Skip navigation
Site powered by
Latest news:
msnbc.com: Top msnbc.com headlines: 'Demolition Man' goes on trial over Bali bombings

40-year-old wins another national swim title

Just 15 months after giving birth, Torres hoping to make 5th Olympics

Dara TorresAP
Dara Torres, 40, won the 100-meter freestyle in the U.S. National Championships on Wednesday.

INDIANAPOLIS - For Dara Torres, it was always the same. No matter how many Olympic medals she won or how many times she touched the wall first, her stomach would rumble and churn before every race.

Torres figured she had left that all behind when she climbed onto the podium in Sydney to receive one more gold medal — the perfect capper to one of the most enduring careers in U.S. swimming history.

“Ahhh, it’s so nice that I don’t have to feel this nervous again in my life,” she thought to herself that day, almost seven years ago.

Well, think again.

At age 40, and just 15 months after having a child, Torres is back in the water hoping to earn her fifth trip to the Olympics. She’s competing this week at the U.S. National Championships, with every intention of reclaiming a spot on the American team next summer.

Torres already looks like a serious contender, winning the 100-meter freestyle Wednesday night against a field that included two other former Olympians.

“Don’t put an age on your dreams,” said Torres, whose 14th national title came a quarter-century after her first, back in 1982 as a 14-year-old swimmer.

Torres woke up Wednesday at 6:15 a.m., feeling those same ol’ pangs in the pit of her stomach even though she was still nearly five hours away from her preliminary heat.

“I couldn’t believe it,” she said. “I wake up this morning going, ’Well, here I am again. I feel like I’m going to throw up.’ People are like, ’You’ve done this so many times, how can you get nervous?’ But I think I’m more nervous now than I was during my last Olympics.”

Maybe that’s only natural when she looks at those swimming around her, many of them not even half her age, plenty of them young enough to be her daughter.

“She’s absolutely amazing,” said 16-year-old Caitlin Leverenz, who was honored just to warm up in the same lane as Torres. “I watched her push off from the wall and her streamline is one of the fastest in the world — and she’s like 40 years old. I’m thinking, ’Wait, this is an old lady.’ I’m just kidding. This is a swimming legend.”

No argument there.

Dara Torres
Aj Mast / AP
Dara Torres waves to the crowd after receiving her medal for winning the women's 100-meter freestyle at the U.S. National Championships on Wednesday.

Torres was the first American to swim in four Olympics and her trophy case is packed with nine medals: four gold, one silver and four bronze. She’s already pulled off one improbable comeback, stepping out of retirement to claim five medals in Sydney. At 33, she became the oldest U.S. swimmer ever to win Olympic gold.

After her amazing performance Down Under, Torres retired again. But she never lost her love of the water or got away from the training that made her a world-class athlete. In fact, on the day she delivered daughter Tessa, she had been to the pool and lifted weights.

“I was feeling miserable that day,” Torres recalled. “So I went in for a swim and felt so much better.”


advertisement
More news
Image: Pekingese Palacegarden Malachy trots in ring at the 135th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show in New York
Reuters
Pekingese favored to be top dog

Robins: It’s the Year of the Dragon on the Lunar calendar, and this Chinese influence could extend to it also being the year of the Pekingese on the green carpet at the 136th Westminster Dog Show on Tuesday.

NY cable dispute blacks out Knicks, 4 NHL teams

NEW YORK (AP) - As the glow fades from the Giants' Super Bowl triumph, some New York sports fans are tuning in to basketball and hockey, with the Rangers in first place and the Knicks' overnight sensation, Jeremy Lin, sparking "Lin-sanity.''

Image:
AP
Six new breeds will join show at Westminster

Robins: This year, six new breeds will be making their debut on the green carpet for the Westminster Dog Show, which begins Monday.

Slide show
Image: Snee, 8, son of New York Giants player Chris Snee and head coach Coughlin's grandson plays in the confetti after the New York Giants defeated the New England Patriots in the NFL Super Bowl XLVI football game in Indianapolis
  The Week in Sports Pictures
The Giants on top of the football world, getting ready for the London Olympics and more.

more photos

Slideshow
Boston Celtics v Indiana Pacers
  Who's hot on Twitter?
Check out which of your favorite athletes have the best pages and most followers!

NBCSports.com

Special feature
"American Woman: Fashioning A National Identity" Met Gala - Arrivals
When athletes and celebs get together
A look at the many links between sports and Hollywood stars.

NBCSports.com

Slideshow
Image: To match Special Report CAMPAIGN/ROMNEY-OLYMPICS
  Presidential candidates and sports
How do President Obama and his Republican rivals stack up when it comes to their sports backgrounds?