After Rocky Roads Since London, Canada & the U.S. Delivered In Rio

2016 RIO OLYMPIC GAMES

Two countries. One, a swimming super power for as long as anyone can remember. The other, having gone through a series of highs and lows throughout their swimming history, stuck in a very drawn-out never-ending low.

The United States and Canada, both very different in so many ways in the world of swimming and otherwise, had one thing in common here at the Olympic Aquatics Stadium in Rio.

After back-to-back dominant Olympic performances with 31 medals each at the 2008 and 2012 Olympics, the Americans success began to dim in the years after. They followed a so-so 2013 World Championships with an abysmal 2015.

The Americans had their fewest medal total since 2009 (23), and their fewest gold medal total (8) since 1994.

There were several reasons for this debacle; Michael Phelps was suspended from the team after his DUI arrest, the selection process wasn’t what it should have been, with athletes being selected a year prior, but most of all many of the athletes just weren’t at their best.

Katie Ledecky was a shining star for them as she always is, but the rest of the team produced a dud of a meet with just one year before the Olympics.

Coming off a dominant 16 gold 31 medal performance in London, there was uncertainty and skepticism abound about how the U.S. would fare in Rio.

On the other hand, the Canadians were in a completely different position. They had struggled mightily…seemingly forever. Since an outstanding 1984 Olympics where they won 4 golds and 10 total medals, the team slowly declined into the 2000s.

Coming into Rio they had won just five Olympic medals in this century, and zero gold. It was draining. After what seemed like a breakthrough 2011 with four medals at the World Championships they got pushed back down again.

Just two medals in 2012, which was their highest since 1996, but still fell well short of lofty expectations. It wasn’t until 2015 when things began to change.

Canada seemed to be rejuvenated with the opportunity to host the Pan Am Games in Toronto, and the swimmers responded. They brought in 28 medals and optimism for Rio started to creep in.

Though the 2015 World Championships weren’t anything special (they won four bronze medals), it was their highest total since they hosted Worlds back in 2005 in Montreal. They knew they had more, especially since all of the swimmers had to taper twice in one summer, something that’s not easy to execute.

So with optimism rising in Canada and skepticism all over the U.S., what did the two swimming opposites have in common here in Rio? Both countries, who had their fair share of bad run-ins over the past few years, delivered better than anyone could have predicted.

The Americans doubled the amount of gold medals they won in Kazan here in Rio, particularly remarkable considering two of their gold medals in 2015 came in non-Olympic events (women’s 1500 free, mixed free relay). That total tied their gold medal count in London, and their total medal count of 33 was their most since 2000 in Sydney when they got that same amount.

Big contributions came from expected personnel; Phelps, Ledecky…but the rest of the team stepped up as well, and swam over their heads. They amazingly only missed a medal in 3 out of 32 events, and in two of those they finished 4th.

While the overwhelming success for the Americans was a surprise (due to the extent, not the fact they did well), the Canadians triumph was something that no one really saw coming.

Penny Oleksiak became an instant star, winning a record four medals including Canada’s first gold in swimming since 1992 in the loaded women’s 100 freestyle.

They came away with a total of six medals, their most at any Olympics or World Championships in 32 years. They won double the amount of medals in Rio than they won combined over the previous three Olympics. All this while their former Olympic star Ryan Cochrane struggled and wasn’t able to make the podium for a third straight time.

So while both teams took very different paths to get to Rio, they both had one very similar thing in common: they both shined brighter, in their own ways, than any other nation at these Olympics. The Americans announced they are still untouchable at the top of the swimming hierarchy, while the Canadians declared that, for the first time in over 30 years, they are real players on the world stage.

Highlights & News from North Americans On Day 8:

  • American Connor Jaeger won silver in the 1500 freestyle, breaking his own American record in 14:39.48.
  • Simone Manuel won her second individual medal of these Games, winning silver in the 50 free after taking gold in the 100 free a few days ago.
  • Both American medley relays dominated, with the women claiming gold in 3:53.13 and the men in 3:27.95.
  • Ryan Murphy led off the medley relay in a new world record of 51.85, erasing Aaron Peirsol‘s 51.94 from 2009 off the books.
  • The medley relay victory gives Michael Phelps 23 career Olympic gold medals and 28 all-time medals, both, as you know, are the most in history.
  • The Canadians were vying for another medal or two tonight, but fell short. Ryan Cochrane had a disappointing 1500 and finished 6th, while the women’s medley relay lost a close race for bronze in 5th.

COUNTRY

GOLD

SILVER

BRONZE

TOTAL

USA

16

8

9

33

CAN

1

1

4

6

As mentioned before, the U.S. dominated the medal standings with over three times the medals of the next highest country, Australia (10). They added two golds and two silvers on the final night.

And the Canadians, with six medals, have their best major international performance in 32 year. A terrific achievement, the youth of this team indicates nothing but good things for the future.

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Lane Four
7 years ago

Penny Oleksiak is going to take women’s swimming to a whole new level. Fasten your seat belts, ladies and gentlemen. She is going to be F*A*S*T!!!!!

Alex Simmonds
Reply to  Lane Four
7 years ago

Nah Ledecky is a bigger star than she will ever be.

sunyangfanboy
7 years ago

The upset of the meet for me was sun yang winning the 200 free. Honestly no one expected him to win coming in but he did it and he won by quite a margin. His splits were absolutely fantastic during the race.

IRO
Reply to  sunyangfanboy
7 years ago

Really? I’d have said he was the favorite going in.

Beachbumj343
7 years ago

Keep in mind that the American total is actually more. A decent amount of swimmers live in the US.Go to school in the US. Work in the US. Eat in the US. Train in the US. Yet represent other countries and win medals for other countries 🙁

America is the land of opportunity and every one should be welcome to come here to better themselves but if a person is going to do that they should at least have the respect for the country that they are living in, going to school in, working in, training in, etc and represent that country that has given them so much.

ALEXANDER POP-OFF
Reply to  Beachbumj343
7 years ago

I know. And we wonder why the US is the land of opportunity? Have you heard of imperialism before? Look it up.

weirdo
Reply to  Beachbumj343
7 years ago

that is not true….it isn’t a long list of international swimmers that train in the usa and win medals.

Bo swims
Reply to  Beachbumj343
7 years ago

You realize most of these swimmers have already raced under their home countries flag by the time they arrive in an NCAA (or club) program. So they should wait 4 or 5 years to become a US citizen and then sit out of international competition in order to change their nationality in the eyes of FINA.

No thanks…

Cate
Reply to  Beachbumj343
7 years ago

Your logic is flawed. You are either an American citizen or you aren’t. It doesn’t matter where you train. In the end it is the SWIMMER that gets into the water. They should have respect for the country where their citizenship is. I don’t think the US should be in the business of buying swimmers. That is truly disrespectful and smacks of a “you owe me” mentality.

Irviner
7 years ago

My Olympic swimming wrap up opinions:

Swimmers of the meet:
Men – Ryan Murphy
Runner-ups – Michael Phelps, Adam Peaty,
Women – Katie Ledecky
Runner-ups – Katinka Hosszu, Sarah Sjostrom, Penny Oleksiak

Race of the meet:
Men – 200 fly
Runner-ups – 100 back, 100 fly, 400 freestyle relay
Women – 100 free
Runner-ups – 200 free, 200 back, 800 freestyle relay

Most dominant win:
Men – Peaty (100 breast)
Runner-ups – Schooling (100 fly), Phelps (200 IM)
Women – Hosszu (400 IM)
Ledecky (400/800 free), Sjostrom (100 fly)

Biggest upset/surprise win
Men – Balandin (200 breast)
Runner-ups – Ervin (50 free), Chalmers (100 free)
… Read more »

Dan
Reply to  Irviner
7 years ago

I am sorry the 50 free was in contention for the race of the meet. I put it over 100 fly and 100 back. Larkin wasn’t swimming well and Murphy was the favor going into finals. Schooling had a short program compared to Phelps. I knew Schooling was going to be at the top of his game. Did you watch the 2016 NCAA Championships? The kid is racer and when he went 48.2 in prelims in the 100 free…I knew phelps was in trouble.

What Anthony Ervin did in the 50 free was just simplely incredible. No one picked him to win that race or even medal. People were picking Schooling to medal and Murphy to win gold in the… Read more »

Onthedeck
Reply to  Irviner
7 years ago

And best on podium goes to Ryan Held without a doubt.

Tigerswim22
7 years ago

Any chance somebody could do some research and write an article on how many Olympic swimming finalists (top eight) train or have trained in the United States? What colleges and/or club teams serve as the magnets attracting these athletes? How are they funded? This seems to me to be an interesting part of the international competitive swimming equation when evaluating medal winning performances and national team results…

Highly Questionable
7 years ago

About to imply blasphemy here – but what if it was the Russians or Chinese teams that had as an incredible meet as the Americans…what would we all be saying?? Record time drop, 31 and 35 year olds winning gold medals, almost everyone swimming much faster than an Olympic trials that was just 1 month before…

Tigerswim22
7 years ago

The USA swimmers performed wonderfully, as did the Canadians! I disagree with the author of this article on the use of one word used in describing the quality of the USA team”s accomplishments. That word is “untouchable” as it implies perfection. The USA swimmers were, clearly, the best team at the just-completed Rio Games. The whole world witnessed some great racing and we won a lot of very close calls, enabling a number of USA swimmers to earn medals. Fact is, many of the swimmers representing countries other than than the USA do some or all of their training with American teams and coaches. Nevertheless, there were some awesome performances recorded by many swimmers from many different countries. Take away… Read more »

Dave
7 years ago

I think this goes down as the single most impressive US team performance in Olympic history. The team’s relatively low expectations compared to its almost complete domination the Games is simply unprecedented. Swimmer after swimmer stepped up and delivered the goods. Considering that this is a team that lost an incredible amount of gold medal talent since the last cycle (Clary, Grevers, Coughlin, Soni etc) and had two of their biggest talents fail to get an individual medal in Rio (Franklin and Lochte), the achievement is even more incredible.

To me, the best news of the Olympics is that so many of these swimmers seem to have improvement still to come. I honestly believe the true Manuel is just… Read more »

Cynthia mae Curran
Reply to  Dave
7 years ago

Yes, it would be nice if a young american male finally got up with Michael in the 100 or 200 fly. Cassidy Bayer might be the next buterfly star on the women side. Maybe, Eva Merrill will still dropped time in the 200 meter back and make it in Tokyo.

swimswamswum
Reply to  Dave
7 years ago

I agree. This games has terrible support and extreme doubts from a large number of “haters” leading up to it. It’s almost like the American citizens WANTED the Americans to do badly. Yet, we literally blew everyone’s minds in a multitude of events. Simone in the 100 free still leaves me speechless. These games made me permanently believe that you ABSOLUTELY CANNOT predict ANYTHING prior to the games. Cate Campbell was a LOCK and yet didn’t even medal in the 50 or 100, unbelievable! I think the only person I’ll ever have 100% trust in leading into a championship from now on is Ledecky- other than that I will give 0 hoots about what someone does at Worlds or Trials… Read more »

swimswamswum
Reply to  swimswamswum
7 years ago

had* terrible support

swimswamswum
Reply to  swimswamswum
7 years ago

Also, whoever won the “Pick ’em contest” literally needs to be given a Ferrari; because the events that transpired over the last week had to have been the least predictable of any swim meet ever

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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