Golden Finale: Phelps Wins 23rd Olympic Gold With Relay Win

RIO DE JANEIRO — The United States had never failed to take the gold in the men’s 4×100 medley relay at a non-boycotted Summer Games, and it was not about to end the streak on Saturday, not in the competitive swansong of the all-time greatest Olympian, Michael Phelps.

The backstroker Ryan Murphy and the breaststroker Cody Miller set the stage for Phelps, who handed the freestyle anchor Nathan Adrian a lead he refused to relinquish. The Americans won with an Olympic record time of 3 minutes 27.95 seconds, to give Phelps his 23rd gold medal and his 28th overall. If Phelps were a country, he would be tied for 38th with South Africa.

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“You just have no idea how difficult it is for anybody to win an Olympic gold medal,” said Phelps’s longtime coach, Bob Bowman. “I know Michael’s done it so frequently; it’s really hard to put it in perspective.”

After 63 races spread over five Olympics and covering 11,800 meters, Phelps is finished. He entered the Rio Games as the most decorated Olympian of all time, with 22 medals, including 18 golds and has added 5 golds and a silver. His other victories came in the two freestyle relays, the 200-meter butterfly and the 200 individual medley, where he became the third American Olympian after the track and field athletes Al Oerter and Carl Lewis to win the same event four times.

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Phelps announced his retirement after the London Games only to resume training in 2013. His departure this time contained an air of finality. Bowman said he does not see Phelps changing his mind and returning to competition. “I think he’s in such a good place personally that he doesn’t need it.”

It is not easy for Phelps, 31, to break new ground in his career, but he managed a few notable firsts in his fifth Games: he led the U.S. team as a captain and he carried the flag for the United States in the parade of nations. And he competed in front of his first-born son, Boomer, who snoozed in the lap of Phelps’s fiancée, Nicole Johnson.

“He always coveted wanting to be a captain,” said the 50 freestyle champion Anthony Ervin, who explained why it wasn’t possible before this year. “Being Michael requires such isolation,” he said, adding, “But this time he started reaching out to other people, bringing them closer. That was special for the entire team to see that.”

Phelps’s leadership was key on a squad replete with athletes who have no memories of an Olympics without him in it. “He’s been the greatest swimmer for as long as I can remember,” said Maya DiRado, a first-time Olympian who won three individual medals, one of each hue, and added a relay gold.

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DiRado said Phelps’s U.S. teammates watched in wonder as he got to the wall first in the 200 butterfly despite a labored final few meters, and they marveled at his two-second victory in the 200 I.M. “We just sat looking at each other like, How?” DiRado said with a laugh. She added, “That’s what he’s done his whole career.”

A 9-year-old Katie Ledecky got her photograph taken with Phelps. Ten years later, she nearly matched him medal for medal, with four golds and a silver. Led by Ledecky and inspired by Phelps, the Americans won 27 individual medals, including 11 golds.

In his individual swansong, Phelps won the silver in the 100 butterfly, beaten by Singapore’s Joseph Schooling, who had his photo taken with Phelps in 2008. The fifth-place finisher in the 200 butterfly, Daiya Seto of Japan, had his photo taken with Phelps as an 8-year-old. Schooling, Seto and so many others grew up wanting to be like Michael.

“I think Michael on a broader scale has impacted the whole Olympic movement,” the relay anchor, Adrian, said. “A lot of people, you say you’re an Olympian, the first thing they ask me is, ‘Hey, have you met Michael Phelps?’ So I think his impact on the sport has been amazing.”

 

100M 200M 300M 400M
1 United States Ryan Murphy51.85 Cody Miller1:50.88 Michael Phelps2:41.21 Nathan Adrian3:27.95
2 Britain Chris Walker-Hebborn53.68 Adam Peaty1:50.27 James Guy2:41.62 Duncan Scott3:29.24
3 Australia Mitchell Larkin53.19 Jake Packard1:52.03 David Morgan2:43.21 Kyle Chalmers3:29.93
4 China Xu Jiayu53.21 Li Xiang1:51.80 Li Zhuhao2:42.75 Ning Zetao3:30.70