Phelps wants to build legacy
Michael Phelps is not done with high-achieving even if his career as an Olympic athlete is over.
The Americanâs indefatigability brought him 18 Olympic gold medals, two silver and two bronze, an unprecedented total, and after he scratches a travelling itch he will set himself new objectives.
Phelps is the man who wants to teach the world to swim, who wants to lop a heap of shots from his golf handicap, who wants nothing more than to see the sport he has dominated in the past decade continue to grow and grow.
He is also not a man who accepts second best, as the rivals who have come and gone, lining their pockets with silver and bronze, can attest.
Just now though, Baltimore-based Phelps wants to enjoy life outside professional sport, the 27-year-old having been cocooned since his mid-teens, visiting the worldâs greatest cities but more likely to be taking in the sights from a coach window than on foot. He could look but rarely touch. Now all that changes.
âI want to travel a bunch. Thatâs something Iâve always wanted to do,â Phelps said. âIâve been able to see so many amazing places in the world but Iâve really never got to experience them.
âIâve seen the pool and hotels, every year over the last 12 years of being in the national team. Iâd like to experience some things, whether itâs travelling through Europe or going back to Australia and being able to go around Australia, or South Africa â something (South African swimmer) Chad (Le Clos) and I were talking about.
âThereâs a lot of things I want to do for myself just to be able to relax, and even though I am retiring and the competitive side of my career is over, thereâs a lot of things I want to do around the sport.
âI would like to take it to a higher level than it is right now, and continue to grow the sport more and more.â
He also has a charitable foundation, aimed at encouraging positive lifestyles for American youngsters.
âIâm going to be able to put more time and effort into that,â Phelps said, âand also my summer schools. Being able to teach children how to swim and live healthily is something thatâs very important to me.â
Phelps won four golds in London, after eight in Beijing and six in Athens. It is also often forgotten he raced in Sydney as a 15-year-old too, but that further underlines how swimming has been his life since childhood.
As well as two relay successes in London, including last nightâs 4x100metres medley, he claimed individual gold in 100m butterfly and 200m individual medley.
Phelps could easily swim on and remain competitive on a world level between now and the Rio de Janeiro Games in 2016.
âSure, if I wanted to I could still go,â he said. âBut Iâm ready to be done. Iâm ready to retire and move on to other things.
âWhatever route I go down Iâm going to have goals. Iâm still a very competitive person, so if I go out and practice more at golf Iâm going to drop x amounts of strokes.
âIâm going to have things Iâll be able to go for and try to achieve. Thatâs the mentality I have and the competitiveness I have, and I think itâll always be with me.â
As a boy, Phelps was diagnosed with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and had a school teacher who thought he would amount to little in life. It was a prediction that was wildly off target, with Phelps emerging as a national hero, sporting nobility.
As he prepared to mount the podium in the Aquatics Centre last night, waiting for the Star-Spangled Banner to strike up, Phelps turned to team-mate Brendan Hansen who is joining him in retirement.
âAnd it was strange,â Phelps said. âBrendan was like, âIâm going to belt the words outâ, and I said, âItâs going to sound like gibberish if I do itâ.
âAs soon as I stuffed up on the podium I could feel the tears start coming.
âI said to Nathan (Adrian, who swam the anchor leg), âOh no, there they come, itâs going to be pretty brutalâ.
âThey just started coming. I tried to fight it but I just decided to let it go, and whatever happened, happened. I was just taking in these last moments of my swimming career.
âTo be able to sit here and say Iâve done everything I wanted to do in my swimming career is something thatâs pretty special.
âThatâs the only thing I wanted to say when I retired. I wouldnât change anything. I didnât miss anything. Iâve had the opportunity to do something nobody else has ever done before, so Iâm very happy with that.â