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    30
    Oct
    2012
    1:50pm, EDT

    Michael Phelps conducts a swim lesson in Rio

    Antonio Lacerda / EPA

    Olympic record gold medal winner U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps adjusts his googles during his visit to the sport complex of the Alemao favela in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on Oct. 30.

    Ricardo Moraes / Reuters

    U.S. Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps gives a swimming lesson to youths during a visit at the Alemao slum complex's Olympic Village in Rio de Janeiro, Oct. 30.

    Silvia Izquierdo / AP

    U.S. Olympic swimming champion Michael Phelps trains young swimmers at Olympic Village Carlos Castilho in the Complexo de Alemao slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Oct. 30.

    Silvia Izquierdo / AP

    U.S. Olympic swimming champion Michael Phelps high fives young swimmers after leading them in a workshop at the Olympic Village Carlos Castilho in Complexo de Alemao slum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on Oct. 30.

    Micahel Phelps, the most decorated Olympian of all time, held a swimming workshop in the Clomplexo de Alemao slum of Rio de Janeiro today. He was visiting to Rio de Janeiro to promote the 2016 Olympic Games.

    • Follow @NBCNewsPictures on Twitter

    1 comment

    Look Phelps has body hair! Good job working with the kids Mr. Phelps.

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  • 29
    Aug
    2012
    9:40am, EDT

    From darkness to gold: Blinded Navy swimmer set to race at Paralympics

    Slideshow: Blinded warrior has visions of gold

    Lt. Brad Snyder lost his sight in an IED explosion in Afghanistan last year. The Navy officer will once again represent the U.S., this time at the London 2012 Paralympics.

    Launch slideshow

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    The man who views only black today is visualizing all the colors of his London swims. In his mind, he sees the aqua-blue pool frothy with wakes, the home stretch of the lane lines painted red, and the dark, wide mouths of roaring fans.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Behind prosthetic blue eyes — replacements for the natural pair he lost after an explosion in Afghanistan nearly a year ago — Navy Lt. Brad Snyder soaks in the scenery of a dream realized. The 2012 Paralympics open today in Britain. Snyder races for gold Friday.

    Already, though, he can glimpse a distinct, happy glow.

    Related: 'Meet the Superhumans': Paralympians burst onto world stage 

    “During the Olympics, I read about the races, about (Michael) Phelps and (Ryan) Lochte and Missy Franklin. I heard the commentary and used that to pull out the details to produce this image,” Snyder said. “But instead of reading about Lochte, I just implanted myself in there.


    “I imagine stepping onto the block, hearing “take your mark,” the sound of the start, hopping in the pool then just being smooth and strong down the middle of the lane, executing some good turns, and hitting the pad at the end. I’m imagining success. I’m imagining the good feeling that comes with competing well.”

    As an elite athlete — among blind swimmers he is No. 1 in the world at three freestyle distances (50-, 100- and 400-meters) — Snyder draws such mental pictures as a preparation tool. As a result, nothing in or around the London pool, he said, should feel unfamiliar.

    Lt. Brad Snyder, blinded by an IED explosion in Afghanistan, is now training for the London 2012 Paralympics.

    But in a life being rebuilt after severe injury, this ironic tactic is simply how the man endures.

    “I’ll tell you a little story,” said his mother, Valarie Snyder. “He was describing his apartment to me: ‘It has the most beautiful rooftop view.’ That’s how our conversations go all the time. It’s been rare that he gets down, and even then he apologizes for it: ‘Sorry I was in a bad mood.’ ”

    Related: Veterans push Paralympics back to battlefield roots
    Related: Wounded warrior seeks glory representing America in London

    The bright side is never far off. But total darkness came in a single stride. On Sept. 7, 2011, the former Navy bomb defuser was rushing forward to help two Afghan soldiers wounded in an initial IED blast. In his dash, Snyder stepped on a second hidden bomb in an irrigation ditch spanning a farm field. His eyes were irreparably damaged by the detonation and later were removed by a surgeon.

    Once a member of the Naval Academy swim team, Snyder returned to the water about a month later — this time, seeking a familiar, soft place in a world suddenly filled with surprise, hard edges.

    “I was there the first day he got back in the pool,” his mother recalls. “Just to see the sheer joy on his face. On the ride home afterward he told me: ‘I can do this, mom. I can swim competitively. Everything new that I can do just makes me realize: this isn’t such a bad thing.’ ”

    The warm water also rekindled an ultra-competitive, inner furnace, driving Snyder to begin training in Baltimore with Brian Loeffler, head swimming coach at Loyola University. His new goal: earn a spot on the U.S. Paralympic swim team and compete at the world’s second-largest sporting event, the Paralympics. He punched his London ticket in June after a series of spectacular sprints at the time trials in Bismarck, N.D.

    He strolls into London’s Olympic Stadium today with 226 other disabled American athletes — one of 20 active or former service members on the U.S. team, and one of six wounded during combat in Iraq or Afghanistan.

    “There’s a girl who was in a coma for four years. There are people dealing with moderate cerebral palsy,” Snyder said. “It puts everything in perspective when I’m contending with my own little issue to see what everybody on the team puts up with. It humbles you. Every person on the roster is one of the most amazing people I’ve met.”

    Yet each teammate also is an accomplished athlete who outperformed hundreds of Paralympic hopefuls to make the cut. For context, simply peruse two of Snyder’s post-injury times. In the 50-meter freestyle: 26.54 seconds — better than 10 Olympians who swam in London; and in the 100-meter freestyle: 57.75 — quicker than three 2012 Olympians.

    The 100-meter free on Friday offers Snyder his first crack at a medal, and it unleashes an aggressive schedule of seven events over nine days. In addition to his three world-best times, he’s currently ranked No. 2 among blind swimmers in the 100-meter butterfly and No. 4 in the 200-meter individual medley. For each event, Loeffler works as Snyder’s “tapper,” using a walking cane to touch Snyder’s shoulders to alert him that the wall is near and that a flip turn or final push is required.

    “His order of events sets up well since the sprints are early in the week (and) I do expect he will do well in his early events,” said Loeffler, who also serves as the co-head coach of the American Paralympic swim team. “(But) we have focused his training toward the 400 free.”

    For Snyder, his coach and his family, that is the race of races, scheduled for Sept. 7 — exactly one year to the day he stepped on the bomb.

    “It’s difficult to imagine and quantify the emotions I’ll be running through that day. But it’s going to be a moment that I’m going to enjoy. Because to me, competing on that day means that I was presented a challenge and I experienced some success in my transition to blindness. I conquered my adversity to some extent. Obviously, the adversity is not conquered. I’m still blind at the end of the day,” Snyder said. “But it means I’ve walked the path from being chained to the bed at exactly a year ago to competing on an international level at event like the Paralympics. It means I won a little bit.”

    All of the people who huddled near that bed last September at Bethesda Naval Hospital outside Washington, D.C. will be in the crowd in London — his two brothers, his sister, an aunt and his mother — who calls herself “a weeper” and who fully expects a gush of tears, win or lose.

    “From getting the phone call that morning from his commanding officer to not knowing what we were about to go through to what we went through the past year and then to see all that he has accomplished, well, it’s going to be amazing,” Valarie Snyder said.

    “He shared something with me not long ago. He said that every little boy dreams of doing something great in their life in sports. If you’re a runner or a swimmer, you dream of one day going to the Olympics. But when you grow up," she added, "you realize that was just a dream."

    “He believes has been given the opportunity to actually fulfill his dream.”

    Bill Briggs is a frequent contributor to msnbc.com and author of “The Third Miracle.” 

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    17 comments

    I'm proud to say that I swam with Brad while we were both attending the US Naval Academy. Brad is a class act that took his injury in stride and instead of wallowing in self-pity, went out and got a new lease on life.

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, military, swimming, blindness, veterans, team-usa, naval-academy, featured, paralympics, bethesda-naval-hospital, wounded-warriors, brad-snyder, london-paralympics
  • 24
    Aug
    2012
    10:09am, EDT

    Missy Franklin reveals movie cameo: 'I'm so excited'

    By Scott Stump

    After winning four Olympic gold medals in London, Missy Franklin has secured a coveted “internship.’’

    The 17-year-old swimming phenom from Colorado told Matt Lauer on TODAY Friday that she will make a cameo in the upcoming movie “The Internship,’’ starring Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson. She will film the cameo in the next few months and the film is expected to be released next year, but Franklin's role remains top-secret.

    “I am so excited about it,’’ she said. “You’re going to have to wait and see.’’

    The five-time Olympic medalist began her senior year at Regis Jesuit High School last week, one day after making an appearance on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. Another perk of her Olympic showing has been catching the attention of her favorite artist. Justin Bieber recently sent her a personalized care package.

    “He notices you!’’ Franklin joked about her new-found fame. “He sent me a huge care package, which was so awesome. I walk home and my mom is so cute. She took everything out and set it out on the table, and I had T-shirts and CDs and posters and all that stuff.’’

    Bieber is playing a concert in Denver in January, and Franklin is hoping to meet him in person.

    “My friend actually bought me tickets for my birthday, so we’re going to go, and I think we might be able to get backstage passes hopefully,’’ she said.

    In the midst of all the fun, Franklin is also mulling the serious issue of whether to turn professional. Throughout the Olympics, she professed a desire to remain an amateur so that she can compete in college, but still is weighing the decision now that lucrative sponsorship and endorsement offers have rolled in.

    “Right now we’ve definitely talked about it a little bit,’’ Franklin said. “I think we still want to talk about it more. As of right now, we’ve had college coaches coming to the house, and I will be taking my visits in the fall, and we’ll go from there.’’

    Franklin acknowledged concerns that deciding to go pro could look like she had gone back on her word.

    “It’s hard,’’ she said. “I’ve definitely put it out there that I do want to swim in college. It’s something that I want to do, and I don’t want people to think that’s not how I feel any more because it is. I still think that I would want to swim in college. I’ve always wanted to do it, whether I’ve said something or not about it, so hopefully I get the chance.’’

    One decision she has already made is to get the Olympic rings tattooed on her right hip, which she did last week.

    “It’s the only tattoo I’m ever going to get,'' she said. "I kind of grew up going to meets where I was watching kind of all my big role models have that tattoo, so I’ve always wanted it so bad.''

    In addition to her appearance on TODAY, Franklin, who is taking a month off from swimming post-Olympics, will participate in the Arthur Ashe Kids’ Day at the U.S. Open tennis tournament on Saturday in Queens. She may be playing doubles with a celebrity partner and anticipates looking like a fish out of water.

    “I’m apologizing right now to everyone that has to watch,’’ she joked.

    More:Ryan Lochte dishes on Vegas party with Prince Harry
    Jeah! Lochte to guest star on '90210'
    Missy Franklin tweets new Olympic tattoo
    Missy Franklin plans to have tattoo along with medals
    Missy Franklin's dilemma: Go pro or go to college?
    Missy Franklin: Amateur status 'still the plan right now'

     

     

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, london, tattoo, swimming, featured, justin-bieber, missy-franklin
  • 17
    Aug
    2012
    1:11pm, EDT

    Missy Franklin tweets new Olympic tattoo

    @FranklinMissy / Twitter

    Swimmer Missy Franklin says that her new tattoo of the Olympic rings, a Team USA tradition, will be the only ink she ever gets.

    By Scott Stump

    In addition to the five Olympic medals she took home in London, swimming phenom Missy Franklin has added one other permanent reminder of her breakout performance.

    Following Team USA tradition after a successful Olympics, Franklin has gotten a tattoo of the Olympic rings. She tweeted a photo of  her new tat on her right hip on Thursday. “All inked up. AHH!’’ she wrote. “Can’t believe it! My one and only!”

    All inked up😄 AHH! Can't believe it! My one and only! twitter.com/FranklinMissy/…

    — Missy Franklin (@FranklinMissy) August 16, 2012

     

    During the Olympics, Franklin told TODAY.com that she had planned on getting the traditional Olympic tattoo found on numerous U.S. athletes, and that it would be her first and last tattoo.

    "Getting a tattoo has never been something ever thought I would do, but this one just has so much meaning to it and it is really something that you have to earn,'' Franklin told TODAY.com. "Not a lot of people have the opportunity to get it, so I just feel like it’s an honor to get it.'' 

    The swimmer's father, Dick Franklin, had already approved of the tattoo before it officially was inked on to her hip.

    "This will be the only one, and she's earned it,'' he told TODAY.com while in London.

    Dick also joked that he might get his own tattoo.

    "Yeah, 'Missy's Dad,''' he said while pointing to his bicep.

    Franklin told TODAY.com that she had initially planned to get inked while she was still in London, a day before her father's Aug. 10 birthday. While her busy schedule didn't allow that, she eventually was able to find time after attending the Olympic Closing Ceremony on Sunday and making an appearance on "The Tonight Show" that aired Wednesday night.

    Franklin flew back to her home in Centennial, Colo., on Monday before jetting off for the "Tonight" spot, and on Thursday she began her senior year at Regis Jesuit High School -- with a permanent souvenir of what she did on her summer vacation.

    Read more:

    Missy Franklin plans to have tattoo along with medals

    Missy Franklin's dilemma: Go pro or go to college?

    Missy Franklin: Amateur status 'still the plan right now'

     

     

     

    14 comments

    Women's bodies are beautiful, they don't need tattoos.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: olympics, tattoo, swimming, twitter, tweet, missy-franklin, olympic-rings, dick-franklin, regis-jesuit-high-school
  • 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.

    Show more
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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
    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.

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  • 2
    Aug
    2012
    12:50pm, EDT

    Very superstitious: Olympians woo Lady Luck with rituals

    By Sarika Dani and Ian Sager

    When four years of training leads up to a single moment, Olympians want luck on their side. For the superstitious ones, that means practicing rituals they know and trust.

    Lee Jin-man / AP

    U.S. swimmer Brendan Hansen always checks the water's temperature before competing.

    For example: Swimmer Brendan Hansen, who won bronze in the 100m breaststroke, checks the pool water’s temperature before racing. “I always put my hand in the water to see how cold it is,” he said. “I’ve done it since I was a little kid. It calms me down. It seems to work!”

    Triathlete Hunter Kemper likely watches what he puts into his body during competition, but the night before a race, he liked to relax with one of his favorites: a slice of pizza. “It was kind of a pre-race ritual. I just love pizza anyways…so it was an excuse to eat [it],” he told TODAY.com.

    Sarika Dani / NBC News

    Triathlete Hunter Kemper's pre-race preparation used to involve pizza.

    But as his career took him to more far-flung locales, Kemper eventually retired his pizza practice: “I couldn’t always find it in international places, so I didn’t want that to be the thing, you know?”

    So now that pizza’s out of the picture, Kemper said his current rule is to never train two days before his race, a practice he adopted years ago.

    For divers Kelci Bryant and Abby Johnston, who earned the U.S. its first synchronized diving medal, their common ritual comes down to a bath toy.

    “We have shared custody of a rubber duck named Alfred. He made the trip across the pond with us,” Johnston told TODAY.com. “When we started training together, we realized we both liked rubber ducks. So we adopted Alfred.”

    Joe Scarnici / Getty Images

    A rubber duck must be good luck for synchronized divers Abby Johnston and Kelci Bryant: Their silver medal is the USA's first Olympic medal in the event.

    Like a real duck, Alfred doesn’t stay put. “When we train, we put him between our bags so he can watch us,” Johnston explained.

    The little yellow duck even made the trip across the pond for the Olympics, but he didn’t come along to the TODAY set with the divers when they appeared on the show Monday.

    “He’s in the village, waiting for us to return,” Johnston said.

    Sarika Dani and Ian Sager are covering the Olympics for TODAY.com. They've been eating press center food each day in London, but not for luck.

    Related:
    U.S. gymnast's lucky towel gains fans
    Why (some) Olympic athletes still embrace the scrunchie

    Olympians flash their bling while going for gold
    What's on Olympians' lock screens? Pinups, gold-plated passion


    3 comments

    Think they are bad? You should see Pro Hockey players. Everything from wearing specific items, to putting gear on in a certain manner, to warm up exercises, to being the last/first one on/off the ice.

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  • 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...

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    Explore related topics: olympics, london, swimming, dream, matt-lauer, featured, michael-phelps, ryan-lochte, 200-im
  • 1
    Aug
    2012
    11:34am, EDT

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

    By Scott Stump

    As worldwide media reported Tuesday that Michael Phelps had just become the most decorated Olympian ever, he was busy giving a quick heads-up to a group who still had no idea — his own teammates.

    Conor Dwyer and Ricky Berens, who swam second and third, respectively, after Ryan Lochte started the 4x200 freestyle relay race that would give Phelps the record, told Matt Lauer on TODAY Wednesday they were in the dark about Phelps' imminent achievement. 

    “To tell you the truth, I didn’t know about the 19 medals,’’ Berens said. “(Phelps) told us after the race. He huddled us all together and he said, ‘Just want you guys to know I just broke the medal record.’’

    “I had no idea until he huddled us up after, and he got pretty emotional about it,’’ Dwyer said. “We were just going out there trying to get him as big a lead as possible.’’

    The medal record was previously held by Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina. The win Tuesday also marked a repeat for the Americans, who won the gold in that same relay in 2008. Phelps, Lochte and Berens were part of that Beijing team, while Dwyer is a first-time Olympian.

     “There’s always a lot of pressure at the Olympics,’’ Berens said. “This is when all eyes are on swimming, especially on Michael Phelps and what he’s doing, so to repeat with the competition so much greater than it was in 2008 is incredible.’’

    “It was something special, especially with Michael breaking the record and making history,’’ Dwyer said. “It was a blast to be on the relay, and it’s easy with these three guys being so good. It takes a lot of pressure off.’’

    Once Team USA brought home the win, it was time for a pig-out. After the race, Berens tweeted, “Finally!!!! The end of season celebration dinner! mcdonalds!! Yes all for me!” He included a picture of a tray loaded with a Big Mac, two quarter pounders, two cartons of fries, six McNuggets and a milk shake. Dwyer got in on the action, too, as they obliterated their diets together.


    Ricky Berens on WhoSay

    “We put so much pressure on this meet,’’ Berens said. “We sacrifice so much for the Olympic Games and we eat so healthy and try to do everything right. It’s just our time to just relax. That McDonald’s sitting in the dining hall has just been calling our name in the last two weeks.’’

    The two continued to ignore their diet on TODAY Wednesday when they piled down British cheeses prepared by celebrity chef Giada De Laurentiis.

    TODAY

    Olympic swimming gold medalists Conor Dwyer and Ricky Berens chow down on some British cheese prepared by celebrity chef Giada De Laurentiis on TODAY Wednesday.

    It's been a hectic time for Berens, who has spent more time with that McDonald’s tray than with his girlfriend, fellow U.S. swimmer Rebecca Soni. With a silver in the 100-meter breaststroke under her belt, Soni will race Thursday in the 200 breaststroke. Saturday, she'll swim the 4x100 medley relay. 

    “I’ve seen her for a total of like 30 seconds,’’ Berens said.

    This might be the final Olympics for Berens, 24. “I got a lot to think about,’’ he said. “It’s a hard place to be in. I would love to go out on top the way I did at this Olympic Games, but I’m also still very young. I probably haven’t taken more than two weeks off of swimming since high school and this is my chance to really take a break and relax.’’

    Read More:

    Obama to Phelps: 'You've made your country proud'

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

    Missy Franklin's mom: 'She's always been smiling'

     

     

     

    7 comments

    Oddly, no one questioned his use of drugs in the last olympics but many people did the Chinese women..no one questioned the English teen that in 2008 came from nowhere to get 2 golds and set record paces..

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  • 30
    Jul
    2012
    6:09pm, EDT

    USA's Missy Franklin takes Olympic gold medal in women's 100-meter backstroke

    Odd Andersen / AFP - Getty Images

    US swimmer Missy Franklin carries a national flag from the podium after receiving her gold medal after winning the women's 100m backstroke final swimming event at the London 2012 Olympic Games on July 30, in London.

    Toby Melville / Reuters

    Missy Franklin of the U.S., who took first place, starts in the women's 100m backstroke final at the London 2012 Olympic Games at the Aquatics Centre, on July 30.

    Mark J. Terrill / AP

    United States' Missy Franklin competes in the women's 100-meter backstroke swimming final at the Aquatics Centre in the Olympic Park during the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, on July 30.

    Michael Sohn / AP

    United States' Missy Franklin listens to the national anthem after receiving her gold medal for the women's 100-meter backstroke swimming final at the Aquatics Centre in the Olympic Park during the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, on July 30.

    AP reports -- Michael Phelps has yet to win a gold medal, and Ryan Lochte's star is fading. So along came Missy Franklin to restore American swim hopes with a gutty performance at the Olympics on Monday night.

    Coming back less than 14 minutes after swimming a semifinal heat, the Colorado teenager won the first gold medal of what figures to be a dazzling career, rallying to win the 100-meter backstroke.

    "Indescribable," the 17-year-old Franklin said. "I still can't believe that happened. I don't even know what to think. I saw my parents' reaction on the screen and I just started bawling. I can't even think right now."

    Continue reading.

    Related links:

    • Slideshow: London 2012: Emotional moments
    • Slideshow: The city of London
    • Slideshow: Olympic torch carries the flame to London 2012
    • Slideshow: Venues for London 2012 Olympic Games

    Mark J. Terrill / AP

    United States' Missy Franklin, left, leads in the women's 100-meter backstroke swimming final at the Aquatics Centre in the Olympic Park during the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, on July 30.

    Mark J. Terrill / AP

    United States' Missy Franklin reacts after winning gold in the women's 100-meter backstroke swimming final at the Aquatics Centre in the Olympic Park during the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, on July 30.

    Martin Bureau / AFP - Getty Images

    Gold medalist Missy Franklin of the US celebrates with her gold medal on the podium after winning the women's 100m backstroke swimming event at the London 2012 Olympic Games on July 30, in London.

     

    6 comments

    Missy Franklin: where to start. She is everything that exemplifies an outstanding young individual and someone that has dedication, strength and discipline. Not just that but she is also a teenager that loves to have fun, finding a great balance in being a gold medal Olympic swimmer at the age of 17 …

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    Explore related topics: sports, olympics, london, swimming, gold-medal, missy-franklin
  • 30
    Jul
    2012
    1:32pm, EDT

    At 97, Olympic female gold medalist savors role as pioneer

    Courtesy of Judy Player

    Helen Johns Carroll dives into the pool in the second leg of the winning 400-meter relay at the 1932 Olympics in Los Angeles.

    By Scott Stump

    Helen Johns Carroll’s Olympic gold medal and her memories may each be 80 years old, but both have been carefully preserved in the generations since her once-in-a-lifetime experience in Los Angeles in 1932.


    Carroll, 97, is believed to be the second-oldest living female American gold medalist, and a simple glimpse of today’s Olympics is all it takes for her to be transported back to that memorable time. Just like current phenom Missy Franklin, Helen Johns, as she was known then, was only 17 years old when she represented the United States in swimming. She swam the second leg on the medal-winning 400 freestyle relay team in 1932, earning a gold medal that is currently under lock and key for safekeeping at a local bank near her home in Sumter, S.C. Track athlete and 1932 4x100 gold medalist Evelyn Furtsch Ojeda, 98, is believed to be the oldest living American female gold medalist.

    “Whenever we go take the gold medal out of the bank, anyone carrying it is a nervous wreck until we get it back,’’ Carroll laughed in an interview with TODAY.com. “Just remembering the whole picture of being there, it was just so wonderful. I look at (today’s Olympics) and try to compare it to ours, and it’s so much more elaborate. Ours was really restricted because of lack of funds (during the Great Depression).’’

    Story: For first time, women from every nation ready to rock Olympics

    In what is being called "The Year of the Woman" in the London Olympics, Carroll savors her role as one of the pioneers and is proud of how far women have come in the Olympic movement. For the first time in history, every participating nation has at least one female athlete on the team, and for the first time, there are more females than males on Team USA. And now, Teri McKeever has made waves as the first female head coach of the U.S. women's swim team.

    wistv.com - Columbia, South Carolina |

    “I love anything that means women are advancing in interest or popularity and setting a good example for people,’’ Carroll said.

    Johns was taught swimming by her father while growing up in Medford, Mass., a suburb of Boston. She trained primarily in the ocean because there were few pools in the area, and had only been formally coached for one year before she qualified for the Olympics in the 400-meter relay at the trials in Jones Beach, N.Y., in July of 1932. Carroll wasn’t even allowed to return home before she was whisked away on a train from New York's Pennsylvania Station, which would take her and her fellow qualifiers all the way to Los Angeles, picking up other Olympians along the way across the country.

    “It was wonderful picking up people on the train and getting to see the country that way,’’ Carroll said. “People would come greet us and cheer us on at every stop.’’

    One of the train’s passengers was the boisterous Babe Didrikson Zaharias, who is widely considered one of the greatest all-around athletes of the 20th century. She would go on to win two gold medals and a silver in track and field that year in Los Angeles.

    “People said she was very conceited about the things she could do, but I didn’t find it was at all objectionable and out of place for her because she would tell you about what she could do and then she would go right out and show you,’’ Carroll said.

    The country was mired in the Great Depression at the time, and Carroll can recall giving some of her extra dresses away to less-fortunate teammates. Her father was not able to see her compete because there was no way he could leave his business on the docks in Boston. The signs of poverty were also apparent outside the team’s hotel in downtown Los Angeles.

    Courtesy of Judy Player

    Helen Johns Carroll (wearing a white hat in the first row behind podium) waits to receive her gold medal at the 1932 Olympics.

    “The city was in dreadful shape,’’ Carroll said. “We took a bus to our practice sessions in the morning, and we would see crowds of unemployed people and people on the corner selling apples for five cents. It was sad.’’

    While it’s hard to imagine in today’s world of teams training closely together and competing internationally for years leading up to the Olympics, Carroll didn’t know anything about her competition or even about her three relay teammates – Helene Madison, Josephine McKim and Eleanor Saville. There were some familiar faces, however, as her small hometown of Medford surprisingly produced two other Olympians in Carroll’s high school classmate, track sprinter Mary Carew, along with distance runner Jimmy Henigan.

    Her swimming teammate, McKim, brought an element of glamour to the team. She was from Los Angeles and was dating Joel McCrea, one of the big movie stars of the 1930s.

    “We liked to be down in the lobby when Josephine’s movie friends would come by to go on their dates,’’ Carroll said. “It was fun to see how other people reacted to them.’’

    Carroll and her teammates breezed to a gold medal in the relay, beating the team from the Netherlands by nearly nine seconds. Carroll can still remember wearing her parade dress, hat and shoes as the gold medal was draped around her neck. Despite being held in the United States, the medal ceremony was conducted in French because they were the ones who organized the first modern Olympic Games in 1896.

    “As they addressed us, they would say ‘Champion of the Olympics’ in French, and then they went on and on and I couldn’t understand what they were saying, but I’m sure it was very complimentary,’’ Carroll said.

    When Carroll returned to Medford with her gold medal, she was greeted by the mayor and a host of neighbors in celebration.  Los Angeles was her only Olympics as she was focused on her studies at Brown University by the time the 1936 Games in Berlin rolled around. Carroll retired from her career as a special education teacher in the Sumter school district in 1980, but she maintained her Olympic connection, carrying the torch for a stretch on its way to the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta.

    More from TODAY in London

    • Find the queen! See opening ceremony in stunning detail
    • What's on Olympians' lock screens? Pinups, gold-plated passion
    • Swimmer Franklin: I'll win to 'shine some light' on Colo.
    • Video: In a first, women compete for every Olympic nation 

     

     

     

    10 comments

    A nice story but what a misleading headline! Is someone going to interview Evelyn Ojeda?

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