While making an appearance at the Daytona International Speedway, American star Caeleb Dressel affirmed his commitment to swimming through the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.
Dressel, who just turned 28 on August 16, told reporters that he most likely would look to reduce his event lineup for Los Angeles, with his plan currently being to focus on the 50 freestyle.
“It has always been one of my dreams to compete on American soil at a championship meet,” Dressel said. “So, yes, my eyes are on 2028. I don’t think it’s going to be a full-event lineup. I think maybe just the 50 free, put a little bit more muscle on, don’t have to be in as good a shape. So maybe look forward to just doing the splash-and-dash. That might be a good time for me.”
The statement from Dressel comes just weeks after the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, which many were theorizing might be his last Olympics. Dressel first competed at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio, winning gold medals as a member of the men’s 4×100 medley and 4×100 freestyle relays. After in international breakout in 2017 that saw him dominate the World Championships, Dressel went on to win 5 gold medals in Tokyo, including individual golds in the 50 freestyle, 100 butterfly, and 100 freestyle. Despite seemingly being at the top of the world in Tokyo, Dressel’s world suddenly shifted when he pulled out of the 2022 World Championships, citing mental health concerns. Following an 8-month break from swimming and relative silence towards the media, Dressel reemerged in mid-2023 with a new mindset. Only weeks after his return to competition, Dressel competed at the 2023 US National Championship, but failed to qualify for the 2023 World Championships. Despite that, he continued to train and then qualified for the 2024 US Olympic Team, his first international roster in 2 years, making both the 50 freestyle and 100 butterfly, also punching spots in the 4×100 freestyle relay and 4×100 medley relay.
In Paris, Dressel didn’t have his best performance indivudually, finishing 6th in the 50 freestyle and failing to advance to the final in the 100 butterfly. However, he won gold medals as a member of the men’s 4×100 free relay and mixed 4×100 medey relay, and added a silver in the men’s 4×100 medley relay. Following his swim in the 100 butterfly, cameras captured Dressel in an emotional embrace with one of the Team USA staff members, leading many to assume that he would be retiring following the Games. However, it now appears that Dressel still has plans for his swimming career.
“Not the exact results I wanted from the games this year, individually, but that’s how the sport goes sometimes,” he said. “Sometimes it’s not your week, but I’m holding my head high. It’s really nice being home. I hope I made my country proud and hope I did my job on relays.”
If Dressel continues on to, and qualifies for Los Angeles, he would be just shy of turning 32 years-old at the start of the Olympic competition. In Paris, breaststroker Nic Fink was the oldest member of the US squad, turning 31 just a few weeks before the Olympic Games. However, there have been many older swimmers who have continued to find success in the 50 freestyle, even this summer. 30-year-old Cameron McEvoy won the 50 freestyle in Paris after shifting his training to only focus on the event. Behind McEvoy, 33-year-old Florent Manaudou won a bronze medal in the event, marking his 4th-straight medal in the event.
Later this week, Dressel will be making an appearance on the SwimSwam podcast to discuss his performances in Paris and his future plans. Is there anything in particular that you want to hear Caeleb talk about? Let us know below.
I would be interested to hear Dressel critically analyse his swims, but in a more specific and holistic approach. For example, “What do you think are the specific weaknesses in your Paris 50 free compared to your Tokyo swim? Are there any areas that you thought you improved?”
It would be really interesting to call back to McEvoy’s interview and ask Caeleb how he views swimming the 50m freestyle. McEvoy views it in 5-10m segments, and articulately describes the thought process and sensations at each segment of the race.
Another relevant question would be “Do you think the 50m free is a crapshoot? Do you think that there is more luck involved in that race than any other?”… Read more »
Was there a technical difference between McEvoy’s 21.2 and 21.0 or was it just the pool?
a 50 is one length…the waves couldn’t have possibly affected him. Especially not a whole 2 tenths. It just wasn’t as perfect of swim, which is okay. still got the job done.
To ask Caeleb about: the mixed medley prelim + 50 free final/100 fly semi debacle. Who was the most instrumental in making the decision to put him in that prelim despite there being another viable option, how much of it was about getting Caeleb another medal, how Caeleb felt going into it and then through each stage of that day, and how he feels about it in retrospect. Swimswam has an opportunity to drill down into what was an objectively bad decision by the US here. It’s the kind of decision that all parties would be taken to task for by the media in “bigger” sports.
Hope he can earn a spot on 400 free relay…that will be 4 consecutive wins!
Don’t count your chickens before they hatch.
womp womp
while im disappointed not to see a 100 fly, ive always wanted to see what he could throw down if he ultra focused on the 50. Cesar Cielo is shaking in fear right now.
nobody is shaking.
Wouldn’t it be something if the sprint GOAT ripped a 20.8 at a home Olympics
I’d like to see an article on Marchand and what his goals are for the next olympics.
I think we all know U.S. citizenship is coming. Bob Bowman said he will be remaining with the U.S. team as a coach in 2028 and not contributing to France in any way. Leon gave his best to Francw in a home Olympics, now the time will be for Leon to give his best to the other country responsible for his upbringing (and in which he will have spent half his life), allowing him the relay potential to get 9 Golds.
Thanks for the lulz
that would genuinely be hilarious if the answer to the USA men’s swimming problem was to just bring Marchand over
Should definitely just drop the 400m IM like Phelps and Hagino did Post-Olympic year and start going after those 200 WRs and maybe add 200m free. He’s got nothing else to prove in 400m IM. Keeping the event or one foot in only hurts him like it did to Phelps and Hagino. The earlier the better.
I don’t see any reason for him to drop it until at least after LA at this point – Whilst he got the Olympic title that had his name on it the moment he went 4:04 in Budapest 2022, there is still things for him to do if he wants – Sub 4:00. And defending the title in LA 2028
Plus He is so much faster than anyone else in the event – phelps and hagino had competitors (Lochte, Seto and Kalisz) that were going similar times. No one else has broken 4:05 in the event and at the moment anywhere between 406-409 medals. If a younger competitor doesn’t break out in the LA quad, then its a very… Read more »
but….. sub 4 minute 400 im
The average age for this years podium was over 30 so Caleb will right on the mark
If they add the 50 fly that makes two individual events
They should not add more 50s. The meet is already way too skewed towards sprinters, given relays and the 50 free. Also, too many medals for the sport. Swimming already has so many medal chances! I know I sound grouchy, but the 50s (except for free, which is iconic) don’t excite me.
Admittedly it was several years ago, but Cesar said that Caleb could break 21 and the record if he opted out of the 1fly.