Caeleb Dressel 2017 World Championships Photo Vault

After an outstanding performance at the 2017 FINA World Championships, Team USA’s Caeleb Dressel has been named Male Swimmer of the Meet. In his first World Championships, Dressel won 7 gold medals. Individually, he won 3 World Championships titles: the 50 free, 100 free, and 100 fly. He was also a member of 4 champion relays.

Caeleb Dressel 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel wins 50 free at the 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel and Nathan Adrian – 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel and Nathan Adrian – 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel wins 50 free at the 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel wins 100 fly at the 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel wins 100 fly at the 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel wins 50 free at the 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

Caeleb Dressel 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)

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Jay
6 years ago

I want to see Schooling breaking the WR first. Hopefully next year Asian or Commonwealth Games.

E Gamble
Reply to  Jay
6 years ago

The Sea Games are up next for Joseph in late August.

Jay
Reply to  E Gamble
6 years ago

Yup but i doubt he will break the WR in SEA. It is not a major meet and not necessarily to have very gd time to win in regional meet.

Billy
6 years ago

Did anyone notice during the men’s 400 medley relay interview with the USA men that Caeleb Dressel looked quite a bit shorter than the other guys. I know Grevers is 6’8″ and Cordes and Adrian are 6’5″ and 6’6″. Dressel looked about 6’1″ instead of his listed 6’3″.

Just curious…….

DDias
Reply to  Billy
6 years ago

Adrian is huge.I saw him very close in a press room and his 6-6 looks seven feet tall!Fratus is small for a sprinter(listed sometimes as 6-2, but up close he looks like 6 even).I saw a pic of Dressel and Fratus, I can say Dressel is not only 6-1.

Pvdh
Reply to  DDias
6 years ago

Cordes/Adrian/Grevers are all 6’6″

DDias
Reply to  Pvdh
6 years ago

Yeah, I know.But Adrian sturdy physique makes him looks much bigger than Cordes.Lean swimmers(like Ervin) look smaller than heavy muscle ones.

Billy
Reply to  Pvdh
6 years ago

Grevers is 6’8″.

samuel huntington
6 years ago

Love the photos!

MrsTarquinBiscuitbarrel
Reply to  samuel huntington
6 years ago

Me too!!!

Zanna
6 years ago

Don’t recall any photo vault having this many comments before.

Domino
Reply to  Gold Medal Mel Stewart
6 years ago

Sjostrom!!

Zanna
Reply to  Gold Medal Mel Stewart
6 years ago

Dressel Fever..

crooked donald
Reply to  Zanna
6 years ago

Part of it’s the Dressel phenomenon. Proablay a bigger part of it is the crushing withdrawal from such an exciting Worlds (for which Dressel produced the most excitement).

crooked donald
6 years ago

Grevers didn’t exactly come back from the dead. Third at OTs (first at the 50 in final) with a 52.6 and 52.7 in semis and finals. I really think he overtrained for OTs. He looked way too thin compared to his just ripped as hell look he had Budapest and at London. Now, Grevers (not Schooling) should’ve been the guy GM Mel was talking about when he was saying more rest after OTs/Rio could make you faster.

As for LaCourt, he’s happy to be out of the drug testing pool, so now if he wants to pee purple, he can.

Bigly
Reply to  crooked donald
6 years ago

Yeah, GM Mel — why were you so high on no training = faster Schooling?

crooked donald
Reply to  Gold Medal Mel Stewart
6 years ago

The more muscle mass with age is pretty imperceptible between 21 and 25 for most elite swimmers/athletes who have already been 3 years into an elite college strength and conditioning program, unless they were distance swimmers who later up the muscle growth-inhibiting effects of intense aerobic exercise and became middle-D or sprinters. Schooling is, what, 20? And a very slight guy. None of the active/former UT guys —- Schooling, Haas, Conger, Licon, Smith — are big muscle mass guys. They come down off of intense training tapers, totally unrelated to muscle mass. Phelps bulked up later, but only because he dropped the catabolic effects of training up to the 400 IM. Same with Lochte. Haas may bulk up as he… Read more »

bigly
Reply to  Gold Medal Mel Stewart
6 years ago

But Schooling is 22. Whatever muscle mass he was going to put on — which, by his looks and his body weight wasn’t much — he would have put on, according to your argument a few years ago. He still doesn’t look like “a man” in terms of more heavily muscled. He’s not resting off of much intense on-land resistance work. Frankly, none of the UT guys are — none of their lead guys would be what you call “chiseled.”

bigly
Reply to  bigly
6 years ago

You’re right, Bigly. The physical transformation of Murphy and Dressel in college to muscular beasts was very dramatic, and what GM Mel is generically referring to. However, that physical transformation didn’t happen to Schooling: he did not pack on a great deal more muscle. He’s going to need to if he expects to get on the podium again the rate a newly committed to mid/shorter distances Guy is going and the freakish potential of Malik and Dressel.

bigly
Reply to  Gold Medal Mel Stewart
6 years ago

So what’s the evidence that Schooling had a “big background,” compared to say, LeClos, Phelps, or Cseh who all had years of swimming the 200 fly and 400 IM double, or even Conger who swam the 500 freshman year at UT? None of the Bolles guys came out lighting up 200 LCMs right away in college off of some magical big base. Dressel won the 50 free and didn’t final in the 100 his first NCAAs. Murphy dropped 4 seconds in the 200 LCM back through college. Santorelli? The weakest events at Bolles during that era were actually “big background” events —- 200 IM, 500 free.

Brownie
Reply to  Gold Medal Mel Stewart
6 years ago

Schooling should take up the 200 fly more internationally he was 1:56 so young and the event is much more open then the 100 fly now that caeleb is ripping 50.0 and 49 highs time after time, I think he should take up the 2 fly more, lazlo won’t be around much longer to contest it, seto is to inconsistent on the big stage and sato and kenderesi are tough but with proper training I could see him going 1:52 high like Le clos did in 2012 and that would surely win and we know he can be decent 1:56 at 16 and 1:37 in yards

Brownie
Reply to  Brownie
6 years ago

Sakai*

bigly
Reply to  Brownie
6 years ago

It’s obvious that he just doesn’t like it: he scratches it whenever he can. Malik is the future of the 200 fly. Those Hungarians are just born with insane endurance.

bigly
Reply to  Gold Medal Mel Stewart
6 years ago

I really don’t think an aerobic base magically stays around for three years, and for a 100 fly, it’s really over-rated. The energy systems for a 100 fly and 200 LCM fly are completely different. You train the energy system, and it either stays with you, or it decays rapidly, as it did with Schooling, who has stayed at 1:56 even to this year, and is it did with Phelps and his 4:10 IM at London. The other take away is that the 100 LCM fly is no longer a finesse event, 200 flyers can’t magically be the best (as Phelps was and Cseh tried to be), and non-powerful guys are not going to win. Dressel has Schooling by 25-30… Read more »

Buona
Reply to  Gold Medal Mel Stewart
6 years ago

Schooling lost to himself in this meet. He is not motivated enough. It’s better to lose now than losing at the Olympics.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
6 years ago

A shout out for Adrian ( who probably and secretly wish one day to win a World championship title ) with his Class act at the ned of the 100 free – which is clearly depicted in one of the pictures . What a great heart and Captain .

Frequentflyer
Reply to  ERVINFORTHEWIN
6 years ago

One photo says it all. Adrian looks so proud! He is genuinely happy for him. Love it

Colinb
Reply to  Frequentflyer
6 years ago

Just seems like such a great sportsman and cerebral swimmer. Dressels instagram post is testimony to great leadership!

crooked donald
Reply to  ERVINFORTHEWIN
6 years ago

Did the same thing (not raising the hand, though) rushing over from his lane to congratulate Ervin after his Rio win. Same joy for a teammate’s success.

Bigly
Reply to  crooked donald
6 years ago

Schooling could take a lesson from this, especially since he’s never going to beat Dressel.

Pvdh
Reply to  Bigly
6 years ago

Schooling gave Caeleb a hug in the water after the race

crooked donald
Reply to  Pvdh
6 years ago

He was trying to dunk him. Only chance for a future gold.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
6 years ago

Sarah gets the crown this year without a doubt

gregor
6 years ago

Gotta love Caeleb, The boy became a man in Budapest!

Bigly
Reply to  gregor
6 years ago

And Schooling went back to being a boy.

samuel huntington
Reply to  Bigly
6 years ago

I was wondering when the Schooling ripping would start again. He has a medal in the 100 fly at three consecutive international meets, an outstanding accomplishment.

crooked donald
Reply to  samuel huntington
6 years ago

And then there’s this: http://www.todayonline.com/sports/le-clos-schooling-keep-your-head-focus-what-youre-good. In other words, Chad says, I’ll take the 200 fly, you stick to the 100 fly with that Dressel guy.

Pvdh
Reply to  crooked donald
6 years ago

Milak mightt have something to say about that

MLAformat
Reply to  crooked donald
6 years ago

No he actually didn’t say that.

Colinb
Reply to  samuel huntington
6 years ago

agreed, outstanding swimmer, check the link from Crooked D in the article, there is an embedded interview with Schooling. It’s clear he is hard on himself and now very motivated to get back to work. Actually his persona and competitiveness reminds me of phelps (pre Rio). looking Fwd to the next showdown.

crooked donald
Reply to  Bigly
6 years ago

Not really going back to a boy. More like carrying Dressel’s water bucket.

Buona
Reply to  Bigly
6 years ago

Please dont jeer at other swimmer. This is so rude.. He is a great swimmer. At least he is an individual Olympic gold medalist, but Dressel not yet for now. Pls show respect.

About Gold Medal Mel Stewart

Gold Medal Mel Stewart

MEL STEWART Jr., aka Gold Medal Mel, won three Olympic medals at the 1992 Olympic Games. Mel's best event was the 200 butterfly. He is a former World, American, and NCAA Record holder in the 200 butterfly. As a writer/producer and sports columnist, Mel has contributed to Yahoo Sports, Universal Sports, …

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