Swimming: Welcome to the Olympic family
Tony Altobelli
NEWPORT BEACH - Focused, driven, competitive, perhaps a little
off-centered?
There’s not enough adjectives to describe the hottest thing to hit
Newport Beach since sunburn, Aaron Peirsol.
“My biggest hope is that people don’t get tired of seeing his name and
picture in your paper,” Aaron’s dad, Tim, said. “The support from the
community has been just incredible. There’s so many people to thank. I
don’t know where to begin.”
It’s been a long and emotional roller coaster ride for not only Aaron,
but for the entire family. The ride ended happily when Aaron was with a
place on the U.S. Olympic Swim Team, following Monday’s runner-up finish
in the 200-meter backstroke at the Olympic Trials.
“The intensity at the trials is so unbelievable,” Tim said. “Even when
you didn’t know anyone swimming in the event, you knew how much hard work
they’ve put into it. Seeing parents crying and seeing so much emotion,
it’s really hard to describe.”
Tim, Wella, and Aaron’s sister, Hayley, didn’t arrive in Indianapolis
until Saturday, but those three days must have seemed like a year and a
half.
“He looked awesome in the preliminaries, very smooth and fast,” Tim
said. “After he qualified for the finals, we just hoped and prayed that
he would see it all the way through.”
There was just one problem. What about Peirsol’s secret formula that
gives him his energy. What about his chocolate chip pancakes?
“He always ate those before each big race leading up to the trials,”
Tim said with a laugh. “I was told before the semifinals, he got to eat
some, but I think he’s starting to understand that he can perform well
even without the chocolate chip pancakes.”
Wella also aged rapidly during the event. “It was very hectic to say
the least,” she said. “But we’re just so proud. Aaron’s such a terrific
kid. He’s so focused and driven it’s almost hard to realize that he’s
only 17.”
So how did Aaron Peirsol spend his first moments as an Olympian?
“He was drug tested right after the meet, then given an assistant and
a bodyguard,” his mom, Wella, said. “They really want to make sure
nothing happens to any of their athletes, which is a good thing. Then,
interviews and autographs. We didn’t see him until over an hour after the
race.”
Both Tim and Wella saw Aaron’s popularity skyrocket throughout
Indianapolis during the trials.
“One mother came up to me and said that her child wants to grew his
hair out just like Aaron,” Wella said. “That’s one of the things we’ve
left up to Aaron and that’s his hair.”
Tim had an ever better one. “After his interviews, about 50 kids came
pushing through all the adults looking for an autograph from Aaron,” he
said. “He made sure he signed every one and he asked every kid what their
names were. He just didn’t grab the paper and sign it. I told him he was
in the rock-star status for the 6-and-unders.”
One thing Tim and Wella won’t have too much of and that’s time to
spend with their son. “We’ve got three days and then he’s off to train in
Pasadena with the rest of the team,” Tim said. “He won’t be back home
until Sept. 28. Our biggest task now is getting a month’s-worth of
homework for him while he’s away.”
According to Wella, don’t take Aaron’s comment’s of “just making the
team is good enough” too seriously. “He’s never satisfied and he wants to
beat (world champion) Lenny Krayzelburg in the worst way,” Wella said.
“He’s going to bust a gut trying and we all believe he can do it.”
For anyone interested in contributing to the Aaron Peirsol Olympic
Fund, call Michele Mullen at (949) 645-8989.
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