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發表於 2004-8-14 21:04:15
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Phelps lands spot on 400 free relay team
Associated Press
ATHENS, Greece -- Michael Phelps made his first day in the Olympic pool look easy.
He began his quest to break Mark Spitz's record of seven Olympic gold medals as the fastest swimmer in morning preliminaries for the 400-meter individual medley with a time of 4 minutes, 13.29 seconds -- well off his world record of 4:08.41.
He was to return Saturday night for the eight-man final as the overwhelming favorite to win his first gold medal of the Athens Games. American swimmers have finished 1-2 in the event at the last two Olympics.
"I'm glad the meet is finally here,'' Phelps said. "I felt comfortable and in control. I'm not worried about time. I just want to get my hand on the wall first.''
Ian Thorpe, the superstar of the Sydney Games, settled for being the second-fastest qualifier behind Australian teammate Grant Hackett in the 400 freestyle.
"I'm pretty confident,'' Thorpe said. "It was a quality swim for both me and Grant.''
Hackett finished in 3:46.36. Thorpe, the world record holder, was next in 3:46.55.
"It's always nice to be together,'' Hackett said. "You want to race the best in the field. You want to be right next to him.''
Four-time Olympian Jenny Thompson advanced in the 100 butterfly, but the Americans suffered a disappointment when 15-year-old Katie Hoff got knocked out of the 400 individual medley. Thompson is seeking her first individual Olympic gold medal; all of her eight golds have been in relays.
Thorpe fell off the starting blocks and was disqualified at the Australian trials in March, but teammate Craig Stevens gave up his berth in the 400 free so Thorpe could defend his Olympic title.
This time, he didn't fall in, but Thorpe was one of the slowest swimmers off the blocks.
"I was trying to be last off the blocks this morning, so I'll be first off the blocks tonight,'' he said, jokingly.
On the deck, though, Thorpe was all business. He walked out barefoot wearing a full black body suit, with his cap and goggles already on. Most swimmers remove layers of clothing, jackets and shoes in the moments before a race.
Larsen Jensen of Bakersfield, Calif., chased Thorpe to the wall in their heat and was third quickest in 3:46.90. Massimiliano Rosolino of Italy, the 2000 silver medalist, also made the eight-man evening final in 3:47.72. Klete Keller of Phoenix, the bronze medalist four years ago, was fifth in 3:47.77.
Rachel Komisarz of Louisville, Ky., was eighth in 59.38. The top 16 women qualified.
Thompson, the most decorated female U.S. Olympian, will get a chance to win her record-tying ninth in the 400 freestyle relay final Saturday night.
The American coaches saved Thompson for the night swim, even though she finished fifth in the 100 free at the U.S. trials, which determines the pool of relay swimmers.
The Australian team of Alice Mills, Lisbeth Lenton, Sarah Ryan and Jodie Henry qualified first in 3:38.26. Americans Amanda Weir, Colleen Lanne, Lindsay Benko and Maritza Correia were second in 3:39.46.
Petria Thomas of Australia led the way in the 100 fly, qualifying in 54.47 seconds. Otylia Jedrzejczak of Poland was second in 57.84.
Inge de Bruijn of the Netherlands, the 30-year-old defending Olympic champion, was third in 58.47. Martina Moracova of Slovakia, the 2000 silver medalist, was fourth in 58.48.
"We wanted to do whatever it took to beat Thomas, but it didn't happen,'' said Paul Bergen, De Bruijn's coach.
Phelps is nearly four seconds faster than anyone else in the world this year. The 19-year-old from Baltimore lowered his own world record at last month's U.S. trials.
He won his heat by three body lengths over teammate Erik Vendt of North Easton, Mass., who qualified sixth for the final in 4:16.68.
Phelps wiped off the starting block with a USA towel, then stripped down to his jammer suit that ended just above his knees. He removed the large headphones that covered his ears and climbed atop the block.
Bob Bowman, his coach, said Phelps told him he could go much faster in the final.
Laszlo Cseh of Hungary was second quickest in 4:14.26 and Alessio Boggiatto of Italy was third in 4:15.76. Greek fans cheered loudly for countryman Ioannis Kokkodis, who made the final in fifth place.
As expected, the men's 100 breaststroke will be a showdown between Kosuke Kitajima of Japan and Brendan Hansen of Havertown, Penn. Kitajima, who lost his world record to Hansen last month, advanced to the evening semifinal in an Olympic record time of 1:00.03.
Hansen, whose world mark is 59.30, was second quickest in 1:00.25. Mark Gangloff of Akron, Ohio, was third in 1:00.81. Roman Sludnov of Russia, the 2000 bronze medalist, was 10th among 16 swimmers who advanced.
The Greeks were on their feet chanting when Spyridon Gianniotis qualified for the 400 free final. Their revelry broke out again after Vasiliki Angelopoulou qualified in the women's 400 individual medley.
Defending Olympic champion Yana Klochkova was the top qualifier for the evening final in the 400 IM. The world record holder finished in 4:38.36. Kaitlin Sandeno of Lake Forest, Calif., was second in 4:40.21.
Katie Hoff, the 15-year-old who swims at the same North Baltimore club as Phelps, failed to make the final and vomited after her heat. She was 17th in 4:47.49 after winning the event at the U.S. trials last month.
There were pockets of empty seats at the stadium on the first day of competition. Swimmers and fans contended with a searing sun that pushed temperatures to 88 degrees at the 10 a.m. start of preliminaries |
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