Phelps into fifth Olympics in event that launched Games career

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Michael Phelps is headed to a fifth Olympics in the event that launched his epic Games career — the 200m butterfly.
Phelps, whose record 22 Olympic medals include an astonishing 18 gold, won the 200m fly at the US Olympic swimming trials on Wednesday, and if the time of 1min 54.84sec left something to be desired, it got the job done.
“I’m checking a box off, being able to get on the team,” said Phelps, who faded on the final lap but was able to hold off the determined Tom Shields, who took second in 1:55.81.
“With everything that’s happened, being able to come back — this was probably harder than any swim I’ve had in my life,” said Phelps, whose comeback after a brief post-London retirement was disrupted by a drink-driving arrest followed by a stint in rehab.
“I didn’t feel good the first two swims didn’t really feel that good tonight,” added Phelps, who celebrates his 31st birthday on Thursday. “But getting on the team was the most important thing, and that’s the only thing I had to do tonight.”
Phelps led at every turn, but Shields stuck with him and was on his shoulder coming off the turn for home.
“I tried to take it out and just pray to God that I was going to hang on,” Phelps said.
– 200 fly ‘special’ –
The 200m fly was the event in which a teenaged Phelps set his first world record, and his world mark of 1:51.51 — set at the tail end of the bodysuit era in 2009 — still stands.
He made his first Olympic team, in 2000, in the 200m fly.
Back then he was a little embarrassed by some of the press conference questions he fielded: “Do you have a girlfriend” and “Have you kissed her?”
Now, he’s delighted to answer questions about fiancee Nicole Johnson and their two-month-old son, Boomer, who received a quick kiss from his father as Phelps was being feted by some 14,000 fans at the CenturyLink Center after his medal ceremony.
Phelps said it was fitting that he punched his ticket to a fifth Games in the 200 fly, an event his sister once swam which he called “very special to the family”.
Regaining the Olympic title he surrendered to Chad le Clos in London, in an event he long considered his baby, figures to be a strong motivator for Phelps in Rio.
“I’ve definitely thought a lot about that race,” Phelps said of 2012 final, adding that he hadn’t brought himself to watch it on video until recently.
“I know there’s a lot that I did in that race that I’m not going to do again, and I think I’m a lot more prepared this time than I was last time.
“I’m looking forward to having the chance to race him this summer.”
However, le Clos won’t be the only man standing in Phelps’s way in the 200m fly, with Hungary’s Laszlo Cseh, Japan’s Daiya Seto and Masato Sakai topping the world rankings.
“We have a little over 30 days to prepare,” said Phelps, who is also chasing Olympic berths in the 100m fly and 200m individual medley. “Just looking forward to hopefully swimming faster than what I swam here.”