SportsLine.com wire reports
Aug. 16, 2000
INDIANAPOLIS -- Spit on this.
Dara Torres ignored Amy Van Dyken's pre-race ploy and finally got a victory
at the U.S. Olympic Trials, beating the defending gold medalist in the 50-meter
freestyle Wednesday night.
 | |
| Erik Vendt reacts to breaking the American record in the 1,500m free.(AP) | |
Van Dyken spit in Torres' adjoining lane before they dived in the water -- a
tactic that has been known to intimidate other rivals. It didn't work against
the 33-year-old Torres, who won in 24.90 seconds.
"For me, it's not a big deal," Torres said. "Maybe it is with the younger
competitors. I'm so focused on what I'm going to do in my race, I don't worry
about that."
Van Dyken, who finished second in 24.99, downplayed the incident.
"I always spit in Dara's lane," she said. "It's nothing against her. I
think she got upset the first time because she hadn't swum against me before. I
told her, `I've got nothing but love for you if I spit in your lane."'
Torres may have beaten Van Dyken, but the victory was tainted just a bit by
the woman who wasn't there.
Jenny Thompson, saying she had a full schedule for Sydney, scratched from
the 50 after edging Torres in both the 100 free and 100 butterfly. Minus her
chief rival, Torres picked up her first victory and ensured her third
individual race at the Olympics.
"I need to be able to go faster," said Torres, who finished short of her
American record and more than a half-second off Inge de Bruijn's world record
of 24.39. "The times I swam here won't compete in Sydney."
In the final event of the eight-day trials, Erik Vendt of North Easton,
Mass., became the first American to go under 15 minutes in the 1,500 free. With
a tremendous finishing kick, he went 14:59.11 to break George DiCarlo's
16-year-old national record.
Vendt, who already earned a spot on the team in the 400 individual medley,
ripped off his goggles and searched for the scoreboard as soon as he touched.
When he saw the time, breaking DiCarlo's record of 15:01.51, the 19-year-old
pumped his weary arms in triumph.
"It feels great to win and get an American record in the same race," Vendt
said. "It's been my goal ever since I started swimming the mile at age 12. At
the 1,100 mark, I could hear the crowd going crazy and I knew I was on pace for
something -- I figured the American record."
About halfway through the grueling race, Vendt pulled away from favored
Chris Thompson, who won a bronze medal at the 1999 Pan Pacific Championships.
The 21-year-old native of Roseburg, Ore., took the second Olympic spot in
15:09.16.
"I went out wanting to lead at 600 meters and then try to hold everyone
off," Thompson said. "Vendt took off on me and I wasn't able to hang with
him."
Vendt will try to end America's drought in swimming's longest event, the
last medal coming in 1984.
"A lot of people came to watch Dara swim the 50," he said. "But if we
were able to put on a good show for them and generate interest in the mile, all
the better."
Torres, the oldest woman ever to make the U.S. swim team, showed the wear
and tear of her busy schedule. She'll be the first American swimmer to compete
in four Olympics, having been there in 1984, '88 and '92.
"My legs are sore," said Torres, who will probably swim two relays in
Sydney as well. "I'm upset with my time but glad to finally get a win."
Van Dyken, who in Atlanta became the first American woman to win four gold
medals in one Games, gets a chance to repeat as the 50 champion.
"The 50 free is my baby and I'm excited to swim it," she said. "I would
like to have won it. But at this meet, second is fine."
For both women, the race was another chapter in their comeback stories.
Torres left swimming after the 1992 Barcelona Games, spending the next seven
years dabbling in modeling and infomercials. But she returned last year and has
been swimming even better than she did in her previous life.
Van Dyken underwent shoulder surgery in 1998 and a similar operation in
January. She didn't resume training until March, arriving at the trials merely
hoping to earn a spot on the relay teams. She wound up challenging her winning
time from the Atlanta Games, 24.87.
"To go under 25 seconds is so exciting," she said. "I have a lot more
room for improvement. You'll see a lot faster than I was in Atlanta. The more I
rest, the better I get."
For the first time, the U.S. men's team is younger than the women. No world
records were broken at the trials, but Vendt's performance was the ninth
American mark.
AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service
Copyright 2000, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved