Phelps on Saturday morning qualified for the eighth and
final spot in tonight's final of the 400 individual medley. That puts him in an
outside lane tonight.
"A final spot is a final spot," Phelps said. "The only
thing that matters is getting a spot in. You can't win a gold medal from the
morning."
No, but you can lose one if you don't qualify, and Phelps
very nearly didn't. He won his heat in 4 minutes, 13.33 seconds, barely beating
Hungary's Laszlo Cseh, who finished in 4:13.40. Cseh will miss the final after
winning silver in 2008 and bronze in 2004.
Lochte qualified in third place overall.
"My first race is always the worst one," Lochte said. "I'm
glad I got the cobwebs out."
And what of his rival and village suitemate qualifying
last?
You can't count him out," Lochte said.
You can't count him out," Lochte said.
"Even though he just squeaked in eighth, he's a racer.
We're going to do everything we can to go 1-2 tonight."
Count Japan's Kosuke Hagino in. He finished first overall
in 4:10.01, a national record. The hotly anticipated Splash of the Titans
between Phelps and Lochte could end up as Hagino's party, which would make him
the first Japanese swimmer to win the Olympic 400 IM.
Lochte (4:12.35) came second in his heat behind South
Africa's Chad le Clos, who qualified second in 4:12.24.
Phelps hopes to be the first male swimmer to win the same
individual event at three consecutive Olympics. Lochte, who won bronze in the
400 IM in 2008, beat Phelps in the event at the Olympic trials and won the world
championship in the medley distance in 2009 and 2011.
Tonight's other qualifiers are Thiago Pereira of Brazil,
Thomas Fraser-Holmes of Australia, Luca Marin of Italy and Yuya Horihata of
Japan. None was expected to be ranked above the two-time defending Olympic
champ.
"I didn't expect those guys to go that fast in the heats,"
Phelps said.
Lochte cautioned reporters to remember one thing: Phelps is
a racer. He said he hoped they'd finish 1-2 tonight. Lochte wants dearly to be
No. 1.
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