SportsLine.com wire reports
Aug. 11, 2000
INDIANAPOLIS -- Josh Davis broke a 12-year-old American record and B.J.
Bedford finally broke through Friday night. But Lenny Krayzelburg couldn't send
a message to the Australians by breaking his own world mark in the backstroke.
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| Josh Davis, who won three golds in Atanta in '96, breaks the U.S. record in the 200 free.(AP) | |
Krayzelburg was considered the best hope to set the first world record of
the U.S. Olympic trials, coming within 0.07 seconds during the semifinals of
the 100-meter backstroke.
The 24-year-old native of the Ukraine broke out his high-tech "jammer"
bodysuit -- stretching from waist to knees -- and donned a tight-fitting cap in
the final, intent on breaking the time of 53.60 set last August. Earlier
Friday, he said it was important to show the Australians that "we're ready to
go."
The powerful Aussies, led by Ian Thorpe, set three records at their own
trials in May.
With a sellout crowd at the Indiana University Natatorium roaring him on,
Krayzelburg went out too fast and faded at the end to finish in 53.84. Still,
he'll be heading to the Olympics for the first time, beating Neil Walker by
more than a second on Day 3 of the trials.
"I was a little disappointed, but I can't complain," said Krayzelburg, who
came to the United States in 1989 and gained citizenship in 1995. "I made the
Olympics. It got a big monkey off my back."
Krayzelburg looked in the stands toward his father, Oleg, who held up his
hands as if to say, "What happened?"
"He's probably disappointed that I didn't get the record," Krayzelburg
said. "But we'll save that for Sydney."
Davis was on world-record pace halfway through the men's 200-meter
freestyle, then held on to finish in 1:47.26. That eclipsed Matt Biondi's mark
of 1:47.72 in the 1988 Seoul Olympics but was still nearly two seconds off the
world record, held by Thorpe.
Davis, 27, of Austin, Texas, won three gold medals in the 1996 Atlanta Games
-- the most of any male athlete.
"There's nothing like wearing the red, white and blue," he said. "The USA
is the best country in the world. It's only right that we have the best
athletes at the Olympics."
Bedford failed to even make the Olympic team at her last three trials, but
she finally ended her 12-year wait in the women's 100 backstroke. The
27-year-old native of Etna, N.H., stretched for the wall and immediately looked
toward the scoreboard, pumping her fist in exultation when the time of 1:01.85
was flashed.
"I am overwhelmed," she said, after jumping up and down on the pool deck.
"I never thought this dream of mine would come true, but it has."
The 27-year-old swimmer began to cry.
"I probably won't be able to describe this for three or four years,"
Bedford said. "I'm overwhelmed, I'm ecstatic, I'm effervescent, I'm in
excruciating pain."
Four years ago, Bedford just missed the team by finishing third in the 100
backstroke in the 1996 trials. She was bartending during the Atlanta Games,
pouring drinks while customers watched the swimming on television.
"I was like, 'Get that crap off the TV,"' she said earlier in the week,
laughing.
Courtney Shealy of Columbia, S.C., made her first Olympic team, hanging on
for second at 1:02.05 to beat out high school teacher Lea Maurer, the American
record holder in the event. Maurer hung over the lane line, covering her eyes
in anguish when she realized she had missed the Olympic team by 0.2 seconds.
"I swam a good race plan and it just wasn't good enough," said Maurer, 29,
who won two medals in the 1992 Games. "For some reason, it was harder than it
should have been."
Sixteen-year-old Megan Quann of Puyallup, Wash., also is heading to the
Olympics for the first time after winning the 100 breaststroke in 1:07.26 --
just 0.14 off her American record set a day earlier. Staciana Stitts of
Carlsbad, Calif., took the other spot on the team at 1:07.79.
Shealy's more heralded teammate at the University of Georgia, Kristy Kowal,
came up short of the Olympic squad by one-hundredth of a second. The 1998 world
champion touched the wall at 1:07.80.
Trailing Krayzelburg, Walker earned a spot on the Olympic team at 54.85.
Davis was followed by Scott Goldblatt of Austin, Texas, who made his first
Olympic team at 1:48.12. Chad Carvin and Klete Keller, who already qualified
for the team, finished 3-4 to earn spots on the 800 relay in Sydney.
In the morning prelims, Tom Malchow made a run at his world record in the
200 butterfly. Wearing a bodysuit with only his arms exposed, he was a
half-second under world record pace at 150 meters before slowing to win in
1:55.67.
Malchow, the 1996 Olympic silver medalist, took it easy in the evening
semis, moving on to the final at 1:56.67. He set the world record of 1:55.18 in
June.
"I was a little too aggressive in the morning and a little too cautious in
the evening," Malchow said. "I've got to find a happy medium."
Malchow said it's not important to set a record at the trials.
"It would be nice, but it's not crucial," he said. "By and large, the
meet has been fast. Maybe we won't set any records here. Hopefully, those will
come in Sydney."
Samantha Arsenault of Peabody, Mass., heads into the final of the 200
freestyle as the top qualifier at 2:00.16. Cristina Teuscher, a gold medalist
in 1996, was top qualifier in the 200 individual medley with a time of 2:14.21.
It was not a good night for 1996 medalists:
- Beth Botsford finished last in the eight-woman final of the 100 backstroke
after winning gold in the same race at Atlanta.
- Brad Bridgewater was seventh in the men's 100 backstroke; he won the 200
backstroke at the 1996 Olympics.
- Amanda Beard, who captured a gold and two silvers in Atlanta, placed last
in the 100 breaststroke.
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