SportsLine.com wire reports
Aug. 13, 2000
INDIANAPOLIS -- Gary Hall Jr. arrived at the pool in a fighting mood.
After stripping off a black hooded robe to reveal a pair of red, white and blue
boxing trunks, he pierced the air with phantom punches.
Take that, diabetes. Take that, swimming establishment.
The flamboyant Hall, overcoming diabetes and a drug suspension, earned
another chance to show he's the world's fastest swimmer by finishing second to
Neil Walker in the 100-meter freestyle at the U.S. Olympic trials Sunday night.
"I'm really stoked to be going to Sydney," Hall said.
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| Misty Hyman wins the final of the women's 200-meter butterfly with a time of 2:09.27.(AP) | |
His father, a three-time Olympian, fired up the crowd at the start of the
evening by waving an American flag and leading a chant of "USA! USA! USA!"
Hall tried to outdo his old man, strolling on deck wearing a patriotic pair of
trunks that he bought at a charity event for Muhammad Ali.
"I wanted to bring them out for a special occasion, and tonight was the
night," the younger Hall said. "I really don't think I'm a showman. I just
like to be me."
Walker set a blistering pace over the first 50 meters, making the turn more
than a half-second under the world record. The 24-year-old from Austin, Texas,
faded on the return lap but held on to win in 48.71 seconds.
Hall, closing fast, took second in 48.84 to claim the other Olympic berth
and a spot on the 400 relay team as well.
"Anytime you're going to race against the Australians, it's going to be a
close race," Hall said. "But I believe this relay team is the greatest relay
team ever assembled, and I look forward to going for a world record."
Ed Moses won't get a chance to go for a breaststroke double in Sydney. He
was the victim of a shocking upset in the 200 final, finishing fourth in a race
won by Kyle Salyards, 19, of Tempe, Ariz.
"I'm really disappointed," Moses said through a USA Swimming spokeswoman.
"I don't know what happened."
Tom Wilkens of Palo Alto, Calif., provided one of the night's highlights by
finishing second behind Salyards, earning the other Olympic berth.
Wilkens was expected to make the team in the 400 individual medley but faded
to third behind Tom Dolan and Erik Vendt. In the breaststroke, he came through
in a thrilling race in which only 0.32 seconds separated the top four
finishers.
Wilkens pumped his fist when he saw his name under Salyards' winning time of
2:13.21. The second-place finisher touched in 2:13.34, edging Brendan Hansen's
2:13.49. After crawling from the pool, Wilkens was overcome by emotion, sitting
on the deck with his hands covering his face.
"Things happen in strange ways," he said. "It wasn't pretty, but it got
me on the team. You don't have to be the best looking."
Moses, already on the team after winning the 100 breaststroke, touched
fourth in 2:13.53.
The versatile Walker missed the Olympic team by one-hundredth of a second in
1996. He's atoned for his disappointment at these trials.
"It really wasn't a negative experience now that I look back on it," said
Walker, who already earned a spot on the team by placing second in the 100
backstroke. "I turned it into positive motivation."
Hall, 25, won silver in the 50 and 100 freestyle at the 1996 Atlanta Games,
but his life has been troubled since then. He was suspended for three months in
1998 after testing positive for marijuana, then learned last year he has
diabetes.
The Phoenix resident didn't earn a qualifying time for the trials until a
month ago and often has to give himself up to eight insulin shots a day to cope
with his disease.
Sabir Muhammad missed out becoming the first black to make the U.S. Olympic
swim team. He finished last in the eight-man final, but will get another chance
in his best event, the 50 freestyle.
However, Anthony Ervin of Valencia, Calif., considers himself of black
heritage. Ervin, whose father is 75 percent black and mother is white, earned a
spot on the 400 free relay after finishing fifth in the 100.
Misty Hyman of Phoenix won't have to compete in the shadow of teammates Dara
Torres and Jenny Thompson any longer. Hyman, edged out for an Olympic spot in
1996, made a name for herself by holding off hard-charging Kaitlin Sandeno to
win the 200 butterfly.
Hyman, 21, touched the wall in 2:09.27, while Sandeno took the second
Olympic spot in 2:09.54 -- with no one else within two seconds. Sandeno already
had made the team in the 400 individual medley, anyway.
Thompson and Torres are swimming in a league of their own among the female
sprinters. They set up another showdown in the 100 freestyle by breezing into
Monday's final as top qualifiers.
Torres, 33, went fastest in the morning preliminaries, while Thompson came
back to lead the evening semifinals in 54.41. Torres was second in 54.92 -- the
only other swimmer to eclipse the 55-second barrier.
Torres, edged by Thompson in a stirring 100 butterfly on Thursday, has made
a remarkable comeback after retiring for seven years. But another 33-year-old
former Olympian didn't fare as well.
Angel Martino of Milledgeville, Ga., a six-time medalist, hoped to make the
freestyle relay team after having a baby three years ago. But her comeback may
have ended when she failed to qualify for the 100 free final, finishing 11th
out of 16 semifinalists.
"I felt like an underdog. But I certainly thought I'd be on that relay,"
said Martino, who probably won't take one last shot in the 50 freestyle.
Amy Van Dyken, who in 1996 became the first American woman to win four gold
medals in an Olympics, was fourth-fastest qualifier at 55.37. The 27-year-old
is coming back from two shoulder surgeries in the last two years.
World record-holder Lenny Krayzelburg and 17-year-old Aaron Peirsol of
Irvine, Calif., breezed into Monday's final of the 200 backstroke. Kristy Kowal
of Athens, Ga., bouncing back from the disappointment of finishing third in the
100 breaststroke, dominated the 200 breast semis. Wilkens came back in his
second event of the night, the 200 IM, to post the second-fastest time of the
semifinals behind Dolan.
AP NEWS
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