Lacking A True “Superhero” At Root of U.S. Struggles At Paris Olympic Games

2024 PARIS SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

It can be spun both ways.

By several metrics, the United States swim team had a successful showing in the pool at the Olympic Games in Paris. They finished atop the medal—in gold medals and total, in case anyone’s asking.

They finished no worse than second in any of the relays, including winning three golds and setting two world records. And several swimmers performed lights out, including the likes of Torri HuskeKate DouglassKatie Ledecky and Bobby Finke, who all won individual gold medals.

However, there’s a flip side of the argument that says the Americans were underwhelming in Paris.

It took until the last individual event of the nine-day schedule for the U.S. men to win an individual event, with Finke soaring to a new world record in the 1500 free.

The team’s total of eight gold medals was the lowest for the Americans since the 1988 Games in Seoul, which was dominated by the East German team that was later revealed to have widespread doping. Their 28 total medals was also the lowest in two decades, matching the 2004 tally from Athens.

It was also the first time in history that American men lost the medley relay at an Olympic Games, falling to China, ending one of the most revered streaks in the sport.

The debate about whether the U.S. underperformed, or was right about where most expected them to be, can go on for hours. The thing about not only this current group of Americans, but also the rising competitiveness of the rest of the world, is that the U.S. no longer has that one swimmer that can take over and be the star.

THE SUPERSTAR IS MISSING

The 2000 Olympics in Sydney was perhaps the last time the American swim team didn’t have that one difference-maker that could change the fortune of a relay, could win multiple individual golds, and raise the level (and perception) of the entire team’s performance.

Starring Performances In Recent Olympics

  • 2004 Olympics, Michael Phelps – Phelps’ first Olympics in a starring role after getting his feet wet in Sydney, he won four individual gold medals and added two more on relays, including a key lead-off leg on the U.S. men’s upset victory over the Australias in the 4×200 free relay. He also won two bronze medals. It should be noted that the American men’s team was so deep that in three of the four events he won, the silver medalist was also from the U.S., so the team’s gold medal tally wouldn’t have taken a massive hit if he wasn’t in the field. (Klete Keller was also fourth behind Phelps’ bronze in the 200 free.) The Americans finished with 12 gold and 28 total medals, with Phelps factoring into half of the golds and nearly 30% of the medals.
  • 2008 Olympics, Michael Phelps – This story is well told. Phelps dominated in Beijing, winning eight gold medals and setting seven world records. Unlike Athens, the U.S. didn’t go 1-2 in any of the event Phelps won, though they had a trio of bronzes in Phelps’ events from Peter Vanderkaay (200 free) and Ryan Lochte (200/400 IM). Phelps ended up factoring in two-thirds of the gold medals won by the American team, as the women struggled with only two titles (and no relays).
  • 2012 Olympics, Missy Franklin – Franklin may not have had as profound an effect on the U.S. team as Phelps (no one has), but she won two individual gold medals in London and played pivotal roles in two relay titles. In Franklin’s era of dominance, her impact was felt most one year later at the World Championships in Barcelona, where she won six gold medals, almost half of the U.S. total (13). This could’ve been the Olympics for Ryan Lochte to be the go-to guy on the men’s team, but he ended up with only one individual gold, while Phelps won two.
  • 2016 Olympics, Katie Ledecky – Ledecky’s peak Olympics came in Rio. Despite there being no 1500 free contested at the 2016 Games, she won four gold medals and three individually, sweeping the women’s 200, 400 and 800 free, setting world records in the latter two. She was the primary reason why the U.S. women topped Australia in the 4×200 free relay, and we can’t forget she split 52 twice in the 400 free relay for the silver-medal-winning Americans.
  • 2021 Olympics, Caeleb Dressel – Dressel was unstoppable in Tokyo, sweeping the men’s 50 free, 100 free and 100 fly and providing key legs on the victorious men’s 4×100 free and medley relays. He broke the world record in the 100 fly final, and then had the fastest fly split in history on the medley relay, which was the primary reason why the Americans beat Great Britain and broke the world record. Dressel factored in on nearly half (5/11) of the U.S. gold medals in the pool.

In 2024, that true difference maker was missing.

  • Ledecky won two golds, as expected, but fell to bronze in the 400 free and is no longer a game-changer in the 4×200 free relay. Some might make the argument that the U.S. isn’t lacking a true superstar because it still has Ledecky, but her impact on the team as a whole—solely looking at results and not what she brings outside of the pool—peaked in Rio and has diminished these past two Games.
  • No one expected to see Dressel on Tokyo form, but he struggled to be as fast as he was one month earlier at the U.S. Trials. He was sixth in the 50 free, missed the final of the 100 fly, and although he anchored the Americans to gold in the 4×100 free relay, he had the slowest split (with a takeover) on the U.S. team and was only fourth-fastest among anchor swimmers. Dressel added a second gold after swimming prelims of the mixed medley relay.
  • Finke saved the day when he won the men’s first and only individual gold of the meet in the 1500 free, but as a distance swimmer, he doesn’t have the type of impact on the entire meet that we’re talking about. He would need that 200-1500 range, a la Ledecky 2016, to do so.
  • Without racing freestyle (and thus multiple relays), it’s difficult for Regan Smith to be in the position of the team’s top star. But she had a shot at winning three individual gold medals, but ended up with three silvers. Still, she was on the world record-setting women’s medley relay and added a second gold after swimming the prelims of the mixed medley.
  • The other candidates to assume this role could be Kate DouglassTorri Huske or Gretchen Walsh. All three performed well in Paris, particularly Douglass and Huske, who claimed individual gold for the first time. Douglass’ range is incredible—who else can do the 50 free and 200 breast?—but due to a scheduling conflict she only raced two individual events (she’s fast enough to challenge for a medal in up to four). Huske and Walsh race similar events—Huske emerged atop the stacked field in the 100 fly, with Walsh second, and also snagged a silver in the 100 free. All three contributed on the 4×100 free relay and Walsh and Huske were on the world record-setting medley. Each might have an argument about being the best or fastest in the world in one event, but don’t have two, three or four races where they’re consistently threatening the podium.

THE U.S. IS NO LONGER A STEP AHEAD

It’s not just the lack of star power on the U.S. squad that’s holding them back, it’s also because of how fast everyone else is swimming.

The rest of the world has caught up, and although they may not have as much depth at their national Trials, several countries have a high-end that can go blow for blow with the Americans in many events.

Australia is in a prime era, perhaps its best since the Ian Thorpe days, with stars like Mollie O’CallaghanAriarne Titmus and Kaylee McKeown driving the bus. Summer McIntosh is here to stay for the Canadians, and on the men’s side, the Europeans continue to take over, led by Leon Marchand.

The Americans may never dominate the medal table like years past, and it’s the missing of a Phelps, a peak Ledecky, Franklin, or even Lochte, that’s the difference.

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swimfast
18 hours ago

Frankly, Ledecky was the star. This games was almost synonymous with her. And to be even more frank- the media was the one who made it that way. Finally, the media caught up with all the actual facts about her history, her current goals, etc, and made it easy for the non-swimmer to get ahold of how majestic she really is. I mean, little quirks like the little girl in the stands losing it to her was what made the difference between her being a top athlete vs actual media star. So, long story short, it’s obvious (and a tale as old as time) that the media has an impact on athlete stardom. If they can do that in years… Read more »

Last edited 18 hours ago by swimfast
Tony
19 hours ago

Yet the U.S. continues to train its competitors….

Bob R
1 day ago

1. So what are we, a Marvel movie? we need a superhero bc we have a team.of little minions who need to follow one leader? I think that’s bs.
We have a lot of strong-willed, independent ppl comprising our team and that’s the way it should be. In fact on a true team, when one person’s down, another person picks it up.

2. I’d say Marchant and Macintosh were pretty superhero-ish and essentially they’re Americans. They train in America, they live in America, they just happen to have a citizenship elsewhere.
So we’re producing superheroes if you have to view it that way.

3. I wholeheartedly agree with Lillie King when she said it’s bullshit that… Read more »

swimfast
Reply to  Bob R
16 hours ago

-They absolutely are not Americans…? In any way, shape, or form. They’re basically on a years-long training trip in the US. Period.
-No one except swimmers even know that they train in the US. The average viewer of the Olympics saw the French and Canadian flag. That’s it.
-The most American thing about them to the average viewer is that they speak English.

Antipodean
1 day ago

Ledecky is unquestionably the USA superstar in the pool in Paris: longevity, consistency, beating her Tokyo time in the 1500, convincingly holding off Titmus in the 800, and giving her all in the 4×200 relay. She elevates the sport, and even if not breaking WRs still, she is a mainstay and icon of the sport at these Olympics in some tough events. The author of this article shouldn’t take that for granted.

Rubez
Reply to  Antipodean
1 day ago

fr, first they left her off HM list for female swimmer of the meet now this? the disrespect needs to stop

Crazycucumber93
Reply to  Antipodean
3 hours ago

I agree, but Ledecky “only” won 2 gold medals in Paris, plus a bronze and a silver. She is fantastic and one of the best athletes at the games, but she just didn’t have the medal count that the “superheroes” mentioned in this article had. Eg: Phelps won 6 golds in ‘04 and 8 golds in ‘08, Franklin 4 golds and a bronze in ‘12, Ledecky won 4 golds and a silver in ‘16, Phelps won 5 golds in ‘16, Dressel won 5 golds in ‘21.
Ledecky is the GOAT, but she just hasn’t won as many golds at the previous 2 Olympics as other stars have. She isn’t carrying the team the way she did in her prime.

Skip
1 day ago

Ugh. Y’all never learn.

Victor Ivry
1 day ago

My feelings on this subject (and I have shared this with my collegiate swimming community) is three fold:
1) Covid had a significant impact on swimming in the US from 2020 to 2022, more so than anywhere else in the World. Training facilities were open and closed for extended periods of time. This affected the US veterans and the up and coming teenagers. Lots of time away from the pool took its toll as the ramp up to Trials unfolded.
2) 4 of the top swimmers in Paris were foreigners training in the US….Mcintosh, Karun, Liendo, and Marchand.
3) The depth of the pool really slowed down the times….the biggest example of that being the Men’s 100… Read more »

Koen
Reply to  Victor Ivry
20 hours ago

1) The covid impact alone is demonstrably false. The lockdown in China was horrendous, many athletes in Europe (especially Southern Europe couldn’t train properly for months), and lockdowns in Australia were harsh and in some states (Victoria) kept getting reinstated. I’m sure I’m missing several other countries on this list.
2) calling Kharun and Liendo among the top swimmers in Paris is a stretch
3) not sure how the pool depth relates to the article on the US performance?

swimfast
Reply to  Koen
16 hours ago

If I may say something very outlandish however that I believe to be true: the depth affected smaller swimmers in stature: aka Regan Smith. I think the turbulence, if anything, was purely greater in this pool, and she- as a smaller swimmer than McKweon- was slowed down more.

Crazycucumber93
Reply to  swimfast
3 hours ago

Maybe, but Mckeweon still probably (almost definitely) would have won even if the pool had been deeper.

Swim Fins
Reply to  Victor Ivry
5 hours ago

You must work for USA Swimming. Let’s rally around no plan and spend money on a light show. Lipstick on a pig.

Paul
1 day ago

I think Katie Ledecky is a star

Swimer
1 day ago

Honestly, we don’t need a superhero. That’s too much to put on one person and it’s shown. Just looking at this list, we’ve got Phelps, Franklin, Dressel, and I would add Lochte to this list who have all been pretty vocal about their mental health struggles. I don’t think that’s a coincidence. These swimmers are giving it everything they got and it comes at a price. I am OK with being a team of swimmers who only win 1-2 gold medals and no standout if it means our athletes are healthier and happier.

chickenlamp
Reply to  Swimer
1 day ago

Agree, the growing depth world wide makes it difficult to depend on one person having a superhuman performance. The depth in the US is still unmatched, but they’ve struggled to hold form from trials to the big meet the last couple years. If they figure that out they’ll be in a a better spot (although that’s far from the only problem they need to solve)

Stingy
Reply to  Swimer
1 day ago

To grow the sport we do need a superhero though? I think we can all agree Michael Phelps was very good for the sport…

If you never have a superhero then it’s hard for the public to stay invested or even know what’s going on.

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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