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Phelps named AP's top athlete of 2008

Eight-time gold medalist and his swimming feat are story of the year

YE Phelps Begins Swimming
Michael Phelps was a runaway winner for AP's athlete of the year. Only Olympic sprinting sensation Usain Bolt and New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning got more than a single vote.
Mark J. Terrill / AP
By PAUL NEWBERRY
AP National Writer
updated 1:28 a.m. ET Dec. 23, 2008

Michael Phelps had just finished his work at the Water Cube, still wet but his place in history secure, when he walked up to his longtime coach.

"Good job," Bob Bowman said.

C'mon, coach, couldn't you come up with something a little more memorable? Didn't you have a "win one for the flipper" speech stashed away for such a momentous occasion?

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"At that point, there was not much to say," Bowman recalled Monday when reached by phone, chuckling at the brevity of his comments on that August day in Beijing. "It had all been said."

Well, not quite.

The honors just keep on coming for the "Great Haul of China" — Phelps' feat has now been selected as the top sports story of the year by members of The Associated Press.

By taking down Mark Spitz's Holy Grail of records with eight gold medals at the Beijing Olympics, Phelps also was a runaway selection for AP's male athlete of the year. Only Olympic sprinting sensation Usain Bolt (five votes) and New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning (four) got more than a single vote. Phelps was named on 172 ballots, becoming just the third swimmer to claim the award.

"Every single moment over there — whether it was winning a gold medal, swimming for my county, spending time with teammates — I had a blast," the 23-year-old Phelps told the AP recently.

He one-upped Spitz's mark from the 1972 Munich Games by winning five individual golds and serving on three relay teams that also touched first — and by breaking seven world records along the way. Not bad for someone who couldn't sit still in elementary school (he was eventually diagnosed with ADHD), a once-scrawny kid with big ears who was picked on mercilessly and prone to fits of whining and crying.

"Some of the accomplishments have sunk in, but some haven't," said Phelps, who followed Don Schollander in 1964 and Spitz in '72 as swimmers winning the AP's annual top male athlete award. "I've been on the road a lot and haven't had time to myself to really sit there and think about what really did happen this summer and this whole year."

Trust us, Michael, it was quite a ride.

Your wake included the New York Giants' upset of New England in the Super Bowl, which ruined the Patriots' perfect season but had to settle for second place in story-of-the-year voting. Tiger Woods' saga — season-ending surgery after a gutty U.S. Open playoff win — was third, followed by Brett Favre's on-again, off-again retirement and move to the New York Jets. The Boston Celtics' worst-to-first turnaround that ended with an NBA title over the rival Los Angeles Lakers took the fifth spot.

As with all great stories, the opening chapter laid the foundation.

Phelps was only 16 — an emerging stud in the pool but little known to the non-chlorine crowd — when he sat down at a table full of lawyers to discuss signing with an agent for the first time. He was wearing a baseball cap, probably tilted sideways. He sat through most of the meeting with that bored, distant look of his, seemingly unconcerned with such mundane matters as percentages and sponsorships.

Finally, Phelps was asked what he wanted out of this new relationship.

His answer, delivered without hesitation, showed a foresight beyond his years. He was seeking mainstream acceptance, for both himself and his sport. He saw no reason the world's greatest swimmer couldn't be part of the same exclusive club as guys such as Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods.

"I want to be on SportsCenter," he told agent-to-be Peter Carlisle.

Mission accomplished — and then some. There's been countless magazine covers, enough TV appearances to qualify for his guild card (including a stint hosting the season premiere of "Saturday Night Live") and a quickie book just in time for the holiday buying season.

And, yes, he's even made the tabloids, the ultimate compliment in our celebrity obsessed culture though not always the most flattering coverage.

"I think the biggest change for him is just trying to adjust to the attention," Bowman said. "It's really been beyond anything we imagined."

How is Phelps handling everything from speculation about his girlfriend to his exploits on the late-night circuit?

"Overall, he's done pretty well," Bowman said. "He's learned a lot about how to handle himself. I think the hard part is handling all the people who come along with celebrity."

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The pool is where he'll always be most comfortable. Phelps already has resumed light training and will get back into a full-time training routine shortly after the first of the year. He plans on swimming at one more Olympics before getting of with the rest of his life, and the 2012 London Games will give him a chance to put another of his records — winningest Olympian ever with 14 gold medals — totally out of reach for the foreseeable future.

On his way out of Beijing, Phelps hinted that he might try for eight more golds in England, though not the same grueling events. However he's apparently put the kibosh on that idea, as he revealed during yet another TV appearance this month on "The Colbert Report."

When asked about his plans for the London, Phelps said, "Hopefully I'll be there. I won't go for eight again."

Bowman is just fine with a scaling-back of the schedule and he's eager for Phelps to try out some new events, especially the backstroke.

"He's really good at it, but he never got to swim it a big event," the coach said.


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