What to learn from Michael Andrew’s five-event experiment

In the span of about 6 hours, it’s been talked about nearly to death: Michael Andrew‘s decision to tackle five events within a single session of the Junior World Championships.

You can read plenty about it in the comments section of our live finals recap, but let’s run through a few big things we can (and cannot) learn from Andrew’s day 2 performances:

It opens a conversation about event focus

While Andrew can be applauded for showing the guts and confidence that often drives great athletes to attempt bigger and better things, the ultimate outcome suggests this was not the smartest choice of events. As Andrew begins to move from the age group ranks to that of a near-adult swimmer, today showed the 16-year-old exactly what he’ll be dealing with at the next level.

While tough doubles and even triples seemed to be a minor obstacle for age group Michael Andrew at domestic meets, today’s lineup aggressiveness was clearly a step too far on the international stage. Andrew’s camp could take the results in one of two ways: either as an indication of what kind of preparation it will take to maintain his versatile, multi-event style at the world level, or as a suggestion that he needs to narrow his event focus for these international meets.

With the 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials just under a year away, how Team Andrew answers that question will be hugely important.

It was a learning experience for a young swimmer

As swimming fandom (and coverage) expands, it’s worth constantly reminding ourselves that knee-jerk reactions are rarely wholly accurate. While Andrew is an accomplished and well-known name in swimming, he’s still a 16-year-old kid who is trying to find his place within the sport.

His event focus certainly has something to do with that, but Junior Worlds is also testing Andrew in a different way: it’s his biggest meet away from his coach, who is also his dad.

Andrew’s career path has been designed to keep his support system consistent and ever-present. The Andrew family travels together around the United States, typically by van, and with both his parents effectively serving as coaches, Andrew is almost always around them, both in the pool and out.

It’s a system that has worked well for many years, but there’s no doubt the entire Andrew family – Michael included – have always been aware that learning to swim outside of that support system would be a challenging, but very important, step in the young swimmer’s growth curve.

Watching Andrew in Singapore, it certainly looked like a couple early disappointments (missing a 100 back medal, then missing the 100 fly final) started snowballing for Andrew on Tuesday. As physical fatigue began to add up, Andrew was forced to deal with disappointment without his longtime support system present.

That’s not an indictment of Andrew as much as an honest admission of a necessary step every swimmer must take in their growth curve. For many, it happens in college, when a young athlete leaves their family, teammates and coaches in exchange for a new environment. With Andrew’s pro status leaving college swimming out of his future plans, Junior Worlds is serving much the same purpose. Learning how to respond outside the comfort of the familiar always takes time. How well Andrew can learn to do so will play a key role in how he performs for the U.S. internationally in future years.

It wasn’t all by design

It’s likely that Andrew himself would have agreed before the meet that 5 events in a two-hour session wasn’t ideal. In fact, the swimmer took to Instagram before the finals session, asking fans for support of his tough event block and noting that he would have scratched one event if he could have:

“I would have dropped the 100 back to have an easier schedule but then I would not have been able to swim the 50 back later in the meet,” Andrew posted.

That’s likely the result of U.S. selection procedures, which were done at U.S. Nationals, a meet that did not feature 50s of the non-free strokes. As a result, 50 spots at Junior Worlds were given to athletes in the 100-meter distances, a favorite tradition in USA Swimming.

That still would have left Andrew to swim the 100 fly, 100 breast and 200 IM with only an event apiece between them, but it’s worth noting that the 100 back, his first swim of the night, was clearly his best swim relative to his lifetime-best times.

 

But mostly…

Swimming 5 events in two hours isn’t easy

Duh. We all know this deep down. We get spoiled by performances like Michael Phelps in Beijing or Katinka Hosszu at basically any meet with money on the line, and we forget just how grueling the sport truly is. If anything, Andrew’s results today should make us appreciate all of these multi-event lineups more than we already do.

Looking at this meet relative to Andrew’s career, it sure looks like today is less a career-defining implosion for Andrew and more a simple confirmation of something we all probably could have guessed in advance:

Swimming two events in a session is a workable combo for Andrew (as it was in today’s prelims). Even swimming three in a session can yield a couple of great swims. But swimming five is just a step too far.

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Hmmm....
8 years ago

the lesson? USRPT doesn’t produce the stamina necessary….

xenon
8 years ago

After reading the comments, I think everyone agrees that no matter what type of training you do, that event lineup was nearly impossible. If you forget about MA’s top times and the context of everything here is what he accomplished: In the all time USA 15-16 rankings he went number 3 all time in the 100 back. Swam a number 9 time in the 100 fly. Then with barley anytime to rest, he swam a 100 breast that would have been a NAG 2 months ago. And after all of that he managed a number 54 time in the 200 IM which is faster than some world champions and Olympic medalist in the 200 IM when they were 16 including… Read more »

Billabong
Reply to  xenon
8 years ago

Nice to see an objective comment to round off the discussion. Is the 200IM a 5th/4th best time? Faster than Lochte is pretty good, and faster than Nolan outright.

Boknows34
8 years ago

MA is still young enough to compete at the next World Junior Championships in 2017. He’s bounced back very well today with a CR and close to WJR in the 50 back heats, and qualified 2nd fastest for the 50 free final.

oli993
8 years ago

IMHO we can sum up:

– the schedule of MA was way too ambitious and a very stupid decision by him and his management
– results are very disappointing so far (except for the 1:59 in 200im). Desaster.
– MA still has to prove he has the potential to be a really great swimmer. Don’t forget he’s 16 (already!). Maybe an unfair comparismb but he has to live with it because he is so hyped: the GOAT was 15 when swimming his first WR.

Time will tell what MA has in the tank. My prediction: he will be a very good swimmer but not the next big thing in U.S. swimming.

Steve Friederang
8 years ago

Heroic meet! You have to go for it sometimes. There are people who need to challenge the records, to challenge others, to climb Everest. Michael is one of them. It’s heroic, not stupid. Not any more stupid than flying across the Atlantic or to the moon. Can he recover enough between events to win? Not yet. But if he keeps trying, keeps training, keeps his ears closed to those who say he can’t do what THEY can’t do or what hasn’t EVER been done, he has a far better chance to be a hero than if he listens to those people. Is winning all these races in one day impossible? Yes, and so a few weeks ago was winning the… Read more »

TA
8 years ago

I am calling out most of the commentators on here for just bashing MA after the fact. Raphael was the person who initially pointed out the pending storm in his schedule on day 2. I did openly question it also but a few said let him try it. Fair enough To all the people who waited to post until he “failed” you can go do a set of 20 400IM’s tomorrow morning and come back on here and tell us how it went.

Ddawg
8 years ago

Negativity is for pussies.

ArtVanDeLegh10
8 years ago

1. I don’t want to hear all this about he wanted to scratch the 100 back, but couldn’t. He could have; he choose to swim it.

2. I don’t think any type of training would have prepared him for swimming that many events in 1 day (Phelps used to do triples in Grand Prix meets to prepare him for swimming tired/recovering quickly, and be would almost always do really well in all 3. That was just 3 events, not 5, but they were back to back to back).
The body does recover aerobically, though. Even though he trains mostly anaerobically, he still is taxing his aerobic system–just not in the traditional 10x200s sense.

3. I wonder how great… Read more »

Alec
Reply to  ArtVanDeLegh10
8 years ago

“I wonder what he would do if he were 5’9” probably the most irrelevant point ever.
Please tell me you’re not one of those “if I was 6 inches taller I’d be in the NBA” types.

gary p
Reply to  ArtVanDeLegh10
8 years ago

Well, the decision to not scratch the 100 back looks pretty good now, given what he did today in the 50 back prelims (meet record) and semi’s (top finals qualifier). Had he scratched the 100, he would have had to forfeit his starting position in the 50. Stupid USA Swimming selection process regarding 50’s contributed to the situation.

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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