2004 Olympics: Swimming and Diving |
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Finishing kick: U.S. men set world record in medley relay
08:42 PM CDT on Saturday, August 21, 2004
ATHENS, Greece – Four guys enduring tough meets concluded their Olympics
with an uplifting race Saturday.
The United States' Aaron Peirsol, Brendan Hansen, Ian Crocker and Jason
Lezak shattered their world record in winning the 4x100-meter medley
relay, each swimming a faster leg than he did in setting the old mark at
last summer's world championships.
Their time of 3 minutes, 30.68 seconds was almost a second better than
the previous record and nearly three seconds ahead of runner-up Germany.
A second world record fell in the relay, as Peirsol's leadoff leg broke
Lenny Krayzelburg's mark for the 100 backstroke.
"I can't tell you enough what a note this is to end on for the team,"
said Hansen, who joined fellow Texas-exes Peirsol and Crocker on the
relay.
Hansen, the world record holder in both breaststroke events, had settled
for silver in the 100 and bronze in the 200. Lezak entered the 100
freestyle as the top seed but failed to reach the semifinals, then
finished fifth in the 50.
Peirsol swept both backstroke events, as he was favored to do, though he
was briefly disqualified after winning the 200. He also created a stir
by accusing Japan's Kosuke Kitajima of using an illegal kick in beating
Hansen in the 100 breaststroke.
Crocker swam a poor leadoff leg in the 4x100 freestyle relay, and the
U.S. team couldn't fully recover and finished third. He didn't qualify
for the semifinals of the 100 freestyle, then lost a big lead to Michael
Phelps in the 100 butterfly to miss gold by .04 seconds.
That result put Phelps in the medley relay final, but he relinquished
his spot to Crocker on Friday.
"I felt the relay was a gift too large to accept. When you break it down
black and white, he beat me, and that's the way it is," said Crocker,
the world record holder in the 100 butterfly. "But when you start to get
down to the nitty-gritty of it, talking about relay experience and relay
takeoffs, it gets closer and closer."
Phelps still won a relay gold because he swam in the preliminaries. That
brought his medal total to eight, with six golds. He tied Soviet gymnast
Aleksandr Dityatin's 1980 record for most medals in a Summer Olympics.
"I've said in the past I want to become the first Michael Phelps and do
something that's never been done before," Phelps said.
He sat in the front row of the stands, waving an American flag and
pounding on the wall as his teammates stretched their lead wider and
wider.
Phelps and Crocker embraced after the medal ceremony, which includes
only the four finalists.
"He said congratulations, and I said thank you," Crocker said.
"It just seemed so many emotions were being exchanged through that hug,"
Phelps said. "It was very exciting. I felt like I was a part of that
race."
E-mail
rcohen@dallasnews.com
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