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2 medals
for
Phelps
would
cinch
Olympic
history
By BETH
HARRIS
AP
Sports
Writer
LONDON -
Michael
Phelps
is
chasing
more
Olympic
history
in his
next two
events
at the
London
Games.
Winning
medals
in the
200-meter
butterfly
and a
relay
would
let him
get it
done in
the same
night.
Phelps
goes
into
Tuesday
night's
fly
final
with the
fourth-fastest
time in
his
signature
race.
He'll
try for
the
second
time to
become
the
first
male
swimmer
to win
the same
individual
event in
three
straight
Olympics.
He
failed
in the
400
individual
medley,
and
Japan's
Kosuke
Kitajima
came up
short of
the same
feat in
the 100
breaststroke.
Phelps
already
has the
most
gold
medals
of any
Olympian
- 14 -
and
eclipsed
Mark
Spitz's
record
with
eight
wins in
Beijing
four
years
ago. He
could
tie
Soviet
gymnast
Larisa
Latynina's
record
of 18
career
medals
in the
200 fly,
and he
would
own the
mark
outright
if the
U.S.
makes
the
podium
the
4x200
free
relay.
So far
in his
farewell
Olympics,
Phelps
earned
his
first
career
silver
medal in
the
4x100
free
relay
after
finishing
fourth
in his
first
event,
the 400
individual
medley.
The
4x200
relay
will
give
Ryan
Lochte a
chance
to get
back on
track
after
two
straight
disappointments.
He got
passed
swimming
the
anchor
leg of
the
4x100
free
relay
and then
he
finished
fourth
in the
200 free
on
Monday.
"I did
my
best,"
Lochte
said. "I
guess
sometimes
you win,
sometimes
you
lose. I
gave it
110
percent.
There's
probably
some
things I
messed
up on,
but you
live and
learn."
The 200
free was
won by
Yannick
Agnel of
France
in a
followup
to his
winning
anchor
leg that
beat
Lochte a
night
earlier.
He led
all the
way in
beating
a loaded
field,
although
Phelps
wasn't
in it
after he
decided
to skip
defending
his
Olympic
title.
Agnel
won in 1
minute,
43.14
seconds.
"I
really
didn't
expect
that
time,"
he said.
"I had a
race
plan in
my head,
but this
is above
my
expectations
and
hopes. I
had to
start
quickly
over the
first
100
meters.
I did
that.
Then I
worked
on
keeping
my speed
and
putting
all my
guts
into the
last
50."
French
President
Francois
Hollande
congratulated
Agnel,
shaking
his hand
warmly
in the
noisy
chaos of
reporters
and
cameras
in the
mixed
zone.
The
medal
was the
third
swimming
gold of
the
games
for the
country
- its
most
ever.
South
Korea's
Park
Tae-hwan
and
China's
Sun Yang
tied for
the
silver
in
1:44.93.
Lochte
and
world
recordholder
Paul
Biedermann
of
Germany
were
shut out
of the
medals.
The U.S.
dominated
the
backstroke
events,
with
teenager
Missy
Franklin
winning
the
women's
100 and
teammates
Matt
Grevers
and Nick
Thoman
going
1-2 in
the
men's
race.
Franklin
has a
relay
bronze
and her
first
individual
gold,
with
five
more
events
to swim.
She had
an
incredibly
busy
night,
advancing
out of
the 200
free
semifinals
with the
eighth-fastest
time and
then
returning
less
than 14
minutes
later to
win the
100
back.
"What
kind of
high
school
kid can
do
that?"
teammate
Breeja
Larson
said.
"She is
incredible.
She is
the one
that is
going to
lead us
into the
swimming
world
next."
Phelps
was
suitably
impressed
with
Franklin's
stamina,
saying
he had
never
done
back-to-back
races
that
close
together
at such
a major
meet.
His
quickest
turnaround
was
about a
half-hour.
"She's a
racer
and she
knows
what to
do," he
said.
Franklin
won in
58.33
seconds.
Emily
Seebohm
of
Australia
took the
silver
in 58.68
and
Japan's
Aya
Terakawa
earned
bronze
in
58.83.
Like
Franklin,
Grevers
rallied
on his
closing
lap to
win the
men's
100 back
in an
Olympic-record
52.16.
The U.S.
men have
won the
event in
every
Olympics
since
the 1996
Atlanta
Games.
Thoman
took the
silver
in
52.97,
and
Japan's
Ryosuke
Irie was
third in
52.97.
Franklin
wasn't
the only
teen
queen in
the
pool.
Fifteen-year-old
Ruta
Meilutyte
won the
100
breaststroke
to give
Lithuania
its
first
swimming
gold
medal.
She won
in
1:05.47,
holding
off 2008
silver
medalist
Rebecca
Soni of
the
U.S.,
whose
trademark
late
speed
wasn't
enough
this
time.
Soni
fell
eight-hundredths
of a
second
short.
Japan's
Satomi
Suzuki
took the
bronze
in
1:06.46.
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