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September 19, 2024
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U.S. swimmers can’t take gold, or Caeleb Dressel, for granted anymore


NANTERRE, France — As Caeleb Dressel flung himself from the starting blocks Saturday at Paris La Défense Arena at the end of the first finals session of the Paris Olympics swim meet, Team USA was still without a gold medal. There are few sure things anymore for the American swimmers in what feels like a transitional era for this powerhouse program, but Dressel with a nearly two-second lead in the anchor leg of the men’s 4×100-meter freestyle relay is still one of them.

There is a reason the U.S. swim team considers Dressel its ultimate firewall against the encroaching tide of parity coming from Australia and other rivals, why the Americans would take 90 percent of Dressel’s best over 100 percent of someone else, why they chose him over some faster, younger teammates — the ones who built him that lead Saturday night — for the crucial anchor leg.

When Dressel, 27, touched the wall more than a second clear of the Australian to his right, Team USA had that first gold medal. Dressel and the three youngsters — Jack Alexy (21), Chris Guiliano (21) and Hunter Armstrong (23) — finished in 3:09.28, safely ahead of the runner-up Aussies (3:10.35) and the bronze medalists from Italy (3:10.70).

“They made my job easy,” Dressel said.

For Dressel, the victory extended one of the more remarkable runs in recent swimming history: He remains unbeaten in Olympic finals. Eight times to the starting blocks, eight gold medals. Though he isn’t the unbeatable force he was in Tokyo, where he won five gold medals and cemented his status as the premier male swimmer in the world, he remains an elite racer whose ability to get his hand to the wall is still world-class.

“Relays are a little more special, to be honest. It takes me back to my first gold,” Dressel said, recalling his two relay wins at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games. “It really doesn’t get old. It’s really special standing on the podium with these guys.”

The crowd that filed into La Défense Arena, a 30,000-seat indoor stadium that is home to the Racing 92 rugby team, cheered on the Americans with only slightly less energy and volume than it did the French swimmers in the field. After two renditions of “Advance Australia Fair” — the Aussie national anthem — finally the last medal ceremony of the night brought “The Star-Spangled Banner.” On the top step of the podium, Armstrong was in tears as the anthem rang out.

“I will give my entire body and soul up for these boys,” Armstrong, who swam the third leg, said of the emotions behind his ­46.75-second split, the fastest of the four Americans. “I knew I had to give Caeleb everything I had, so I’m glad I was able to get my job done.”

If Dressel’s presence at the end of that relay was a comfort to his three teammates, that relay’s presence at the end of an otherwise unfavorable race card on opening night was a comfort to the entire team. While the victory prevented a gold medal shutout, the Americans already trail their rivals from Down Under in the gold medal count (two to one) and the overall count (four to three).

Earlier on Saturday night, Australian middle-distance star Ariarne Titmus turned a potential race-of-the-century matchup against American distance legend Katie Ledecky and Canadian teenager Summer McIntosh into a rout, touching the wall in 3:57.49, nearly a second faster than silver medalist McIntosh (3:58.37) and more than three seconds clear of Ledecky (4:00.86). For Ledecky, the bronze medal was the first of her Olympic career, to go with seven golds and three silvers, and leaves her one medal shy of matching three others for the most by a female swimmer in history.

You need to go back to 1988 — when it amassed eight gold medals and 18 overall, compared with 11 and 28 for East Germany — to find the last time Team USA failed to finish atop the medal table in swimming. But Australia, in particular, has been closing fast and outpaced the Americans in golds a year ago at the world championships in Fukuoka, Japan — a meet in which, notably, Dressel did not swim, having recently taken an eight-month mental health break from the sport.

When it comes to the women’s side of the sport, the Australians have already surpassed Team USA for world supremacy, based on the results from the Tokyo Olympics as well as the 2023 world championships — both of which saw the Aussies double the Americans’ gold medal hauls.

And on Saturday, their women’s 4×100 free relay of Mollie O’Callaghan, Shayna Jack, Emma McKeon and Meg Harris (3:28.92) torched the silver medal-winning American quartet of Kate Douglass, Gretchen Walsh, Torri Huske and Simone Manuel (3:30.20). Walsh and Huske, however, have Team USA pointed toward a potential gold-silver sweep of the 100-meter butterfly Sunday, having finished 1-2 in Saturday’s semifinals.

Like Dressel, Manuel, 27, has been absent from the international scene in recent years, having been forced into an extended break by a bout of overtraining syndrome. Like Dressel, she poured an infinite amount of emotion and energy into trying to will herself back into form. And like Dressel, she viewed her anchor leg as a mission she once thought she might never be entrusted to take again.

“It just feels good to be back here, honestly,” Manuel said. “I didn’t know if I would ever be performing at this level again, and so just to have the full-circle moment of being on this relay again from 2021 to now but in a happier and healthier place, I just think is really special. So I’m really excited I got to get my first Paris medal with these women.”

Like Dressel and Ledecky, Manuel represents a link to the program’s glory years. All three earned gold at Rio in 2016, the last Olympics of Michael Phelps, when the Americans could still be counted upon to dominate the medal table — that year’s haul was 16 golds and 33 overall, compared with three and 10 for second-place Australia — and the pipeline of talent seemed endless.

To get the Americans back to that point, if it’s even possible anymore, is going to take more than the efforts of their veterans. The remaining eight days of this meet will show whether the younger group has the wherewithal to hold off Australia and the rest of the world for another generation.



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