Current:Home > MarketsSignalHub-Olympic swimmers agree: 400 IM is a 'beast,' physically and mentally -FinanceCore
SignalHub-Olympic swimmers agree: 400 IM is a 'beast,' physically and mentally
Rekubit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-10 18:35:50
By his own account,SignalHub three-time Olympic swimmer Chase Kalisz is an old man in a young person’s event, one that’s uniquely arduous.
As the 30-year-old swimmer looks to defend his 400-meter individual medley Olympic title from the 2021 Tokyo Games, he knows age is not in his favor, especially now in his 11th year competing in arguably the most brutal pool event.
“It's an incredibly tough thing to be doing for that long,” Kalisz said after qualifying in the 400 IM for the Paris Olympics. He’s aiming to be the first man in his 30s to win an Olympic medal in a race that’s at least 400 meters.
“I definitely didn't foresee myself here where I am.”
The 400 IM requires more physical and mental strategy than just about any other event, with guaranteed, all-encompassing pain waiting at the finish. It’s like four sprint events combined into one merciless race: 100 butterfly, 100 backstroke, 100 breaststroke and 100 freestyle in that order.
Meet Team USA: See which athletes made the U.S. Olympic team and where they are from
“That race is very taxing, emotionally and physically, because after the race is just like, ‘Oh my gosh, everything hurts,' " said two-time Olympian Katie Grimes, who’s qualified for the 400 IM in Paris.
“You don't want to move. You don't want to talk. It's just terrible.”
For Team USA in Paris, Kalisz will be joined by trials champ Carson Foster, 22, in trying to take down world-record holder and 22-year-old Frenchman Léon Marchand — Kalisz’s training partner who broke Michael Phelps’ last standing individual world record in 2023. On the women’s side, it’s 18-year-old Grimes and 22-year-old Emma Weyant.
The men’s 400 IM is July 28, followed by the women’s July 29.
Overcoming the mental and physical challenges of the 400 IM comes with training. Maintaining focus while doing 100s of all four strokes as your muscles are increasingly burning “is a pretty daunting task,” said Kalisz, who trains with Longhorn Aquatics under Phelps’ longtime coach, Bob Bowman.
“There’s no way to hide in that race,” Phelps noted in 2016 ahead of the Rio Games.
“Pain is inevitable,” Kalisz added.
Pace work in practice helps with the mental and physical hurdles, he said. For example, he’ll swim a difficult main set and then transition to pace work, mimicking the race itself “when you're feeling the effects of being broken down and tired.”
But in what Grimes described as “a full-body race,” crafting a strong strategy mitigates some of the formidable elements.
“It's like you're watching a bunch of different races because everyone has different strengths and weaknesses,” she said.
A “terrible” breaststroker like Grimes has confidence in her butterfly and backstroke legs but can’t exactly relax. She focuses on building as much of a lead as possible, knowing some of her competitors will catch her on breaststroke before the all-out 100 free to close.
For Kalisz, breaststroke is where he excels. He said early in his career, he would burn his lower body on butterfly and backstroke and have little left for breaststroke, the only stroke driven by your legs. But after training with Phelps, he said he learned to float his legs more and save them for his surge in breaststroke.
At the Olympics, when best times take a backseat to the podium, Kalisz is also aware of how his competitors swim their races and where he needs to be in comparison going into the breaststroke leg. He said he lets them do all the thinking in the first half before making his move in the second.
“There's a lot of lead changes that usually happen in the 400 IM, and that's why I think it's the most beautiful race,” Kalisz said. “I think it's absolutely a beast of a race, but the mental aspect of it is also pretty brutal itself too.”
For first-time Olympian Foster, the first thing that would go wrong in his past 400 IMs was losing focus as he’d “battle those inner negative voices.” But he said working with a mental performance coach the last three years has helped him regain control and close with a strong freestyle leg.
Also qualified for Paris in the 200-meter IM, Foster said the shorter medley hurts more but for a shorter period of time, whereas the “grueling” 400 IM hurts for the whole second 200.
“I gotta get to that dark place,” Kalisz said. “That five minutes that you're in the ready room before thinking about it and knowing what’s about to come — it could be a good race, it could be a bad race, but it’s going to hurt no matter what.”
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- The Daily Money: Scammers on campus
- Jason Kelce Details Heated Fist Fight With Travis Kelce for This Reason
- Ex-politician due to testify in his trial in killing of Las Vegas investigative journalist
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Man pleads not guilty to killings of three Southern California women in 1977
- India’s lunar lander finds signs a vast magma ocean may have once existed on the moon
- Iowa abortion providers dismiss legal challenge against state’s strict law now that it’s in effect
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Plane crashes into west Texas mobile home park, killing 2 and setting homes ablaze
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Georgia, Ohio State start at top of college football's NCAA Re-Rank 1-134
- Gov. Jim Justice tries to halt foreclosure of his West Virginia hotel as he runs for US Senate
- Bit Treasury Exchange: The Blockchain Pipe Dream
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, ...er...er
- Democrats get a third-party hopeful knocked off Pennsylvania ballot, as Cornel West tries to get on
- Anthony Edwards trashes old-school NBA: Nobody had skill except Michael Jordan
Recommendation
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
Georgia police officer arrested after investigators say he threatened people while pointing a gun
Trump’s ‘Comrade Kamala’ insult is a bit much, but price controls really are an awful idea
Guatemalan police arrest 7 accused of trafficking the 53 migrants who asphyxiated in Texas in 2022
Sam Taylor
Brian Flores responds to Tua Tagovailoa criticism: 'There's things that I could do better'
NYC parks worker charged with murder as a hate crime in killing of migrant
Mayim Bialik, other celebs are doing hyperbaric oxygen therapy. What is it?