The
Stuff of Heroes
At
his first Olympics, Australia's Ian Thorpe shows the world his
style, power and poise-and why his swimming-mad country has
the team to beat in the pool
By TOM DUSEVIC
We
know his name, but its meaning is a seductive work in progress.
He grows from stage to stage with the ease of someone who
has passed this way before; and, via every new challenge and
with each stunning deed, Ian Thorpe changes the way we think
about champions. At his first Olympic Games, the 17-year-old
Australian is driving through the water at Sydney's International
Aquatic Centre like swimming's gift from the gods. "He was
born to swim," said Italian Massimiliano Rosolino, who finished
second to Thorpe in Saturday's 400-m freestyle final. "I think
he can still get better. Who knows? I hope for himself that
he does. I hope for myself that he doesn't."
On the first evening of the swimming program, the expectations
of millions found perfection in 10 laps of the Olympic pool.
Thorpe won two gold medals, broke his own world record for
the 400-m freestyle and shared another world best with three
teammates when he anchored Australia's 4 x 100-m freestyle
relay team to victory over the U.S.-a country that had never
failed to win that event at an Olympics. For Thorpe, it had
been the "best minute, best hour, best day, best week" of
his life. "To be able to dream and to fulfil it is the best
thing an individual can do," he said. "It was just so great
to be able to share that moment with the whole country." Thorpe's
triumphs lifted an already happy host nation's mood-and inspired
the great racers from the rest of the world to hit new heights
in a pool that elite swimmers think is fast: eight world records
were set in the first two days of competition.
As soon as Thorpe walked onto the pool deck Sept. 16, it
was like Phil Spector orchestrating thousands of paparazzi:
a thunderous wall of sound combined with a dazzle of camera
flashes. The 17,500-seat stadium rocked to the chants of "Thor-pee,
Thor-pee, Thor-pee" as swimming-crazy Australian fans anticipated
the showdown between their country and the world's top swimming
team, the U.S. "Until tonight I hadn't got the Olympic buzz,
the true spirit," said Thorpe. "But it was as if the gladiators
had walked into the Colosseum. When I walked out I was ready
to race and race well. Hearing the crowd gave me an even bigger
buzz." For his rivals, that kind of atmosphere is a source
of envy. U.S. sprinter Gary Hall Jr. believes the Americans
could learn something from the Australians. The host country's
mix of big venues, knowledgeable fans and corporate sponsorship
had given Australia an edge in the pool.
It's a swimming system and sporting culture that have made
the current teenage sensation. "Only Australia could produce
Ian Thorpe," says Gennadi Touretski, an Australian team coach
who previously coached national teams in the former Soviet
Union. "A teenager as Olympic champion-that's the Australian
dream," he told Time, recounting the examples of John Konrads
in 1960 and Shane Gould in 1972. Touretski believes swimming
is entrenched in the country's culture. Strong local clubs,
rather than colleges, breed promising youngsters, he says,
the best of whom go to sports institutes as teenagers. Government
funding also supports home-based athletes (such as Thorpe)
and their coaches (such as Doug Frost, Thorpe's mentor). A
benign climate, particularly in Sydney and Brisbane, offers
hundreds of training venues year-round. Supportive parents
who cart seven- or eight-year-olds to early-morning squad
sessions help achieve great results at a younger age. "There
is no country with this culture," says Touretski.
And once every generation, out of hundreds of thousands of
young hopefuls, along comes a talent like Thorpe. Not only
does he have the oversized body (1.95 m) that is perfect for
power aquatics; other swimmers believe he is also the hardest-working
athlete of a select breed. "I'm very fortunate to have what
I have, and really it is a gift," Thorpe said. "And I'm very
thankful for that." Thorpe's long, graceful stroke and explosive
kick were on show in the 400-m freestyle. He was a full second
ahead at the first turn and swam the rest of the race in style
for a new world record of 3:40.59. It gave him his first Olympic
title-and, amid the country's wild celebrations, he thanked
God, the crowd, the nation, his family and his coach. "I'm
one of the select few athletes who have performed at their
best at the Olympic Games," he said afterwards. "It's one
of the things I wanted to do." The other thing he wanted to
do on Saturday was to help his teammates-Michael Klim, Chris
Fydler and Ashley Callus-break the U.S. lock on the 4 x 100-m
freestyle relay.
Before the Games, Gary Hall, Jr. said the Americans would
smash the locals "like guitars." A world-record start by Klim
(48.18 sec.) set up the Australian victory, but Thorpe sealed
it. "I was hoping [Thorpe] would find something. I knew he
was the fitter guy of the two and he just paced perfectly,"
said Klim. Hall got the U.S. ahead at the final turn, but
Thorpe kept his head cool and his stroke smooth to bring home
the race in a new world-record time of 3:13.67. "The last
50 m were rather painful," said Hall. "This is the Olympics,
all or nothing. I doff my swimming cap to the great Ian Thorpe.
He had a better finish than I had." While Hall was hurting,
Thorpe's mind was a blur. "When I touched the wall I had this
feeling we had won," he said later. "I didn't look up or anything."
The Australians celebrated with some air guitar on the pool
deck.
Australian swimming idol Dawn Fraser, three-time winner of
the Olympic 100-m freestyle and a teenage champion in 1956,
said the relay was the best race she had seen. Most observers
were wondering whether they had seen the best swimmer of all
time. Australia's head coach, Don Talbot, once described Thorpe
as possibly the "swimmer of the century." On Saturday night,
the chatty coach was almost lost for words. "How can you enhance
the opinion I've got of him?" said Talbot. "I don't have the
superlatives." But it was the question that commentators were
not going to leave alone: Is Thorpe the best ever? "This is
only my first Olympics," Thorpe said carefully. "When I have
achieved a little more than I have, maybe then I can start
thinking along those lines. It's too early yet." For now,
it is enough for the world to enjoy his fluid beauty; the
journey he makes on his sporting career will be shared and
savored.
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September 25,
2000 | NO. 38
C
O V E R
T H E OLYMPIC GAMES
COVER:
Let There Be Sport
Sydney lights the Olympic flame and welcomes the world's athletes in a
spectacular pageant of music, dance and story that brings together Aboriginal
mythology and popular culture
SWIMMING:
King of Lap Land
Australia's teen sensation Ian Thorpe sends records tumbling
TRIATHLON:
On Track
The new sport makes a thrilling debut in a telegenic setting
SHOOTING:
Diamond Eye
The Atlanta dark horse wins a second gold medal in the trap
CYCLING:
Blazing Saddles
Michelle Ferris takes silver; Shane Kelly settles for bronze
NOTEBOOK:
Highlights of the first few days
OLYMPIC
SCENE: When just competing is a victory
A
R T S
CINEMA:
In Space Cowboys, Hollywood acts its age
Shakespeare's
Titus-with tattoos
U
S A
CAMPAIGN 2000:
When Dubya Went Off-Message
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