Current:Home > ScamsKatie Ledecky savors this moment: her eighth gold medal spanning four Olympic Games -Wealth Harmony Labs
Katie Ledecky savors this moment: her eighth gold medal spanning four Olympic Games
EchoSense Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-08 17:20:43
NANTERRE, France — As Katie Ledecky did what Katie Ledecky does, churning back and forth, lap after lap, building her lead quickly to that magical moment when it’s clear she cannot be beaten, a sense of calm came over her.
She knew she was going to be in the water for a very long time, 15 1/2 minutes as it turned out, swimming one of her two specialities, the 1,500-meter freestyle. She was moving quickly, of course, but this was going to last a while, and why not?
There was no need to rush history.
When she touched the wall and slapped the water, an uncharacteristic moment of exuberance for the self-effacing superstar, Ledecky had won by more than 10 seconds, one-third of the length of the pool. Her time was her eighth fastest ever, 15 minutes 30.02 seconds, an Olympic record. She now has the 20 fastest times ever swum in the 1,500, an event she hasn’t lost since she was a young student swimming in a regional meet near her home in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, D.C., 14 years ago.
It was another one of those Ledecky moments where she’s in the finishing photo with none of her competitors in sight. But it also was so much more. For the fourth consecutive Olympics, Ledecky has won a gold medal, a remarkable combination of dominance and longevity. With the victory, she won her eighth Olympic gold medal, tying her with swimmer Jenny Thompson for the most gold medals won by an American woman in any Olympic sport, ever. And she has two more opportunities to add to her gold medal total here and pass Thompson, in the 4 x 200 freestyle relay and the 800 meters, an event she has won three times in the Olympics.
The magnitude of the moment was not lost on Ledecky.
“Each one means a lot,” she said of the eight golds, the first of which was won 12 years ago when she was a little-known 15-year-old at the London Games. “Each one is challenging in its own way. I try not to really dwell on history or the magnitude of things. I’ll just let you guys (journalists) do that.”
And we will. This sport (or any sport, actually) has never seen anyone quite like Ledecky, whose range runs from the 200-meter sprint to the 1,500-meter marathon. And she’s not done yet. No matter how she ends these Olympics — likely with two more medals for a grand total of four this week — she has said numerous times that she intends to keep competing and go for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, when she will be 31.
For Ledecky, the longest race in the pool is not only a grueling physical test but also a fascinating mental challenge. She said she uses various “tricks” to stay calm as her mind wanders through the long minutes in the water, but she has also had to battle some unusual doubts over the past few days.
She wasn’t particularly pleased with her bronze-medal-winning time in the 400 freestyle Saturday, nor with her qualifying times in the prelims for the 400 and on Tuesday for the 1,500.
“I just was kind of feeling like those first three swims, each one of them felt faster than the time,” she said. “And I think doubts enter your mind, you just try to stay positive through it all.”
She said it has been that way all year for her in training at the University of Florida, where she practices with some of the world’s best male distance swimmers under the tutelage of coach Anthony Nesty, a 1988 Olympic gold medalist himself.
“Coach Nesty and all my coaches do a really good job keeping me steady, keeping me on track, reminding me to trust the process,” she said. “I felt like I finally put together a swim (in the 1,500) that matched how I felt and was in line with what I felt I was capable of, just finally having a swim, a time, that I could feel pretty happy with.”
As she was racing Wednesday night, she said she kept her thoughts “very simple” to stay calm. “The voice in my head has been consistent over the years in its tone and its positivity that I try to have in these final races. Just a very positive good voice today that definitely helped me along.”
What did she think of during all that time with her head in the water?
“My mind wandered a lot,” she said. "I was thinking a lot about my teammates back home that I train with everyday. Three years ago in Tokyo, I was repeating my grandmothers’ names in my head a lot. Today I kind of settled on the boys’ names, the boys at Florida that I train with every day. Just thinking of all the practices we’ve done and all the confidence I get from training, being next to them and racing them. That’s the energy I wanted to channel into this race.”
But 15 1/2 minutes requires a lot of thoughts.
“Mentally I was using all the tricks that I’ve used through all these years of distance swimming,” she said. “I have a lot of tricks in my back pocket, counting down all the number of 50s left, thinking about people in my life, my teammates, my family, my friends, so many different things that are going through your head.”
But then all that thinking stopped and the celebrating began. She touched the wall, saw the excellent time, pounded the water and took it all in as the crowd roared for the greatest female swimmer of all time.
“I expected it of myself,” she said later. “It’s not easy to always follow through and get the job done. There are moments of doubt, there are hard days in training where you doubt yourself and you just have to push through and trust in your training and trust that everything will come together in the end, and I’m happy that it did today.”
veryGood! (73)
Related
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- North Korean leader urges greater nuclear weapons production in response to a ‘new Cold War’
- New Hampshire sheriff pleads not guilty to theft, perjury and falsifying evidence
- Jimmy Carter's 99th birthday celebrations moved a day up amid talks of government shutdown
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- For Sanibel, the Recovery from Hurricane Ian Will Be Years in the Making
- Israel says it foiled Iranian plot to target, spy on senior Israeli politicians
- Who's the greatest third baseman in baseball history?
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Watch the joyous energy between this jumping baby goat and adorable little girl
Ranking
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Christie calls Trump ‘Donald Duck,’ DeSantis knocks former president and other debate takeaways
- Emirati and Egyptian central banks agree to a currency swap deal as Egypt’s economy struggles
- Colin Kaepernick asks New York Jets if he can join practice squad
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- 200 people have died from gun violence in DC this year: Police
- North Dakota Supreme Court strikes down key budget bill, likely forcing Legislature to reconvene
- Lebanese singer and actress Najah Sallam dies at age 92
Recommendation
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
ExxonMobil loses bid to truck millions of gallons of crude oil through central California
California man pleads guilty to arranging hundreds of sham marriages
Tropical Storm Rina forms in the Atlantic Ocean, the National Hurricane Center says
Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
Latest fight in the Alex Murdaugh case is over who controls the convicted murderer’s assets
Why this week’s mass exodus from embattled Nagorno-Karabakh reflects decades of animosity
Guardians fans say goodbye to Tito, and Terry Francona gives them a parting message