SportsLine.com wire reports
Aug. 9, 2000
INDIANAPOLIS -- Age and experience took a beating at the U.S. Olympic
swimming trials Wednesday night.
Klete Keller touched the wall an instant before Chad Carvin and broke a
12-year-old American record in the 400-meter freestyle to earn an Olympic berth
on the opening night of the eight-day meet.
Keller, an 18-year-old from Phoenix, won in 3 minutes, 47.18 seconds,
breaking the mark of 3:48.06 set by Matt Cetlinski in the 1988 Olympic trials.
Carvin, 26, also went under the old record time and finished in 3:47.50 to
claim the other Olympic berth. Keller and Carvin were nearly stroke-for-stroke
over the final 50 meters after Carvin had led from the start.
 | |
| Dara Torres -- who ended a seven-year retirement last July -- sets a U.S. record in the prelims. (AP) | |
"I'm not disappointed," Carvin said. "This meet is not about winning.
It's about making the team and having a shot at Sydney. That's the ultimate
goal."
Kaitlin Sandeno, a 17-year-old who has dominated the 400 individual medley
nationally for three years, is also headed for Sydney.
"I'm going to be missing a month of high school," she said. "But I think
it's a good excuse."
Sandeno, of Lake Forest, Calif., led the entire way and won in 4:40.91 --
third-fastest in the world this year.
"It's a huge honor. I'm going to go out there and kick some butt for the
USA," Sandeno said, wiping away tears as the crowd at Indiana University
Natatorium roared.
She beat Maddy Crippen of Philadelphia by a body length. Crippen, 20, took
the second Olympic spot in 4:42.81.
Two 1996 Olympians were shut out. Cristina Teuscher, 22, finished third in
4:44.42, while Kristine Quance-Julian, a 25-year-old mother, was last in the
eight-woman field in 4:51.98.
"We have a good set of younger swimmers here," Sandeno said. "I don't
think age has a lot to do with it. If you have it within you, you can go out
there and win no matter how young you are."
Carvin, of Laguna Hills, Calif., put his hard-luck past behind him in making
his first Olympic team. He was diagnosed with a heart condition that caused him
to miss the '96 trials. Two years later, a bulging disc in his back forced him
out of the world championships.
"Once I finished and looked up and saw I was second, I was filled with so
much emotion," he said. "All I've gone through flashed before me. I wish I
could share this feeling with everyone. It feels so good."
Four years ago, Carvin tried to watch the trials on television from his
parents' home in California, but gave up.
"I broke down in tears," he said. "I couldn't even get through the first
day."
Carvin was on American-record pace as the fastest qualifier in the morning
preliminaries.
Keller will go up against world record-holder Ian Thorpe of Australia in
Sydney. Even though both Keller and Carvin went under the American record,
they're still nearly six seconds off Thorpe's record.
"It's going to be fun. It's going to be a pretty big challenge, but I know
everyone's beatable so I have a shot at him," Keller said. "We're the best
America has to offer. We're going to go down there and give it what we've got.
I think people will be surprised."
Dara Torres, 33, created a sensation with an American record in the 100
butterfly preliminaries after ending her seven-year retirement last July.
Torres was the fastest qualifier in 57.58, breaking Jenny Thompson's mark of
57.88, set last August.
Thompson answered right back in the evening semifinals as the quickest
qualifier for Thursday's final in 57.59. Torres, swimming in a different heat,
was second in 58.07 and Ashley Tappin, a '92 Olympian, was third in 58.84.
When Torres began her comeback last July, she trained with Thompson at
Stanford. But by December, their coach, Richard Quick, split them up because
the intensity of daily practice rivaled the Olympics.
"Things can get intense when you've got two swimmers going after exactly
the same thing, and there's only one thing out there -- the gold medal," Torres
said. "But it's not like we're enemies. We're cordial to each other and we're
teammates."
Angel Martino, a gold medalist at the Atlanta Games, was sixth in the
semifinals, but may scratch the final.
Torres is trying to become the first American swimmer to make four Olympic
teams.
She competed in her first Olympics at Los Angeles in 1984, winning a gold
medal in the 400 freestyle relay. She captured bronze and silver at the 1988
Games before seeming to finish her career with another gold in the 400 relay at
Barcelona in '92.
Next came a successful modeling and TV career, in which she did swimming
commentary and made an infomercial for Tae Bo workout videotapes.
After coming out of retirement in July 1999, she merely hoped to earn a spot
on a relay. Now, she is a threat to make the Sydney Olympics in three sprint
events as she is also planning to compete in the 100 and 50 freestyle.
She's never won an individual Olympic gold medal.
Thompson is pursuing the same goal; all five of her Olympic gold medals came
in relays. She failed to make the '96 team in an individual event because of a
surprisingly poor trials, where she was fourth in the 100 fly.
In the semifinals of the men's 100 breaststroke, Ed Moses of Burke, Va., was
the fastest qualifier in 1:00.99 for Thursday night's final.
Moses, 20, also led after the morning prelims, when he was urged on by his
mother's handlettered sign reading "Part the water Moses."
Auburn teammates Pat Calhoun and David Denniston were 2-3 behind Moses in
the semis.
AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service
Copyright 2000, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved