A G’Day for Peirsol
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Tony Altobelli
Aaron Peirsol is officially Sydney-bound.
The 17-year-old Newport Harbor High junior finished second in the
finals of the 200-meter backstroke event at the U.S. Olympic swimming
trials in Indianapolis on Monday, adding his name to the 2000 U.S.
Olympic team roster.
“It really hasn’t hit me yet,” Peirsol said. “I’ll probably be laying
in bed when it finally sinks in.”
Peirsol, who swam a finals time of 1 minute, 57.98 seconds, and finals
winner and world champion Lenny Krayzelburg of USC (1:57.31) will
represent the United States in the event at the upcoming Olympics in
Sydney, Australia.
Opening ceremonies for the Summer Games are Sept. 15.
“We’ve had Aaron for four years now and I’m telling you, this kid
likes to compete,” said Dave Salo, coach of Irvine Novaquatics. “It was a
good swim for him. Perhaps he might be a little tired from a long, busy
week here, but his main objective was to make the Olympic team and he did
just that.”
Swimming rivals over the last year, Peirsol and Krayzelburg will be
training together before they head “Down Under.”
“I just realized that I’ll be training with him,” Peirsol said. “I’m
sure I’ll learn a lot from training with him. He’s a good guy and it
should be very helpful.”
The race was Peirsol vs. Krayzelburg from the start, with the rest of
the pack battling for third place. In fact, the third-place finisher,
Brian Walters, was nearly two seconds slower than Peirsol.
Krayzelburg was ahead of Peirsol by three-tenths of a second after the
first 50 meters. His lead was the same after 100 meters before the
three-time CIF-Southern Section champion cut the advantage to just
two-tenths after 150 meters.
“He hung tough with Lenny in each split,” Salo said. “We told Aaron to
swim for first place, not just to qualify.”
Finally, in the final 50 meters, it was Krayzelburg who put on a late
burst to prevail.
Peirsol was happy to put this part of his journey behind him.
“The trials are so mentally draining, I almost have to believe that
the Olympics are going to be easier than this,” he said with a laugh.
“I’m so mentally exhausted. My whole goal was to make the Olympic team
and now that I have, everything else is going to be fun, fun, fun. Once
you’re there, the rest is just icing on the cake.”
The last Newport Harbor swimmer to appear in the Olympics was John
Moffet at the 1984 Los Angeles Games. Moffet, then the world breaststroke
champion, took fifth place in the 100-meter event after tearing a leg
muscle in the preliminaries.
Peirsol was just a year old at the time.
Moffet said the best piece of advice he could hand down to Peirsol is
to simply enjoy the moment.
“It’s great to see another Newport Harbor swimmer make it to the
Olympics,” Moffet said. “The best thing I could tell Aaron is to soak
everything in, let the excitement and pressure work toward his benefit,
and have a great time.”
And that’s exactly what Peirsol plans to do.
“It’s going to be such a blast,” he said, talking like a typical
17-year-old. “I’d love to check out the beaches and do some sightseeing
when I’m out there.
“I’m really looking forward to the opening ceremonies and being a part
of that. I wonder who is going to carry the flag for us.”
The victory also cements travel plans for Peirsol’s parents, Tim and
Wella, and his sister, Hayley, who were poolside Monday in Indianapolis.
So with the goal of making the team achieved, Peirsol will begin
training in Pasadena. Then, he’s off to Sydney.
“No more home-cooked meals for me for a while,” Peirsol said. “Plus,
only three nights in my own bed before starting my training. I’m going to
miss my bed.”
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