in the
- 50-m race followed his victory two days earlier in the 100-m
- freestyle, where Biondi holds the world record. At the postrace
- press conference, Popov was asked how it was possible to succeed
- amid the chaos of the former Soviet Union. "We were preparing
- in the worst conditions ever," agreed the curly-locked
- machinist's son. "But that did not do us any harm. On the
- contrary, it made us more aggressive." With a flash of bravado,
- he added, "If the American team wants to win more medals, we say
- to them, `Come and train in Russia!'"
- </p>
- <p> With the cold war allegedly over, U.S. Olympic officials
- tried to be magnanimous, all the while pointing out that the
- Unified Team, led by their forceful trainer Gennadi Turetsky,
- had profited handsomely from a wealth of new data published by
- American sports institutions. "Our team is doing as well as
- expected," said the U.S. head coach, Dennis Pursley. "But the
- days when one nation can dominate the world of swimming are
- past." Still, with 11 of 31 gold medals, the U.S. firmly
- outdistanced its closest competitors. The Unified Team captured
- six, Hungary five and China four. The conspicuous loser was
- united Germany, with only one gold. In 1988 the
- steroid-dependent East German women had sacked 10 golds, but
- that was before new doping controls.
- </p>
- <p> If Biondi, 27, lost his Tarzan title to Popov, he
- nonetheless collected gold in a 4 X 100-m freestyle relay. That
- brought his career medal total to 11, tying him with the
- legendary Spitz. Meanwhile, the world's most famous woman
- swimmer, American Janet Evans, collected a silver in the 400-m
- freestyle, a race she was expected to win. Grinning bravely, she
- told the press, "It's not the end of the world: the sun will
- come up tomorrow." But within moments, the 1988 triple-gilded
- champion was in tears. ``You don't understand the pressure
- that's placed on athletes here," she said. "I gave it everything
- I had." Two days later, however, the sun did come up for her as
- she roared to gold in the 800-m free. "Four years is a long time
- to train six hours a day," she reminisced. "The bad times make
- the good times feel so good."
- </p>
- <p> Overall, the much touted U.S. women's team bagged five
- gold medals, fewer than expected. Strong competition came from
- Hungarian Krisztina Egerszegi, a coquettish 17-year-old whose
- iron discipline--as well as her powerful backstroke and
- individual medley races--won her three golds. Her long,
- blue-polished nails helped her "grab the water," she said. Two
- 14-year-old sensations, Japanese gold-medal breaststroker Kyoko
- Iwasaki and German silver and bronze freestyler Franziska Van
- Almsick showed mettle that belied their shy manners. The Chinese
- women also mounted a powerful challenge, with Li Linh, a
- 20-year-old Jiangsu native, setting a new world record in the
- 200-m individual medley. Noticeably huskier than their Western
- or Japanese counterparts, the Chinese were repeatedly forced to
- deny doping rumors, many of them spread by U.S. officials.
- Midstream, in response to the grousing, authorities changed the
- random testing pattern to include each winner.
- </p>
- <p> No longer overshadowed by the charismatic Biondi, with his
- Greek-god looks and unbeatable speed, other members of the U.S.
- men's team swept to victory with a swagger. Hopping, skipping
- and punching the air with his fist, Nelson Diebel made no
- effort to restrain his delight at winning the 100-m
- breaststroke. His shaved head wrapped in a Stars-and-Stripes
- scarf, the Princeton University undergrad cried, "It's like a
- drug! It's the best high you could ever get!" Diebel should
- know. Between ages 12 and 16 he was a heavy drinker and
- marijuana smoker; then he was rescued by a disciplinarian
- swimming coach. "I was hyper and self-destructive," Diebel said.
- "Swimming turned my life around."
- </p>
- <p> Three remarkable comebacks also buoyed up the U.S. team.
- Pablo Morales, a 1984 silver medalist, had retired after failing
- to make the 1988 Olympic team. Enrolled in law school, he
- missed the thrill of competition. About a year ago, he began
- training again and at 27 won his first gold in the 100-m
- butterfly. "It was my time at last," he said, "a dream come
- true." The drive to recover from past disappointment also fired
- up Mike Barrowman, who placed fourth in the Seoul 200-m
- breaststroke. Last week he captured the gold, breaking his own
- world record. As for Melvin Stewart, who came in fifth in the
- 1988 Olympic 200-m butterfly, defeat "haunted me," he said,
- choking up at a press conference. "I had nightmares." Last week,
- after four hard years of training, he finally won the Olympic
- title.
- </p>
- <p> Now that its quadrennial moment of glory has passed,
- swimming will fade to the back of the sports section. Biondi has
- plans to learn to ride a horse and find a job that will keep him
- outdoors. Jager is thinking of starting a fence-building company
- out of his New Mexico home. And Popov is free to go back to
- playing his beloved Gameboy. Will Olympic gold change his life?
- "I can't say, to be honest," he confesses. "The political
- situation of our country is such that no one knows what will
- happen next. All we can do is continue to live our life as
- sportsmen." And train on for the also changing Olympic swimming
- meet.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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