For athletes, it’s not just a race
With powerful speed and drama, former Newport Beach High School star
swimmer Aaron Peirsol crystallized his chances for medals in Greece.
First, he impressed by winning the 100-meter backstroke with the
fastest time this year, 53.4 seconds, at the Olympic Trials in Long
Beach.
Then came the real show. The 20-year-old Peirsol shattered his own
world record in the 200-meter backstroke, touching the final wall in
1 minute, 54.74 seconds, the first sub-1:55 swim. His previous best
was 1:55.15.
With his feats last week, and similar accomplishments from people
like Newport Harbor High School graduate Misty May, a champion beach
volleyball player, and five men who came of age on the UC Irvine
water polo team, local athletes have forged a path from our own
neighborhoods, local pools and beaches to Athens.
They will represent their nation well. We know they will, because
to get to where they are going -- whether or not they were very
conscious of it -- their accomplishments have placed them in
positions to represent their schools, their cities, their families.
Ultimately, they compete for the love of it. We selfishly relish
how they win. But as they travel to the cradle of Western
civilization, a piece of them will be with many of us.
No matter how far away, it was still here, for many of them, where
the lessons, the classes, the beaches and the pools existed as
training grounds to develop and flourish.
“I’ve swam since I was 3 years old, and the neighborhood that my
parents picked out had a community swim team,” said Stephanie Gabert,
who just completed her freshman year at Corona del Mar High School.
“Ever since then I have loved the water.”
Gabert lost out on an Olympic birth by placing 29th in the
200-meter breast stroke at the Olympic Trials. But her words to a
Pilot reporter were no less powerful. And we can expect to hear more
of them as she only gets better and faster.
So as these sojourners, with tremendous talent in their bodies and
minds, move on to Athens for the games in August, we hope for their
safety in a turbulent world, and we are comforted by their
competitive spirit, which will help bring that world together in what
we hope is some semblance of peace.
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