PARIS, France – Bobby Finke prevented a shock gold medal wipeout for the U.S. men with his win in the 1,500-meter freestyle at the Paris Olympic pool on Sunday, August 4, but alarm bells will be going off at USA Swimming headquarters ahead of the 2028 Los Angeles Games.
From Michael Phelps to Johnny Weissmuller, the US has rolled out Olympic champions like a gold medal assembly line.
But that production slowed at La Defense Arena, where Finke needed a world record to fend off Italy’s Gregorio Paltrinieri to come out on top in the final individual event on the program.
If Finke had not gotten to the wall first the Paris Games would have been considered a monumental failure for U.S. Swimming marking the first time since 1900 that American men had been shut out of the individual Olympic golds.
“I knew going into the race, I was the last individual swim for the guys,” said Finke, after a successful defence of his 1,500m title. “I’m just happy I won.
“I had a lot of pressure going into the race.
“I really wanted to defend that medal too, I really wanted to get on top of the podium again and hear the anthem all over again like I did for the first time in Tokyo.”
Finke’s win and another record smashing victory by the American women in the final event of the competition the medley relay were just enough to vault the US over Australia at the top of the medal table.
But their eight golds was the lowest Olympic haul for the US team since returning home with the same number from the 1988 Seoul Summer Games.
It may have been a golden celebration for the Americans but it came with a sobering reminder as they watched the United States’ 64-year unbeaten run in the men’s 4×100 meter medley end as China swept to a seismic win.
“I feel like for Team USA, the expectation is gold,” said Caeleb Dressel, after adding the relay silver to his nine Olympic gold. “That’s traditionally what we strive for and I don’t think that changes any Olympic cycle.
“There’s very competitive teams. I mean, just across the board, the wealth is being spread.”
American swimmers and officials like to say that just getting through the do-or-die Olympic trials and earning a spot on the US squad is tougher than winning a Games medal.
Not anymore.
Paris has shown that the competition is getting tougher with many of the star performers in Paris, like home hero Leon Marchand, coming through the US college system trained by top American coaches such as Bob Bowman.
More than eight gold medals will be demanded of American swimmers at the Los Angeles Olympics, where the sport is being set up as the headline event, moving the pool into the massive SoFi stadium, home of the National Football League’s Rams and Chargers.
In the immediate aftermath of Paris the future looks foggy for US prospects, while two great new talents surfaced at the Paris pool from France and Canada.
Paris poster boy 22-year-old Marchand, winner of four golds, will be hitting his prime in four years, while 17-year-old Canadian wunderkind Summer McIntosh, winner of three golds, could by Los Angeles have replaced Katie Ledecky as the next superstar women’s swimmer.
“I’m just trying to soak in this moment and know that this does only come around every four years,” said McIntosh. “I’m already thinking about LA to be honest, I’m really excited.” – Rappler.com