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    28
    Aug
    2012
    7:16am, EDT

    Olympic medalists beginning to rake in gold

    Slideshow: The most-marketable Olympians

    Getty Images

    For many stars of the games, it's time to temporarily switch attention away from the business of winning to the business of making money.

    Launch slideshow

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    Olympic stars who sparkled in London are raking in millions in an unusually active endorsement season, reaping the benefits as Americans show a hunger for heroes after five years of tough economic news.

    Sponsors appear to be paying extra this post-Olympic season compared to years past to sign golden names, such as gymnast Gabby Douglas, say endorsement experts, including Sheryl Shade, Douglas’ agent.

    “I think the deals are larger coming out of the 2012 Olympics,” said Shade, whose firm also has represented Olympic gymnasts Shawn Johnson and Shannon Miller. “Kids need someone to look up to and, let's face it, adults need that as well right now. We do need heroes.”

    The Olympic afterglow is reminiscent of the patriotic pride that flared following the 1980 gold medal win by the vastly overmatched U.S. men's hockey team. Americans dominated the London games with 104 medals including 46 gold, far more than China, the closest rival team.

    Quantifying the wave of endorsement deals is difficult without viewing and tallying each contract. But consider the reported pact Douglas recently signed with Kellogg’s, said to be worth $1 million to $3 million, and estimates that break-out swimming sensation Missy Franklin could have made $2.5 million a year had she not opted to eschew endorsements to maintain her eligibility for college sports.

    Related: Gabby's gold worth millions in endorsements

    Luke Macgregor / Reuters

    Gymnast Gabrielle Douglas is expected to earn millions in endorsement deals.

    “The desire for heroes – in the U.S. anyway – is as strong as it’s been in years,” said John A. Davis, author of “The Olympic Games Effect: How Sports Marketing Builds Strong Brands.” “At the risk of sounding overly philosophical, we tend to reach for mythical heroes when times are particularly challenging.

    “It's natural to seek hope in those who exude a sense of optimism, and this year's Olympians, including Gabby Douglas, seem to be a particularly honorable bunch,” Davis said. “Given our propensity to create narratives around heroes, sponsors have understandably become willing authors.”

    While Olympic marketing insider Jan Katzoff said he, too, has seen “a slight uptick in endorsement money,” he ties that increase to a slowly rebounding economy, including stronger corporate earnings.

    Meanwhile, the U.S. Olympic Committee, which funds athlete training and coaching, has successfully renewed some sponsorship partners (24 Hour Fitness) and landed new ones (Chobani), creating an even taller stack of Olympic-minded business backers. 

    “The third part, for me, is there is money coming from corporate support that is not necessarily Olympic-sponsor driven,” said Katzoff, whose agency Radiate Group represents 18 Olympic sponsors and forged sponsorship deals with hundreds of Olympic athletes on behalf of brands. “I would cite Subway as a brand that has become very aggressive in signing Olympic athletes – and that also drives the market.”

    At the quiet end of the revenue stream, quadruple-gold-medalist Missy Franklin has opted, so far, to stay out of the lucrative endorsement pool so she can swim for the NCAA school of her choice.

    “It is safe to say that she would be giving up between $5 (million) to $10 million over the next quadrennium (four years),” Katzoff said. “She really could be the next big story in U.S. swimming and could attract a variety of brands in addition to her endemic ones. She has to be confident that she has three more Olympic Games in front of her.”

    Davis added, “There’s so much commercial pressure on these athletes now to take advantage of this very short window because they may not have this opportunity again -- and it will take 30 to 40 years to earn that same amount. The flip side is, you have to admire the fact that she wants to go to college and have a normal life. But it is sort of tempting to look at it and say, ‘Oh my gosh, she’s instead going to college for four years?’”


    Follow @NBCNewsBusiness

    Many Olympic medalists, of course, never get a whiff of endorsement gold, largely due to the lack of TV coverage for lesser-known sports.

    But one of the London Games’ most satellite-beamed stars, American swimmer Ryan Lochte -- who snagged two golds, two silvers and a bronze -– hasn’t yet cashed in on endorsements as heavily as some marketers had expected.

    Lochte does have existing sponsorship agreements with Gillette, Nissan, Ralph Lauren, Procter and Gamble, AT&T, Mutual of Omaha and Speedo. Fortune Magazine calculated his endorsement payout reached $2.3 million this past year.

    Yet some in the sports-marketing community say Lochte should be raking in millions more.

    “He probably could have done more, based on the expectations,” said Shade, the agent for Douglas. “He’s handsome, speaks OK. People were expecting a lot more. It hasn’t happened yet. Maybe there’s more to come.”

    There are whispers in endorsement circles that Lochte might be a bit of a loose cannon, perhaps a risk to straitlaced companies when athlete missteps can erupt quickly into Olympic-sized scandals. (See: Michael Phelps.)

    When Lochte admitted to TODAY correspondent Ryan Seacrest that he occasionally pees in the pool, many marketers that had been considering the swimmer likely were relieved they had not signed him to an endorsement deal, experts said.

    “If you represent a company these days,” said Shade, not speaking about Lochte, “you’ve got to be absolutely, 100 percent pure.” 

    The swimming phenom lived up to expectations in London, winning five Olympic medals and setting a new world record. She talks about the events to celebrate her homecoming, starting her senior year of high school, and whether she plans to go pro or go to college.

    More money and business news:

    • Nike says it stands by Lance Armstrong
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    • Sign up for our Business newsletter

    88 comments

    The medal winners are given a payment for winning the medal, so it is not taxes on just the medal (as if the medal is 'worth' X amount of dollars). So the $25K given as payment for winning a gold medal is taxed as income. It isn't a case of the money coming out of the medal winners pocket as in, 'he …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: team-usa, london-games, featured, endorsements, ryan-lochte, missy-franklin, gabby-douglas, sheryl-shade, olympic-endorsements, john-a-davis, jan-katzoff
  • 23
    Aug
    2012
    9:39am, EDT

    Ryan Lochte dishes on Vegas party with Prince Harry

    By Scott Stump

    Who needs Michael Phelps? Prince Harry is all the swimming competition Ryan Lochte needs.  

    On TODAY Thursday, Lochte told Matt Lauer that Harry challenged him to a race in a nightclub pool last Friday, and the Olympian accepted. 

    Lochte had never met the prince until the royal's entourage approached him that night.

    "His people came over to my table and said, 'Prince Harry wants to meet you,'" he said. "I was like, 'Lets meet him.' I went over there. I was fully clothed, and he says, 'You want to race me in the pool?' I took off my shirt, jumped in and we started racing."

    Lochte enjoyed his brush with royalty, which began and ended with their impromptu race.  

    “He’s part of the royal family and everything, but he’s really a nice guy,’’ Lochte said. “He’s really talkative. He just wanted to meet me and honestly wanted to race me. I thought that was the coolest thing.’’

    Only hours later, all of the prince’s clothes came off in a now-infamous strip-billiards incident that took place in a hotel suite. Lochte did not get the invite to play strip billiards with the prince and his friends.

    “He never said anything like that,’’ Lochte said. “After our race and everything, we went our separate ways. I’m kind of happy. I don’t need that.’’  

    Nightclub swims notwithstanding, Lochte, 28, said that these three weeks out of the water have been his longest break from the pool since he was 10 years old.

    “After racing Prince Harry, I got that competitive edge back in me and I want to get back in the water,’’ Lochte cracked.

    After celebrating his birthday and dabbling in acting on '90210,' Lochte is ready to start gearing up for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. He said he will get back to training on Monday.

    “Once I landed back in the States after London, I already had my goals in mind for Rio,’’ he said. “They’re a little different now. I can’t spill everything.’’

    Lochte did let it slip that he will not be swimming the same events as he did in London, where he won two golds, two silvers and a bronze to bring his career total to 11 medals.

    “Whenever I go up on the blocks, I don’t want to go for second or third, I want to win,’’ he said. “So I was definitely pleased and unpleased with some of my races, so hopefully I can change that in the next four years. I’m going to be swimming different events, that’s for sure. I’m getting older, my body’s getting older, so I can’t do those long events.’’

    His outside interests in fashion, acting and other pursuits will not distract him from his training, Lochte said.

    “Because of the training that I’ve been doing these past eight years, I have a good background, so I know that I’m able to do other things that I wasn’t able to do before so that leads to acting, doing who knows what,’’ he said. “The whole acting thing is definitely nerve-wracking. I can swim in front of 10,000 people, no problem, but acting, that’s a little hard.’’

    More: Video: Prince Harry returns to London amid photo scandal 
    Lochte: 'I'm going another four years' to Rio games 
    Jeah! Lochte to guest star on '90210' 

    124 comments

    I love Ryan and I think Harry is a great guy. He is still young and just wants to have some fun. So what is the big deal leave him alone and let him have his day in the nude. Myself I think the photographers shouldn't be printing anyones picture without their written consent. Ryan is a role model fo …

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  • 10
    Aug
    2012
    9:46am, EDT

    Lochte on peeing in pool: 'Sometimes you just gotta go'

    By Jillian Eugenios

    Swimmer Ryan Lochte is going home with five Olympic medals, but it's what he left behind in the pool in London that has made some joking headlines as the Olympics wind down.

    Lochte was in the spotlight a week ago when he admitted to TODAY special correspondent Ryan Seacrest that he occasionally pees in the pool. Then came a "Funny or Die" parody video where he took the peeing theme to hilarious heights.

    Lochte jokingly reiterated his stance in an interview with Matt Lauer on TODAY Friday. 

    “I mean, sometimes you just gotta go,” he said.

    Peeing in Pools with Ryan Lochte from Ryan Lochte

    British prime minister David Cameron was not amused once he heard how Lochte was using London’s Olympic pool. “I was surprised to hear that,” he told Britain's Metro newspaper. “It’s not OK to pee in the pool.”
     
     Lochte has certainly stood by his right to relieve himself in the water. When comedian Will Ferrell called and asked him to make a “Funny or Die” video on the subject, he jumped at the opportunity. In the video Lochte says, “The way I see it, the pool is the biggest, most expensive toilet and it’s all mine. That’s the only time I allow myself to pee. Animals, they mark their territory. I pee in the pool. That’s my territory.”
     
    Luckily for the pools of the world, Lochte isn’t going anywhere near one for at least a little while after a whirlwind Olympic experience.
     
    “I’m definitely going to take some time off," he told Lauer. "It's been four years of every day in the pool. I think it’s time for me to take at least a couple weeks.”

    Lochte isn’t worried that the come-down after the Olympics will lead to a crash. He has already said that he plans on making a run at a spot in the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro when he will be 32 years old.
     
    “The Olympics is great," he said. "But for me, I treat every meet, every swim meet that I go to, the exact same. It just has a different name to it. And you know what? I love racing. And I want to keep doing it for another four years.”
     

    While the world waits to see him in Rio in 2016, he'll be keeping busy on dry land. He already is entertaining multiple reality TV offers, and he has plans to move to Los Angeles, which he said has been a big goal of his for a long time. He told Lauer he hopes it will help him get into fashion.

    “That is my passion,” he said. “When swimming is all said and done I definitely want to get into fashion and design my own clothing line.”

     

    Read more:

    Agent: Ryan Lochte fielding multiple reality TV offers

    Ryan Lochte: I'd like to do 'Dancing with the Stars'

    Ryan Lochte: 'I'm going another four years to Rio"

    Phelps rival writes his own London headline: 'Ryan Lochte takes over'

    75 comments

    Everybody pees in the pool. EveryTHING pees in the ocean. It's hilarious how uppity some people get about this topic, deflecting attention from the high likelihood that they do it also.

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    Explore related topics: olympics, london, swimming, david-cameron, matt-lauer, featured, ryan-lochte, peeing-in-the-pool
  • 8
    Aug
    2012
    10:00am, EDT

    Who'll win the gold medal for partying? Olympians let their hair down in London

    AFP - Getty Images

    British gold medal-winning cyclist Bradley Wiggins is seen on stage at a concert in Hyde Park, left, enjoying a beer while watching Olympic action in the Velodrome, center, and meeting Stone Roses singer Ian Brown at a secret VIP gig by the band in London, right.

    By Alastair Jamieson, NBC News

    LONDON - After four years of intense training and personal sacrifice, athletes are letting their hair down and joining London’s city-wide Olympic party.

    With many events now over, and with Sunday's closing ceremony looming, Olympians are becoming a more frequent sight on the streets – and in the bars – of Britain’s capital.


    Many are turning up at venues to support their team-mates in the remaining competition -- and sign autographs for lucky spectators.

    “It is nice for us now to be able to relax and watch some of the Games,” said Czech cyclist Denis Spicka, who was surrounded by friends and female fans at Czech House – one of dozens of temporary national ‘party houses’ set up around London by tourism promoters and sponsors.

    Have you ever wondered what Olympic athletes do after the competition and medals? TODAY special correspondent Ryan Seacrest heads out into London to investigate, going to Ryan Lochte's birthday bash and getting the scoop on how Missy Franklin plans to commemorate her medals.

    Spicka was one of hundreds of party-goers enjoying Czech beer while watching giant screens showing his country take on France at women’s basketball on Tuesday night – only hours after he had finished his own race in the Olympic Velodrome.

    “The girls here are very nice,” he grinned.

    Alastair Jamieson/NBC News

    Officials from Britain's Olympic team enjoy a late-night take-out in east London's Mile End.

    Across town, U.S. swimmer Ryan Lochte was enjoying a birthday party at a Planet Hollywood theme restaurant near Leicester Square. The 28-year-old enjoyed chicken fingers, nachos, Champagne and birthday cake, according to E!, before heading to Mahiki, a nightclub popular with Prince Harry.

    It was not the gold medal winner’s first night of partying: He joined a throng of fellow swimmers including South African Jean Basson and Lebanese Katya Bachrouche at club Chinawhite on Sunday night.

    Will Games curse leave 'ghost town' London out of the gold rush?

    Chad le Clos, the South African who beat Michael Phelps in the 200m butterfly last week, also dropped into the club, dancing with his team and some Australian swimmers. "It was pretty cool,” he told the Daily Telegraph. “Everyone was there, the Americans and the French team. Pretty much the whole of the VIP area was crawling with swimmers. We all enjoyed ourselves."

    Slideshow: Graffiti Games: UK street artists take on Olympics

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    Street and graffiti artists have been satirizing, celebrating and making jokes about the Olympic Games in London.

    Launch slideshow

    Others have been touring London’s sights or relaxing in and around the Olympic Park. Cook Islands swimming coach Romani Katoa was enjoying a few beers with fellow spectators at the track and field events on Sunday night, while Hungarian hammer-thrower Krisztian Pars was showing off his gold medal on the top floor of a double-decker bus.

    Christians, Muslims and even a 'vegan turkey' seek converts at London 2012

    In the Westfield shopping mall that leads to the Olympic Park, athletes from around the world have been signing autographs for fans or partying in the top-level casino.

    Indeed, spotting athletes has now become a London tourist activity in its own right: Olympians from Rwanda were pictured waiting for a bus on Monday, officials from Team Great Britain were seen ordering a late-night take-out in a kebab house in east London’s Mile End and Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins posted a picture of himself on Instagram “getting wasted” near St. Paul’s Cathedral after winning his cycling gold medal for Britain.

    This is why I love the Olympics. Team Rwanda at my bus stop instagr.am/p/OBOPefmIN4/

    — Michael Acton Smith (@acton) August 7, 2012

    Wiggins and fellow British gold medalist Jessica Ennis were among the athletes who attended a VIP Stone Roses concert on Monday. The duo were reportedly introduced at the gig as "king" and "queen" of England.

    At the Austria House near the Tower of London, where party-goers can enjoy pilsner and sauerkraut while watching live Olympic action, Austrian gymnast Fabian Leimlehner was among those signing autographs.

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    Julia Sailer from Innsbruck, Austria, pours two-liter beers as fast as she can sell them at Austria's national hospitality house in the Tower Hill area of London on Tuesday.

    'So much debauchery'
    Speculation is now turning to life inside the Olympic Village – the super-private athletes-only area notorious for evolving into a party zone as the Games come to an end. In a now-notorious ESPN feature last month, Lochte predicted that “70 to 75 percent of Olympians” would be having sex with other competitors, adding: “Hey, sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do."

    About 150,000 condoms have been handed out by organizers in the wake of of stories about goings-on at the Sydney 2000 games where, according to U.S. target shooter Josh Lakatos, competitors turned an empty room into a venue for round-the-clock casual sex, assisted by an Oakley duffel bag overflowing with condoms procured from the village's medical clinic. “I've never witnessed so much debauchery in my entire life," he told ESPN.

    Traveling around traffic-plagued London can be a hassle at the best of times -- never mind during an event such as the Olympic Games. NBCNews.com put the city to the test in a race to the Olympic Park.

    So are the beds of London’s Olympic village really shaking? “We are all sharing rooms, so it is difficult,” said Czech runner Josef Prorok at the Czech House party. “Our apartment is above the laundry area and some of my friends have discovered there are some empty places, so…”

    Inside the Olympic Village: World's top athletes share college dorm-style rooms

    In practice, he said, athletes prefer to head into the city to party. “There is no alcohol in the Village bar so it is boring there. Here there is a screen and there are people having fun, and girls,” he said.

    His comments were echoed by former British Olympic swimmer Sharron Davies, who told The Mirror; “Any partying is done away from the Village out of respect for athletes who are still competing. To be honest you spend all your time training and eating healthily – and it only takes a glass of wine and you are hammered.”

    More London 2012 coverage from NBCNews.com

    All the better for Londoners, who are are cruising the national party houses in the hope of getting to meet athletes.

    "Which is the best one?" asked Nick Watterson, from north London, who was drinking at the Czech House with friends after watching Olympic soccer at Wembley Stadium. "Brazil House sounds good. It's a great atmosphere in the city at the moment, a real party going on."  

    Slideshow: Speeding through life: Olympians then and now

    Tony Duffy / ALLSPORT, Getty Images

    How has life treated the many U.S. Olympians who have dazzled and inspired us over the years? Find out in this handy then-and-now roundup.

    Launch slideshow

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Who'll win the gold medal for partying? Olympians let hair down
    • One year after London riots, a family still grapples with fallout
    • Antarctica rescue drama: US expeditioner ailing
    • Are these German protesters the world's oldest squatters?
    • Will Games curse leave 'ghost town' London out of the gold rush?
    • Interpol drops 'red notice' for dissident
    • Race to London's Olympic Park: Fastest way is ...?
    • Journalist: British militants took me hostage in Syria
    • Londoners: I'll take a 'flat white'... What?

    24 comments

    Why put Bruce Jenner's plastic mug shot in this article?

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  • 7
    Aug
    2012
    9:47am, EDT

    Michael Phelps is ready to write final journal entry

    By Scott Stump

    As he gets set to finish his Olympic diary, Michael Phelps continues to insist that this will be the final chapter. 

    The legendary swimmer has been keeping a journal in London in order to preserve his memories. There has been plenty to write about: Phelps set Olympic records last week with 18 career gold medals and 22 medals overall. Tuesday on TODAY, Phelps said that these games were his last.

    “I’m done,’’ he told Matt Lauer. “I’m finished. I’m retired. I’m done. No more. The biggest thing is I can look back at my career and say I’ve done everything exactly the way I wanted to, and if you can say that, I’m happy.’’

    Since his final London race Saturday, Phelps, 27, has put down his pen down to enjoy some free time. The trip back to the United States will give him time to record his thoughts.

    “I kind of enjoy writing whenever I’m on the plane, so whenever I’m on the plane I’m sure I’ll go through a couple of pages and write down all the moments and experiences that I’ve had here in London,’’ Phelps said. “It’s just been incredible.’’

    Phelps shared headlines with rival Ryan Lochte, who gave his own dream headline to Lauer before the Olympics began: “Ryan Lochte takes over.’’ The comment put another log in Phelps' fireplace.

    “Everything fueled my fire,’’ he said. “Sort of just hearing, seeing what people were doing and saying, that really helped over the last few years. I wasn’t going to comment (on Lochte’s comment) back then, and I won’t comment now.’’

    Phelps felt less pressure this time around than he did in 2008. 

    “It was a lot more relaxed than the other Olympics,’’ he said. “(Coach) Bob (Bowman) and I were very laid back, and we were ready to just have some fun, and that’s what we did. It was a cool week.’’

    Bowman has coached Phelps throughout his three Olympics, and the two have developed a tight bond.

    “When I was walking around the pool the last time, (Bowman) was on the deck, and that’s pretty much what he said,’’ Phelps said. “He said, ‘I’m very proud of you and I love you.’ My whole career wouldn’t be anywhere close to where it is without him. We worked great together, and we’ve been able to do everything we’ve ever wanted.’’

    Phelps was 15 years old when he qualified for the 2000 Olympics in Sydney but did not medal in any races. He watched in awe as 15-year-old Katie Ledecky got the gold on Friday in the 800-meter freestyle.

    “It did (remind me of Sydney), but she won a medal out of it,’’ Phelps said. “That was one of the coolest races that I was able to watch this whole Olympics. I was like, ‘Oh my God, she’s really going to do it.’’’  

    Read more:

    Um, how do we break this to you Team USA: You didn't actually win gold

    Ryan Lochte: I want a 'stare-off' with Phelps

    Phelps' teammates 'had no idea' he set Olympic medal record

    Obama calls gymnasts, tweets Phelps: 'You make our country proud'

     

     

     

     

    10 comments

    OH my goodness stop asking him if he's done HE'S SAID IT OVER AND OVER TAKE A HIS WORD THE FIRST TIME!!! Interviewers are so annoying!!

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  • 3
    Aug
    2012
    10:03am, EDT

    Ryan Lochte: Mom meant 'nothing negative' about my love life

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    By Sarika Dani

    Days after his mom, Ike, told TODAY.com her son "goes out on one-night stands," Ryan Lochte clarified what she was really trying to say about his love life.  

    "I know what she meant by it," he told us. "What she meant is that I'm not in a relationship so I do go on dates. It's not that negative part....She had nothing negative." 

    We feel you, Ryan! Sometimes mom-speak needs translating. 

    The gold medal-winning swimming star addressed another burning question: Just how many shoes out of his collection of 130 did he pack for London?

    "I brought a total of eight pairs," he said. 

    For his visit to the TODAY set, Ryan also brought along his world-famous set of red, white and blue grillz. Should we stay tuned for a potential line of Lochte dental wear? A signature collection of grillz could happen, he said, "maybe in my near future."

    Slideshow: Happy birthday, Ryan Lochte! Here's 12 pictures of him

    Fabrice Coffrini / AFP - Getty Images

    Launch slideshow

    More: Ryan Lochte's mom: He's too 'on the go' for girlfriend 
    Lochte: 'I'm going another four years' to Rio  
    Lochte: 'I want a stare-off with Phelps'  
    Check out all of TODAY.com's London Olympics coverage here! 

    36 comments

    What is up with that grillz thing? It looks like hell and it makes him look like an idiot. What a stupid thing to do. He has a nice smile and nice teeth. Why make it look like you are wearing braces? What a nut.

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  • 3
    Aug
    2012
    9:36am, EDT

    Ryan Lochte: 'I'm going another four years' to Rio

    U.S. swimming star Ryan Lochte talks with TODAY's Matt Lauer about his plans for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, his rivalry with Michael Phelps and his feelings on his overall performance in London.

    By Scott Stump

    The diamond grill and Speedo aren't being retired just yet. Get ready, Rio de Janeiro, because Ryan Lochte plans to be coming your way in four years.

    After winning two gold medals, two silvers and a bronze in London, the U.S. swimming star told Matt Lauer on TODAY Friday that he has his sights set on a berth in the 2016 Olympics in Brazil. Lochte also celebrated his 28th birthday on the set of TODAY with a pool-shaped cake and his signature sunglasses.   

    “By all means, I’m going another four years,’’ Lochte said about his future Olympic plans. “There’s no question about it, I’m going another four.’’

    TODAY

    Star swimmer Ryan Lochte celebrates his 28th birthday in style on TODAY with Savannah Guthrie, Matt Lauer, and a pool-shaped cake.

    Lochte will turn 32 during the 2016 Olympics, so he will be a grizzled veteran competing mostly against swimmers in their early 20s. His main rival, Olympic legend Michael Phelps, is a year younger than him at 27. Phelps has already announced that London will be the final Olympics in his brilliant career, but Lochte wants to keep competing.

    “It has been a long four years, but I’m having a blast swimming,’’ Lochte said. “I love just getting up on the blocks and racing the top people in the world. I get excited for that.’’

    Lochte came in second behind Phelps in the 200-meter individual medley on Thursday, his final duel in the pool with his rival. The pair split in two head-to-head races in London, with Lochte blasting to a three-second victory in the 400-meter individual medley before Phelps beat him on Thursday to bring his Olympic record to 16 gold medals and 20 overall.

    “I think me and Michael is going to go down as one of the greatest rivalries in the history of swimming,’’ he said. “I’m just happy that I was a part of that.’’

    Only 31 minutes after he won a bronze medal in the 200-meter backstroke on Thursday, Lochte had to regroup for his showdown in the 200 individual medley with Phelps. Phelps got out ahead of him early with a dominant butterfly leg and did not relinquish the lead.

    “I knew that’s what he was going to do,’’ Lochte said. “His butterfly is so strong. That’s one of his strongest strokes, so I knew if I had any kind of a fighting chance I would have to go with him. It kind of hurt me towards the end.’’

    Slideshow: Happy birthday, Ryan Lochte! Here's 12 pictures of him

    Fabrice Coffrini / AFP - Getty Images

    The gold medal-winning swimmer turned 28 on Friday.

    Launch slideshow

    The Lochte-Phelps rivalry was one of the main storylines heading into London, with many swimming experts predicting this would be Lochte’s time to shine after being in the shadow of Phelps during the 2008 Olympics. Lochte won five medals to bring his career total to 11 medals.

    “I’m always going there to win,’’ Lochte said. “I’m not going there for second. I’m going there for the gold, and sometimes it happens, sometimes it doesn’t, but overall I’m pretty happy.’’

    Lochte also dismissed the notion that his bulked-up physique had anything to do with his inability to dominate the way many had predicted he would. Leading up to London, he had been doing strongman workouts like flipping giant tires.

    “I don’t think I bulked up too much,’’ he said. “I think it was perfect just because I’ve gotten a lot faster since I’ve gotten a lot bigger, and it’s just all the extra training that I’ve been doing. I know it helped me out a lot, so I’m just going to stay hopefully the same.’’

    Leading up to London, Lochte was asked by Lauer what headline he would write about the Olympics and he replied, “Lochte takes over.’’ Now that the competition is over, he isn't sure how he would sum up his performance.

    “That’s hard to say, just because I had some up-and-down swims at this Olympics,’’ Lochte said. “I’m just going to have to wait and see what the actual media says.’’

    Read More:

    Ryan Lochte: I want a 'stare-off' with Phelps

    Ryan Lochte's mom: He's too 'on the go' for girlfriend

    Phelps' teammates 'had no idea' he set Olympic medal record

     

     

     

     

    5 comments

    I find that stupid diamond grill of Lochte's to be annoying and it make him look like some clown gangsta wanna be. He can hang on for another four years and try and make the Rio team, but he will be facing stiff competition from the younger swimmers coming up.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, brazil, swimming, birthday, matt-lauer, rio-de-janeiro, michael-phelps, ryan-lochte
  • 2
    Aug
    2012
    11:39am, EDT

    Ryan Lochte: I want a 'stare-off' with Phelps

    By Scott Stump

    If Ryan Lochte could have his way, Thursday’s swimming showdown with Michael Phelps would start with Lil’ Wayne blaring out of the loudspeakers, move to a stare down with Phelps and end with Lochte winning in world-record time.

    Lochte will gladly settle for at least the last part becoming reality.

    Before gearing up to go head-to-head with Phelps for the final time in the Olympics during the 200-meter individual medley, Lochte was asked by Matt Lauer on TODAY Thursday to describe his perfect race.

    “In the middle lanes it’s me and Michael,’’ Lochte said about his dream scenario. “I look over at Phelps, and we have like a little stare-off. We’re just staring at each other like, ‘Who wants it more?’’’

    Phelps is trying to add to his Olympic-record haul of 19 career medals, while Lochte is trying to take home his third gold medal in one of the most-anticipated events in London. In Lochte’s mind, he would be off the blocks quickly and neck-and-neck with Phelps before a big finish.

    “I’m hitting the water like a rocket, and I’m not looking back,’’ Lochte said. “Going into the last turn, we both go underwater, and we both look at each other because we’re dead even. It’s a close race, and I just destroy everyone off the last wall. I take off and going into the home stretch, I touch that wall and I shattered the world record. Just killed it by a second or two.’’

    Lochte’s imagined finish would then include muscle flexing and bellowing in triumph. He made no mention of a diamond grill in his mouth on the podium, but that's almost a sure bet as well.

    “To me, that’s the best way I can put a race,’’ he said.

    Slideshow: Olympic hotties: World’s most alluring athletes

    A collection of the winning smiles and champion physiques of Olympic hopefuls from America and other nations.

    Launch slideshow

    Read More:

    Ryan Lochte's mom: He's too 'on the go' for girlfriend

    Obama calls gymnasts, tweets Phelps: 'You make our country proud'

    Phelps rival writes his own headline: 'Lochte takes over'

     

     

     

     

    3 comments

    This guy makes me a Phelps fan...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, london, swimming, dream, matt-lauer, featured, michael-phelps, ryan-lochte, 200-im
  • 31
    Jul
    2012
    12:54pm, EDT

    Ryan Lochte's mom: He's too 'on the go' for girlfriend

    Martin Bureau / AFP - Getty Images

    By Sarika Dani

    Ike Lochte is a strong — and emotional — supporter of her son’s competitive lifestyle, but she says Ryan is too busy to commit to a girlfriend.

    “He goes out on one-night stands,” she told TODAY.com. “He’s not able to give fully to a relationship because he’s always on the go.”

    Update: Lochte clarifies his mom's comments 

    The swimmer celebrates his 28th birthday this Friday, Aug. 3, but Ike says the family will celebrate him on Saturday after he is freed up from competing. His 4x200 freestyle relay swim airs Tuesday night on NBC. 

    Lochte’s mom, along with the family clan, was on the TODAY set to chat with Matt Lauer about Ryan’s performance so far this Olympics. “Everything he has done has been to the max,” Ike said. “He’s unique, loving, and he challenges himself all the time.” Ryan likely gets much of his drive from his own parents, both of whom were swim coaches. Ike says the best trait he inherited from her is his love of kids and his awareness of his position and his fans.

    The swimmer uses Twitter to show his love to fans, re-tweeting and updating his admirers. Monday night he thanked them: “GOODNIGHT #LochteNation & thank u for being the best fans. Always said it b4 & I'll say it forever.. I wouldn't be anything without u.”

    As for Ike, she’s not on Twitter, but she sends words of encouragement to her son via text when she’s not with him. Before he competes, she keeps her message simple: “I say, have fun, and I love you,” she said. 

    Sarika Dani is a TODAY.com editor in London. No lie: She has the same birthday as Ryan Lochte. 

    More:

    Phelps rival writes his own headline: 'Ryan Lochte takes over' 
    Fashion lover Ryan Lochte has 130 pairs of shoes 
    Ryan Lochte to Vogue: 'I'm a coach's nightmare' 
    Olympic moms on supporting star athletes 
    Ad gives Olympic (and regular) moms their due  

    30 comments

    Congrats to Lochte...and am thinking maybe Mom was searching for a phrase for someone who is dating around rather than "one night stand?" Pretty funny.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, ryan-lochte, commentid-featured, olympic-moms
  • 27
    Jul
    2012
    9:36am, EDT

    Best yet? Swim team makes 'Call Me Maybe' lipdub

    TODAY

    It’s the song you can’t get out of your head this summer. That’s a good thing for the Team USA Swimming — because “Call Me Maybe” gets them pumped.

    The team produced one of the best (and most elaborate) video parodies yet of the Carly Rae Jepsen hit. The lipdub, released Thursday, has racked up more than 250,000 views on YouTube as of this post. 

    Why'd they pick the tune? It's a favorite among several of the stars: Missy Franklin told TODAY.com it’s her go-to karaoke song, and teammates Rachel Bootsma and Elizabeth Beisel said it’s on it's on constant rotation on their iPods as their pump-up song before jumping in the pool.  

    The video, spearheaded by swimmers Alyssa Anderson, Kathleen Hersey and Caitlin Leverenz, follows members dancing in airplane aisles, down water slides and on the bottom of pools. Michael Phelps gives a wink, and Ryan Lochte blows a kiss. 

    Watch it below! Do you think it’s a gold medal-winning video?

    More on TODAY.com: 
    Dance off! Harvard, SMU recreate 'Call Me Maybe' viral hits on plaza
    Sorry, everyone else. KLG & Hoda nailed the 'Call Me Maybe' dance-off
    Obama, Romney parody 'Call Me Maybe,' thanks to some digital hijinks

    19 comments

    Just wonderful! Bright and funny. GO TEAM USA!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: swimming, featured, michael-phelps, ryan-lochte, missy-franklin
  • 25
    Jul
    2012
    9:49am, EDT

    Phelps on his final Olympics: 'I have a job to finish here'

    TODAY special correspondent Ryan Seacrest chats with 14-time gold medalist Michael Phelps about his goal to become the most decorated Olympian of all time as he reveals that thinking of the London Olympics as his last is "kind of emotional."

    By Scott Stump

    As anticipation mounts for the opening of the Games, even a legend with more gold medals than anyone else in the history of the Summer Olympics has to find a way to pass the time.

    Michael Phelps may be only three medals shy of becoming the most decorated Olympian history, but for his first few days in the Olympic Village in London, he has been more like a college sophomore hanging out between summer classes. Passing the hours in a sweltering dorm room, Phelps has been spending his time with a New Mexico high school teacher and some Baltimore cops.

    “I started The Wire and Breaking Bad,’’ Phelps told TODAY special correspondent Ryan Seacrest Wednesday. “(Just doing) a little bit of sitting around and just watching shows and movies.’’

    Jeff Haynes / Reuters

    Ryan Lochte (left) and Michael Phelps check their times during the U.S. Olympic swimming trials in Omaha, Nebraska, June 26, 2012. The two rivals will vie head to head at the Summer Games.

    Phelps has broken a sweat without even leaving his room: There's A/C in the Olympic Village amid temperatures in the low 80s, and even millionaire athletes like Phelps had to adjust as if they were average college freshmen.

    “We walked in and tried to crank the thermostat down, but nothing was happening all day, and they told us in the meeting that we have no air-conditioning,’’ Phelps said. “I think everybody on the team has a little college dorm fan that rotates, so we have some air circulating. Everybody has to deal with it.’’

    Once the action gets started, Phelps plans on swimming seven events after winning a record eight gold medals in 2008 in Beijing. In the 200 and 400 medleys, he will go head to head with teammate Ryan Lochte in the most anticipated rivalry in London.

    Phelps, 27, has already announced that this will be his fourth and final Olympics. Having already won 16 medals in his career, he is three away from passing Russian gymnast Larissa Latynina as the most decorated Olympian of all time.  

    “It’s kind of been weird,’’ Phelps said about his final Games. “We’ve said like, ‘This is my last Tuesday afternoon workout,’ or ‘This is my last double.’ It’s cool to say, but it’s also kind of emotional. One thing that I’m looking forward to this week is having a lot of good memories and having a lot of good moments, and (I) hope I finish my career with some good swims.”

    Phelps swam well enough to qualify in eight events at the U.S. Olympic trials, but he admitted to starting from scratch with his breaststroke technique in preparing for London as well as tweaking some other aspects of his stroke.

    “Physically I’m a lot better than I was (at the trials),’’ he said. “Mentally, part of it is coming day by day, (and) being able to visualize my races and prepare myself for what could happen, what I want to happen and what I don’t want to happen.’’

    Phelps trained in the London Aquatics Centre alongside Lochte on Tuesday, getting his first glimpse of the setting for one of the hottest tickets in London.

    “It’s overwhelming,’’ Phelps said. “The deck space is kind of small, but you look up on both side of the stands, and there are a lot of stands up there. Hopefully we can have some loud cheering over here, and hopefully that place will be rocking. I remember back in 2000 (in Sydney), you could feel the floor shaking.’’

    When the smoke clears from Phelps’s quest for history in the new few weeks, he will take the time to contemplate his accomplishments. Right now, it’s all about business.  

    “I think a lot of things I’ve done through my career haven’t sunk in yet,’’ he said. “I guess the more I move through my life, I think some of those moments will sink in even more. I have a job to finish here. That’s why I’m setting out on Saturday to start my journey, and hopefully it’s a good one.”

    After more than a decade of having his life centered around his training and a clear goal in sight, Phelps is looking forward to a blank schedule once the Games conclude. He will be on Season 5 of The Wire before he knows it. 

    “We have a couple trips booked, and I’m looking forward to just pretty much relaxing and doing whatever I want to do and going wherever I want to go,’’ Phelps said.

    Related:
    Michael Phelps' mom: 'Don't push' kids into sports
    Phelps rival writes his own London headline: 'Ryan Lochte takes over'
    Fashion lover Ryan Lochte has 130 pairs of shoes
    Video: Olympic swimming hopefuls show off moves

     

    3 comments

    Just what the h*ll's going on in London? First, they come up woefully short on the number of their security force and now they can't even do something so basic as to maintain room temperatures at an optimum level, a temperature that will allow these athletes--who've spent years in preparation--to g …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: london, swimming, ryan-seacrest, michael-phelps, the-wire, ryan-lochte, breaking-bad, london-aquatics-centre
  • 24
    Jul
    2012
    9:16am, EDT

    Phelps rival writes his own London headline: 'Ryan Lochte takes over'

    Ryan Lochte and Matt Lauer talked competition, style and what it's really like on to hear the national anthem played for you.

    By Scott Stump

    Ryan Lochte may be facing arguably the greatest swimmer in history, but he is ready to pass by Michael Phelps to become the big story out of the London Olympics.

    In an interview on TODAY Tuesday, Matt Lauer asked Lochte to write the headline to his own London story.

    “Ryan Lochte takes over,’’ Lochte replied.

    That’s a bold prediction, considering Phelps has a record 14 gold medals and a knack for rising to the occasion in the Olympics. However, after having beaten Phelps regularly over the past three years, including a five-gold-medal performance at the 2011 World Championships, Lochte is favored to win after playing the bridesmaid several times in 2008. The two are expected to go head-to-head in the 200 and 400 individual medleys.

    “To me, Michael is just another swimmer,’’ Lochte said. “It’s just another person that I’ve got to go up against and race. He’s one of the toughest competitors I’ve ever had a race against, and I love racing against him.’’

    Ryan Lochte promises to bring back the diamond grill he has been known to sport on the podium.

    Lochte plans on celebrating his victories in his unique style. That means his infamous diamond mouthpiece will be making an appearance on the podium.

    “(The grill) will come back, yes,’’ Lochte said.

    Lochte also refuses to turn off his goofy side, which in the past has led to a sprained ankle while playing with his dog, a knee injury suffered while breakdancing, and a scooter crash. Lochte said if Lauer handed him a skateboard on the spot he would bust out some tricks.

    “If I don’t be myself, then I won’t swim to my best,’’ he said. “I need to live life. I can’t do anything different. Life is too short. You don’t know when it’s going to end, so you’ve got to live life to the fullest.’’

    Lochte has made some changes, however, after finishing behind Phelps in two events in Beijing. He ditched his well-publicized fast-food habit and also added more variety to his training. He began doing exercises usually used by competitors in strong-man competitions in addition to his work in the pool.

    “I’m lifting like an 850-pound big tire,’’ he said. “I’m dragging a 525-pound boat chain like 60 feet. I’m doing keg tosses in the air. I’m a lot stronger. I can pull a lot more water than I’ve ever pulled before, and I think that’s one of the reasons why I’m so much faster than 2008.’’

    That was the year he took his spot on the Olympic podium, after winning gold and setting a world record in the 200-meter backstroke.

    “I just remember looking up in the ceiling and being like, ‘Thank God, it finally happened,’’’ Lochte said. “My dad was even crying. Then once I saw that, I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m going to lose it.’ Then I started getting teary-eyed. It was something that I’ll never forget.’’

    And once London is over, Lochte said, he may ride off on to the runway.

    "After swimming is all said and done, (and) I hang up the Speedo, I'm definitely going to go into fashion, designing my own clothing line.'' 

    More: Video: Olympians give advice to Savannah Guthrie
    Fashion lover Ryan Lochte has 130 pairs of shoes
    Matt's live in London! Let the Games begin 
    Missy Franklin on winning for Colorado 
    Matt Lauer to Jimmy Fallon: Help us cover the Olympics! 
    Table tennis Paralympian to fulfill Olympic dreams, too 
    Meet 'The Missile': Missy Franklin 'aims to make my country proud 

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    9 comments

    Dude! I'm gonna party with Mick and The Stones! Nice. What a bonehead.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, london, matt-lauer, featured, michael-phelps, ryan-lochte, diamond-grill
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