The Rich Roll Podcast - The Voice of Swimming: Olympian Rowdy Gaines on The Sport That Saved His Life
Episode Date: August 12, 2024Rowdy Gaines is a three-time Olympic gold medalist, NBC’s voice of swimming, and a living legend in the aquatic world. This conversation explores Rowdy’s extraordinary journey from late-blooming ...swimmer to world record holder and beloved broadcaster. We dig into his mental resilience through setbacks like the 1980 Olympic boycott and a battle with Guillain-Barré syndrome, his perspective on the evolution of competitive swimming, and his passion for water safety advocacy. He offers a behind-the-scenes look at the Paris Olympics and much more along the way. Rowdy’s infectious enthusiasm is a gift to the sport. He shows everyone how and why we love this sport, which means so much to us both. Enjoy! Show notes + MORE Watch on YouTube Newsletter Sign-Up Today’s Sponsors: Waking Up: Get a FREE month, plus $30 OFF 👉wakingup.com/RICHROLL Roka: Unlock 20% OFF your order with code RICHROLL 👉ROKA.com/RICHROLL Bon Charge: Use code RICHROLL to save 15% OFF 👉 boncharge.com Birch: Get 25% off ALL mattresses and 2 free eco-rest pillows 👉BirchLiving.com/richroll This episode is sponsored by Better Help: Listeners get 10% off their first month 👉BetterHelp.com/RICHROLL Meal Planner: For customized plant-based recipes 👉meals.richroll.com Check out all of the amazing discounts from our Sponsors 👉 richroll.com/sponsors Find out more about Voicing Change Media at voicingchange.media and follow us @voicingchange
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The Rich Roll Podcast.
Rowdy Gaines is in the flesh.
I've been looking forward to this for so long.
Thank you for taking the time to do this.
I'm really excited to geek out on swimming with you.
I'm more excited than you are, my friend.
I just told you before we went on.
I highly doubt that.
I know, man.
I've been a big fan for a long time.
So we're recording this,
I think we're two days out from the swimming,
the formal swimming in the pool competition being complete.
We still have open water on the horizon.
You're gonna be calling that.
But as the voice of swimming,
you just, that was an endurance event,
what you went through.
The amount of energy that you give
like on the daily to the experience,
to keep it really exciting for everybody at home
is really something to marvel at.
I mean, does that drain you?
Do you get energy from that?
I would think you would be exhausted right now.
Yeah, I am.
Most Olympic games, I literally sleep
for like 24 hours afterwards. I mean, I get sleep for like 24 hours afterwards.
I mean, I get up for a couple hours
and then go back to sleep.
But this one, Rich, was completely different
because I didn't have to do preliminaries.
Dan and I just did the finals,
first games that I had never done the preliminary.
So it really helped for the energy levels
because I was able to sleep.
I mean, I go back to Athens, for example,
I think we were sleeping three or four hours a night.
So it was running on fumes by the end.
But this case, even though we didn't get back to the hotel
till two or three in the morning,
we could wake up at 10.45 and watch prelims on TV
or I'd go down there every once in a while
and just have a lot more energy because of sleep.
That was the primary thing.
Yeah, this is the first Olympics that I've ever attended.
And it's been incredible to actually go to finals.
I went to finals on three evenings.
Oh, you did swimming?
To see it live.
Yeah, yeah, I was there.
Oh, cool.
I was there. Not every cool. I was there. That's awesome.
Not every night, but three of them.
And it was really remarkable to experience it in person.
But in between, like I'm running around like an idiot
doing all kinds of stuff here.
I can imagine.
I'm way more unplugged from the results than I would be
had I been sitting on my couch at home watching it on TV.
And the one thing that I've been missing
is you calling the races.
Like I'm there watching it,
but I don't have Rowdy in my,
as part of that experience.
Oh, lucky you.
So I actually haven't,
I didn't see you call any races
aside from scrolling through your Instagram
and seeing some clips here and there
on the NBC feed and your feed.
So that's been a little bit different.
So I miss that.
Like that's what you miss when you're witnessing it live.
You're very fortunate.
I don't know about that.
Yeah, definitely are.
But the other thing that's been cool is,
we're of a certain generation, I'm basically your age,
I'm a couple of years younger than you.
And I was really plugged into all the athletes and all the backstories of basically every single swimmer
from the mid 1980s through maybe the mid 2000s.
And now I'm at a certain age where I'm just, you know,
like I'm not paying quite as much attention
to the sport as I used to,
but it's been really fun to kind of plug back in
and learn about all these kids and their stories.
And I had the opportunity to do a bunch of interviews
with a bunch of the Speedo swimmers
over the last couple of days and getting to know them.
So that's like refreshed my interest in the sport.
Right, isn't that great?
I mean, and I think even though we are
from a different generation, you're much younger than I am.
Not really.
We all have that sense of commonality, if that's a word, of familiarity, of brother and sisterhood.
Because I think at the end of the day, we all kind of know what we have gone through being a swimmer.
You were a swimmer.
have gone through being a swimmer, you were a swimmer.
And even though the sport has changed dramatically over these generations, the basic training
and heartache and grinding away is still the same.
Yeah, I wanna get into how it's changed
and how it hasn't, but maybe let's put a pin on that for now.
With respect to Paris itself,
this is your eighth games that you've called?
This is my ninth games.
With NBC, my eighth with Dan Hicks.
So we started together in 96.
I started, believe it or not,
you might remember this in 92 with the triple cast.
Yeah.
It was an NBC property kind of ahead of its time,
but I called the cable side of things
and started over the air in 96.
So ninth Olympiad, what was different about Paris?
What made this experience unique
as compared to some of the other ones?
Good question.
I think first and foremost, Paris.
The city is so iconic.
And I'm not saying cities like Athens and Sydney
and Atlanta and all,
they don't have really special qualities.
They do, all of them are iconic in one way or another.
But Paris is, dude, I mean, this place is just magical.
I mean, the beach volleyball
and the steps of the Eiffel tower.
So plus 15,000 people, mostly French and Leon Marchand,
it just made the place so electric night in and night out.
Did you go at any night?
Yeah, I did.
I was on the evening that he did the double.
Oh, dude, that's the best night.
And the French fans just losing their minds.
You picked the best night.
Yeah, it was really something special.
Well, you know, I mean,
so I think that differentiates it a little bit.
The last one I can remember was probably Sydney
with Ian Thorpe and how electric that place was.
But it's been a long time since the, you know,
since the place was that energized with emotion.
Has France ever had such a successful swimming Olympics?
Not since I've called.
I'm not sure they have probably in history, but I mean,
you go back to the last time it was there, they probably did,
but no, no, no, nothing close to what they did here.
And that was, it wasn't just Leon.
I mean, you know, Flo and Relays,
and they were, you know, time and time again,
that a lot of the French swimmers stepped up.
And I can guarantee you that if Leon,
if we did this Olympic game,
somebody like Leon would not have performed as well.
I'm not saying he wouldn't have won four gold medals,
but my betting side of things would have said,
I don't think he would have won all four.
I think that crowd willed him to victory in that 200 fly.
And 200 IM, 400 IM he would have won,
but that's 200 fly.
Sure, but the way he came behind, I mean, it was won, but that's where it flies.
But the way he came behind,
I mean, it was not a given that he was gonna win
that race by any stretch.
And I can feel, I can say that with all confidence
because I swam in a home 11 and I shouldn't have won.
I could swim that race 10 times in LA
and I would have lost nine of them.
Well, we're definitely gonna get into that.
But my point is, is I think that's what differentiated
to your question pairs with all the other Olympic games.
And the US underperformed in many respects,
especially on the men's side.
But when you're talking the global side of the Olympics,
this was right up there.
Yeah, Team USA, I wouldn't say they had a bad meet,
not the best meet though, right?
The men had yet to win an individual gold medal
at the pool until Bobby Fink,
astonishingly broke the world record
in that 1500 meter freestyle.
I mean, what a performance,
what a great exclamation point.
I imagine he was probably shouldering
quite a bit of pressure.
We need at least one gold.
But when was the last time Team USA
had only won one gold medal on the men's side?
I mean, it has to have been eons.
Been a long, long time, my friend.
God, we said that stat on TV and I can't even remember.
Have you ever done that where you do a podcast and like you study for it
and you get so much out of the person you're talking to
and then 20 minutes you walk out and go,
what's your name again?
Yeah, I know.
Or, you know, a year later or some months later,
somebody says, oh, when you said that thing
or we're talking to that person on the,
and you said that, I have no idea
what you're talking about.
So I don't remember when, but it was a long time.
And so, yeah, I think that the men have some work
cut out for them as we head to LA.
But I also, I was asked this question this morning,
Elizabeth, and I said, you know what?
The men are gonna be just fine.
It's a young team.
We've got kids like Thomas Heilman, Maximus Williams,
and who you've never heard of,
but he's a kid that, you know, 17, 18 years old.
I think in four years,
the men are gonna be set up really well for LA
and plus a home Olympics and all that.
Women are fine.
They're gonna be great.
Yeah.
But the men will be fine.
My sense is that it was a unique team
because you had all of these superstars
who are kind of in the twilight of their career,
who are hanging on,
but are kind of past their peak performances.
And then you have this new crop of very young swimmers
who are exciting, but are still probably two years away
from making the cut that gets people to pay attention.
So it's this weird, like liminal space.
We're in between generations, I think.
And we saw that in the results, but to your point,
I think it is exciting when you look at Jack Alexie
and Josh Leenda, like these are gonna be,
these people are gonna be big stars in 28, I think.
No question about it.
There's a lot of young talent.
You brought up Chris, Giuliani or Giuliano and Jack Alexie, because those are
two future superstars in sprint freestyle.
And that's what the United States needs.
They need a Caleb Dressel or, you know, a Michael Phelps to be able to kind of hang
their hat on on relays.
You know, the men only won one relay.
I say only.
They won out of one out of three is still not bad. But,
you know, usually you expect that kind of dominance for the United States when Michael
was on board. I mean, they lost very, very few relays. So they need a guy that they can count
on those sprint relays, mixed relay. And they put together a great 800 free relay and they've got
good nucleus for that
that's how one of the ways i measure a country success is the relays because it it really
determines your versatility the medley relay the hundreds and two hundreds it's it's really where
it's that's like college you know a coach is going to you know recruit an average sprinter
versus a great distance swimmer it's not fair but it's all because of relays, you know?
And that's not exactly the way it goes for the Olympics,
but it's still a very important part of the success
of a country at an Olympic games.
But what do you think the conversations are
in the boardrooms at USA Swimming and, you know,
the kind of powers that be who are now, you know,
we're a couple of days out.
We got to look back into the rear view mirror
and kind of deconstruct what happened
and try to, you know, build for the future.
What are those, what are they, you know,
how are they going to do that?
Well, I have no idea
because I am not part of any of that.
Yeah, but you know all these people.
But I know all these people.
But one thing I would say, if I was advising,
take your time.
Let's not rush into anything.
Let's get the data.
You know, that's the first thing.
Get the data down.
How many people went PBs?
What was the training camp like?
You know, make sure you have all your ducks in a row before you start to make those changes that are necessary.
Because I do think changes are necessary.
I really do. I don't know what those changes are off necessary because I do think changes are necessary.
I really do.
I don't know what those changes are off the top of my head.
I can think of one.
You're going to let us know what that one is?
Yeah, why not?
I don't care.
What are they going to do, fire me?
Nobody's going to fire you, Roddy. I think you have to get Michael Phelps back into the fold.
I think you need to do whatever you can
to get the greatest swimmer of all time,
greatest Olympian of all time, in my opinion,
back into a key strategic position in the sport.
There's nobody, you know, if he walked into a room of junior national kids,
it would be incredibly motivational and inspiring.
So Michael and I've talked,
he's gonna get after me on this probably,
but we haven't discussed any specifics,
but I've actually come gone to him and said,
we gotta get you back in the sport.
He hasn't been involved very much, a little bit, but not enough. Right. Not as a coach, but you mean in some
leadership capacity. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Exactly. Yeah. Some sort of advisory role where he is a
big part of the national team and junior national team, because we need to build for that future because i just texted this to him i
mean his legacy has already set he could walk away and never appear in public ever again and his
legacy is set let me change the sport more dramatically than anything or anybody in the
history of our sport um but he could he could create another legacy.
You know, I think he's starting to do that
on the water safety side of things,
certainly on the drug issue.
I mean, we just saw, read that article
about him going to Capitol Hill and testifying.
I think it was awesome that he came out
and said those kinds of things.
But I also think from the national team perspective,
especially as we head to LA,
it would be really cool for him
to kind of move in that direction.
And I have a plan.
It sounds like it would be something
that he would be very interested in doing.
I mean, his love for the sport is very earnest.
Like, you know, it's been so great to see him,
you know, with you in the booth,
but also just all the social media.
Like, he's very happy to be here.
He is not only the most successful
and sort of charismatic swimmer of this generation,
but also, or of his generation,
but also it's greatest evangelist.
Like he knows how to get people like you do,
like knows how to get people really excited about the sport.
And he knows so much.
I mean, if you saw him in the 400 IM,
well, you didn't because he's such a great analyst.
You know, he could kick me out of the booth anytime.
Who is gonna, when you retire in 28, who's it gonna be?
I have no idea.
I don't know.
Do you get to be involved in appointing your successor?
She's awesome.
She's great.
She's really good.
Elizabeth Beisel, she's a dear, dear friend.
And I love her so much, like another daughter, you know.
But I think she's destined for more greatness
than just being, you know, an analyst in swimming.
I think I said the same thing to Summer Sanders
back in 96 when she did it with me and Dan.
She called the women, I called the men
and she didn't really like it very much.
So Elizabeth likes it okay,
but she wants to do something else.
And I told Summer, you're destined for greatness.
The camera loves you.
You're so well-spoken.
You've got so much personality.
And Elizabeth is just like that.
So I can see her becoming a host of a TV show or a game.
I mean, I don't know.
She's definitely a natural for that.
But getting back to who it's going to be, I have no idea.
Part of me feels like it should be a woman
because it's been a man for so long.
But I also think it needs to be somebody
that provides the best amount of knowledge
along with the energy,
especially on the Olympic level
because I don't get into the weeds
with too much of the technical side of things
when I commentate at the Olympics.
First of all, because I don't know as much
as somebody like Michael.
But you also have to speak to the every man
who doesn't know anything about the sport
and make it relatable.
They don't know anything about starting block.
People ask me all the time,
what are those flags that go across?
I mean, so that's who we have to speak to
and try to bring people in and create energy for it
and tell them how, make them feel how much you love it.
So it has to be somebody like that.
Somebody like Cody Miller.
I've told Cody Miller, he'd be great.
Ryan Murphy's awesome.
Lily King, you know, she would be awesome.
Katie one day, but Lily says she's not going
to another Olympics, but I don't buy that.
I think she will.
Katie's gonna keep swimming.
So I have no idea.
You mentioned earlier how swimming has changed a lot,
but it's also fundamentally the same.
When you look at the times, I don't know about you,
but like I can't even relate to how fast
these people are swimming.
And I now kind of measure my performances
against the women, you know?
Like I just can't fathom
how these people are swimming so fast.
To what do you attribute that?
Like, is it changes in sports science, in training?
Like what is driving like these margins
where we continue to see improvements,
improvements, improvements?
I mean, this Olympics was a little bit different,
probably the least,
whether two or three world records total, like that's, you know, improvements. I mean, this Olympics was a little bit different, probably the least, whether two or three world records total,
like that's abnormal.
We can get into that, but by and large,
every year, every Olympic cycle,
like these records just continue to get eclipsed.
Yeah, well, we'll back up and tell you the biggest reason
that doesn't have to do with the sports science thing.
The biggest reason in my, there's two.
The biggest reason is money.
When we swam, there was no money in the sport.
In fact, when I swam in 1984,
you were not allowed to accept money.
It was like the NCAA type rules a few years ago.
So I was 25 when I won.
I was a third oldest swimmer in history.
I remember in 84 when you were swimming
and the whole narrative was like, he's so old.
You were 25.
And I was hanging on by a thin thread too at 25.
But now you can earn a living.
Most swimmers that are swimming that are out of college still
are living, you know, hand to mouth and are not making much money. I think the average athlete
makes $25,000 a year that are, that's swimming, that is not in that, that mouth brush more type
atmosphere, stratosphere. But money has kept the athletes in longer.
So you see more swimmers in the water past the age of 21.
Mark Spitz quit when he was 21.
John Nabert was 21.
They all retired after college.
So that's one reason there are more bodies in the water
to be able to provide that.
And the second reason are the underwaters
from the physical side of things. reason is are the underwaters
from the physical side of things. We didn't have underwater, right?
I'd pop up right at the flags, didn't have dolphin kick.
And that was just starting when I was swimming.
I swam with Sean Murphy who then in the 88 games,
that was really the coming out party with Dave Burkoff
and the Burkoff blast and all of that.
Brian Redditor was so good underwater.
So yeah, that's changed the sport
because somebody like Marshawn spins,
on the 200 fly, he'll spend 60 meters underwater.
And it's faster than being above the water.
And so those are the two, I think personally,
I tell you the truth,
I don't know the sports science side of things.
I'm not that smart, but I know that's changed.
And also from what I understand, video analysis.
We didn't have video now.
There was no videotaping of our stroke.
You know, we'd get the eight millimeter or whatever it was and look at grainy,
but now they can break things down very, very specifically with their stroke technique.
And I'll have all kinds of bells and whistles
on that side of things.
So from that side, nutrition, obviously, training,
you know, we, I don't know about you,
but you're quick.
Okay, we're all going 10, 200s, ready to go.
Breaststrokers, sprinters, you know, distance.
We all did the same thing.
And now it's much more specialized.
That's what made Marshawn so amazing.
And Reagan Smith, you know, first time in history ever to win 200 fly and 200 back in the same,
or win a medal in the 200 fly, 200 back.
But ordinarily, you'll have athletes like Flo Manidou that just swims the 50, hangs on in 100.
You know, Nick Fink just swims a 50 hangs on in a hundred.
Nick Fink just swims, well, he tries to swim the 100 and 200
but just made the 100.
So it's much more specialized.
Yeah, also a lot of these athletes are a lot larger.
I mean, Jack Alexie is like six, seven, I think.
Crazy.
These guys are huge.
So there's that also.
But I think the training really has evolved.
Like we were of the era of slogging it out,
going hard on every set
and it was just volume, volume, volume, right?
Even yourself, 100 meter specialists,
like sprinters training like endurance athletes,
just putting in an unreal amount of mileage,
of yardage every single day.
And I didn't realize how much it had evolved.
And I've told this story before,
but I've had a couple opportunities to drop in
on the workouts at USC where some of the post-grads
who are kind of training for the Olympics
have been when Urbanchak was on deck, who was a friend,
and got to like mix it up with those guys a little bit.
Like when, like Lochte was there, a bunch of those guys,
Connor Dwyer and some other ones.
And I didn't even understand
what was happening in the workout.
It was all about explosiveness off the walls,
all about the turns, all about the kick
and all these contraptions where you're, you know,
pulleys and all this kind of stuff.
So it was all about acceleration and power.
And I'm like, when are we gonna do 10, 200s?
You know, that's just not part of it anymore.
Isn't that so crazy to think that that's the norm now?
You know, I mean, this guy that won the 50 freestyle
read about his workouts, Cameron McAvoy from Australia.
You know, all he does is fast swimming.
I mean, he'll warm up very little and then just all he does is fast swimming.
I mean, he'll warm up very little
and then just all he does is speed work.
Yeah, but look at what they're doing on the track.
I mean, that's what the 100 meter
and 200 meter guys for a long time.
We finally taken a page off.
And so why did it take so long to figure out?
Like if you're swimming a race that takes you 18 seconds,
you don't need to be going 20,000 meters a day.
And we did. Right. We did.
I'd put in 15, 20,000 and, uh, but it's, it's a different animal now, but I think that's a good
point that you make about athletes being bigger and stronger. I was talking to, I can't remember
what it was, but it was, uh, it was an ex pro football player and he had just retired. And he
was telling me that a Lawrence Taylor wouldn't even make an NFL team today.
That's how much bigger, stronger, faster they are
compared to that generation ago.
So I'm sure it just holds true.
It's across the board.
I think I saw the other day that the eighth place finisher
in the men's 100 meters on the track
was faster than Carl Lewis ran.
So, you know, this is just the evolution of humans.
That's why, you know, I was a senior in high school.
First time somebody broke 50.
I mean, I broke 20 in the 53 style Joe bottom, 19, seven.
And then I was at Auburn when somebody broke 19,
Freddie Busquet for the first time, he went 18-7.
And then of course I was commentating on Caleb Dressel
when he went 17-8, I think it was.
Yeah, it's hard to imagine.
So in 15 years, 10, 15 years,
there'll be somebody breaking 17.
People ask me, when's it gonna stop?
It has to stop at some point. I know, we keep thinking,
every generation thinks they're up at the edge of it.
You're on the edge of this stuff, when is it?
I don't know, I don't know.
I mean, I think-
It won't be in my lifetime.
I think we'll continue to see breakthroughs.
And I think there's all these emerging technologies.
I mean, you mentioned videotaping stroke,
but now they can like examine
like the hydraulics of your stroke.
They can get really granular on like how to perfect stroke.
Like we just get in and swim,
well, this feels right or whatever,
but I'm sure there's a lot of improvements
that can be found with, you know, using like science
and these, you know, these sort of AI learning models
to like evaluate all of these kinds of things
that, you know, the human eye can't even detect.
Right, and I don't think I'll be around.
Well, at least not commentating.
But let's get into your story a little bit.
I mean, there's so many interesting things
about your journey, not the least of which is
you didn't even start swimming until you were 17,
which is you didn't even start swimming until you were 17, which is incredibly late.
Yeah, I love sports as a kid,
but when I got to high school,
I wasn't very good at anything.
So I just kept getting cut.
I tried out for football, baseball, basketball, golf,
and tennis my sophomore and junior years.
We didn't have, ninth grade was still part of middle school.
And I just got caught.
And along the way, I was, we were just talking about it. I was going down a path that, you know, was a bit dark
and not the best way to lead a life as a 16, 17-year-old.
And one last sport, swimming.
In fact, the day I went out for the swim team, 17 year old and one last sport, swimming.
In fact, the day I went out for the swim team, I went to the library, obviously library back then
and checked out a book on track and field to say,
maybe I could try track just in case,
figured it wasn't gonna work, I was gonna get cut.
And, but swimming stuck and it changed my life.
So I grew up in Florida, knew how to swim, Rich.
I mean, water was part of my DNA.
It's part of the fabric of who I am growing up.
My greatest memories are around water.
My parents water skied for a place called Cypress Gardens.
We lived on the same lake.
They would take the boat over across the lake
to work every day and back.
But I just never did it competitively
until I got to high school.
I had heard you share about this
with the unfiltered waters podcast girls.
Oh, Kate and Missy.
Kate and Missy.
Yeah.
And you mentioned that your decision to try out for swimming
was motivated by this friend that you had
who had some ocular issues,
like he was eye challenged or something like that.
Very true.
And he was your buddy and you kind of went into it together
thinking you were just doing it
to help him out of solidarity with your friend.
Very true.
He was, you know, I miss him every day.
There isn't a day I don't think of Bobby.
He passed away a year after our high school,
not to get into the weeds with it,
but he was struck by lightning while water skiing
and passed away.
So it was a tragic ending to a life
and just a great guy.
We used to take him driving, my buddies and I.
Turned 16, I got my parents' station wagon.
We'd take him to a mall parking lot and let him drive.
He was completely blind in one eye and 90% in the other.
So he was legally blind, but he wanted to try out for the swim team.
And I said I'd help him.
This is January in Florida.
The water's cold.
There are no heated pools in Florida.
And so we'd go in his backyard, and I remember swimming in this 10-foot pool, it seemed like.
And then we'd go out and sit in the sun and try to warm up.
We'd swim in there for about 10 minutes and go warm up.
And finally got up the nerve to try out for the swim team
when tryouts happened and we both made it.
He didn't stick with it.
And the swim coach was the same coach
as the football coach that had cut you?
Yeah, same guy.
Coach Bill Woolwine, still alive,
still coaching, great friend to this day,
45 or so years later.
Yeah, he kind of felt sorry for me.
And I said, I'll let you hang.
Did you hear about this story where I,
we had a swim meet two weeks after I started.
I still didn't, I'd swim my head up.
I was like that one of those eight and unders
running into the lane lines.
And he put me on an E relay, not an ABC or D relay,
honest to God truth.
I was on there with a chess club guy
and a couple of band members and,
but I out split everybody on the team.
It was 200 free relay.
And so it was like, it was a moment for him like,
oh, this guy might be pretty good.
And for me, it was a moment of, I just didn't get caught.
It wasn't, I didn't start thinking about.
But just the right amount of validation
for this kid that loves sports that finally found something
where maybe he might have some potential.
It's exactly, exactly to the epitome of how I felt.
But how long before it locked in like,
oh, maybe there's even something more here.
Because as I understand it,
it was only like two and a half years
between that moment and you breaking your first world record,
which is insane.
Yeah.
Is that true?
Started in February of 76
and broke two world records on relays
in the summer of 78.
So yeah, I guess about two and a half years, yeah.
From a kid who was swimming with his head out of the water
to breaking world records
with a coach who is fundamentally a football coach.
Oh yeah. I'm still trying to understand how this happened. of the water to breaking world records with a coach who is fundamentally a football coach.
I'm still trying to understand how this happened.
He had no idea what he was doing.
I mean, he ended up quitting football coaching
and just doing swimming, but we both started,
literally it was his first year, my first year.
And we were learning together, but it happened fast.
I was blessed.
You know, the Lord blessed me, Rich,
in many ways to be able to have that kind of,
I feel talent.
And once I found out that this was a sport
I fell in love with,
I was gonna do everything in my power to get better at it.
Going to the library and checking out books.
I check out stacks of books.
I remember reading Mark Spitz's 50 Meter Jungle,
Deepwater by Don Schollander,
checking out books by Doc Councilman.
And I just immersed myself into the sport.
I sent 50 letters to colleges,
finding out what I need to do to get a scholarship.
And all of them said,
hey, you need to start training two a days.
Well, we didn't do two a days.
So I would sneak-
There was no club team in Winter Haven.
No, no club team.
I mean, our high school.
And so I would sneak into motels, not hotels, motels
and swim in their heated pool.
And there were like four or five of them.
So I'd sneak in one last about a week,
get kicked out and then go to another one
and then go to another one.
Wow.
Ride my bike to it.
I still hadn't had my license yet.
So those are the kinds of things that I did
because I just fell in love with it.
It wasn't like I still had no dreams of being an Olympian.
I just wanted to get better.
And I didn't even think about college scholarship yet.
I just, these people told me these are the things
you had to do to get better.
So I would.
Did you have a conscious sense or awareness
that this was like sort of a path of salvation for you?
I mean, you mentioned, you know,
you were kind of going down a darker path.
You'd found this thing,
you clearly understood that you held some promise
and that this could be like a path away from that other,
like, were you like,
was that happening unconsciously or consciously?
No question, absolutely.
I knew, well, I just said, I was close.
You know, I, I was close.
I knew I was close to something that,
if I look back on it now, it would have been tough. Like self-destructive, like drugs and alcohol
or like crime or what are we talking about here?
Wow. All of the above.
I don't know about crime.
I didn't do anything criminal.
But you were just wayward.
Sneak into motels.
Where were mom and dad during that time?
Mom and dad, my mom was there.
My parents were, and my dad still is, my mom passed away,
but my mom and dad were always there for me.
But they went out, my parents divorced when I was little.
So I live with my mom and she they went out, my parents divorced when I was little. So, you know, I live with my mom and, you know,
she'd go out, she's remarried.
I love my stepfather.
I had a great upbringing from that side of things,
but I just, you know, my friends were awesome.
We just started drinking at first.
And I, but I could just tell my inner being was that,
you know, you have the- Sure, the wolf, yeah.
Which wolf is talking about us.
And that guy that was the bad guy was kind of leading things
and said, do this, do this, yeah, you know.
But I don't blame anybody but myself.
There was nobody leading me down that path.
My friends were great. They were path. My friends were great.
They were innocent.
My parents were awesome.
There was nobody that was pointing me down that dark direction except myself.
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When you look back now, obviously, you know, in the rear view mirror, everything kind of makes sense.
You're like, well, this happened and then this happened
and it was, this is the way it was meant to be.
But do you extract meaning from that?
I know you talk to people all over the country
and travel and do a lot of public speaking.
And I think, you know, a lot of people go through
some version of that in their life
and either they take that left turn
or they take that right turn,
but not everybody stumbles into something
that makes them an Olympic champion.
So how do you kind of share the wisdom of that experience
in a helpful way for other people?
I guess it's my belief that,
and this sounds so corny,
but I think we are all put on this earth
for a very specific purpose,
whether you believe in God or not,
I think there's no way we were just kind of thrown down here
and I think we all have a gift to share with the world.
And sometimes it takes longer for others to discover that gift, you know, and sometimes
they never do.
And for me, I just try to, you know, I try to tell people, you know, that there's no
reason for anybody to tell you
you're any different than me.
You know, I was a skinny little kid
from Winter Haven, Florida.
I lived six miles out on a dirt road
and, you know, grew up from very humble beginnings.
But I wish I had something much more philosophical
to tell you, but for me, it's really about,
I think my advice has always been,
not to have this whole weight of the world
on your shoulders.
I think for a long time I did that.
I thought there's some things you know, some things of my
childhood that were, again, had nothing to do with my family, but just something happened that,
that I just, I just can't talk about quite yet. But at some point I will.
But I, after that happened, it was like, you know, the guilt and the shame and putting it all that
on my shoulder, never being able to talk to anybody. And, and instead of relying on the
people that love you and care for you so much. And that's what I ended up finally doing is like,
you know, it's okay to, to, to have people help and support you. You know, it started,
you know, early on as my family.
And then when I met my wife, she was a huge part of that.
I've been able to talk to her about many of the things
that happened to me and she's been my rock in many ways.
So it's taken a long time.
Yeah, but every instinct when you're in that
is to push it down and compartmentalize it
and like really just like be in this relationship
with shame, right?
And never tell anybody what's going on.
I still live with that though, Rich.
Yeah, it's hard.
It still had, and that's why I try, you know,
I still live with that shame and that guilt, you know?
So, you know, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, you know? So, you know, I,
no, I do.
And it, you know, it's there,
but fortunately I've, you know, therapy has helped
and, you know, my wife has helped a lot.
So I think it's gonna be okay.
And that's what I try to tell other people,
my own children, my own grandchildren.
I just had a conversation with my daughters
and she was just having a bad day.
And just, I said, it's gonna be okay.
You're gonna be okay, you know?
And I couldn't really say anything that helped too much.
I just, yeah.
Just being there.
Yeah, it was said to me early on
that shame can't survive the light, you know?
And as much as we wanna, you know,
keep those things in abeyance, it's only in kind of releasing them light, you know, and as much as we wanna, you know, keep those things in abeyance,
it's only in kind of releasing them and, you know,
sharing them that we can find some peace and freedom in it.
But it holds on tight, man.
And I think it's, you know, thank you for sharing that.
It's not easy to talk about these things.
No, it's not.
But I think it's, you know,
I think it's helpful and empowering for other people
to hear like,
I've heard you talk about that.
We all go through shit, man.
Dude, I talked, I heard you last night.
These dark moments can be teachers.
Yeah, so, I've heard you say many, many, many times
like swimming saved my life,
but I think I have a deeper understanding
of just how true that is, I think for you know, I have a deeper understanding of, of just how true that
is, I think for you. So I've never talked about it before. So not in that kind of depth. And it,
you know, not only did it save your life, it gave you an entirely new one. So you end up at Auburn.
Did you have a sense when you, when you arrived there that, you know, Richard quick, I mean, like you you're going from basically this football coach turned, you know, and then now you have a sense when you arrived there that Richard, I mean, like you're going from
basically this football coach turned,
and then now you have Richard Quick
early in his career, obviously,
who would go on to just be one of the absolute legends
and icons of swimming coach history, right?
And he really set you up for tremendous success.
Yeah, he did.
And believe it or not, Rich,
and a lot of people remember this,
but Eddie Reese recruited me.
Oh, I didn't know that. He was at Auburn.
And he coached at Auburn before he went to Texas.
So Eddie recruited me out of high school.
He was one of only two schools to recruit me.
I wrote letters to 50 schools
and didn't get recruited by Western Kentucky and Auburn.
And Eddie would call me all my senior year.
And it's a long story, but he had seen me swim somewhere
and knew that I had the potential.
You know, Eddie is, I mean, he's like-
Sure, yeah, this isn't like a swimming podcast.
There's a lot of people have no idea who that is.
Eddie would go on to be-
He's the greatest college swim coach in history.
At Texas and just, you know,
basically oversaw a dynasty for decades.
We have Mount Rushmore, right?
He's in that Mount Rushmore.
And so I swam with him my freshman year
and certainly flourished.
And then he went to Texas and then Richard came in.
And so I had the best of both worlds.
I had that beginning with Eddie,
and then I had the rest of the way with Richard
and he went to Texas, not to get into details,
but he coached the women, Eddie was coaching the men.
So after I graduated from Auburn,
I went down to Austin and spent two years with both of them. And I'd swim with Richard mostly, but also swim with Eddie too. So I had,
you know, two of the greatest coaches in history coached me those last two years.
And what is, what, if you could sort of crystallize the wisdom that you learned from them,
not just a sport level, but on a life level, like what did those guys teach you that you still carry with you today?
Well, from Eddie's standpoint,
the sense of humor, deprecation of perspective,
you know, he was so good at that.
You know, Colin tells that story where Eddie, he was the head coach in 2008 He was so good at that.
Colin tells that story where Eddie, he was the head coach in 2008
and they're at 400 free relay.
And they're getting ready to go out.
Michael Phelps going for eight gold medals,
Jason Lee, Zach anchoring, the story of that relay.
A lot of people do, even if you don't know swimming.
And the last thing he said to the guys
when they were walking out, he goes, don't F it up.
You know, I mean, that's the kind of, you know,
it really helped me when I was like wide-eyed,
it helped me with that sense of humor.
And obviously his knowledge is just amazing.
He had the knack of that perfect taper.
For Richard, you know, I think everybody needs that,
that person in their life that they can go to
outside of the pool.
And Richard was my second father, you know.
I love the man more than I can ever begin to tell you.
And talk about there isn't a day that goes by,
there really isn't that I don't think of Richard and his love and his passion for the sport.
I mean, you knew him and he was,
I learned a lot about passion for what we have in our sport from him and the love of it and the ability to, I mean, I remember him saying, you have to eliminate the NT words from your vocabulary.
We are not going to say can't, don't, won't, et cetera.
We are going to be positive in every respect.
And I was a bit of a negative guy, you know,
I was still kind of up and down
and never was perfect, obviously,
but he helped transform that in a big way.
What do you think are the qualities
that define the best coaches?
Like what is the ultimate coach in your mind
as somebody who's been around sport
and elite performance for so long?
Well, I think the amount of the number of people
that you have talked to, you probably know that better.
And I know you know that better than I do.
But for me personally, I think patience
is a really big thing for me.
I need somebody that, you know, this sport will chew you up, man.
And you really need patience for that pupil of yours.
You need to have the wherewithal to be able to understand what they're going through.
Richard certainly had that in so many ways.
Eddie did too, but spent most of my career with Richard.
And I think for Richard, I think for a coach in general,
you cannot be afraid to fail.
You have to take risks.
I think that status quo type coach is going to fall into,
oh, it worked this year, so it's going to work next year, you know, and Richard never did that.
If we were successful one year, he was still not afraid to experiment the next year, try something
different in a tape or on a set or something in the weight room, dry land, you know, he was
or something in the weight room, dry land, you know,
he was constantly experimenting, you know,
and that's tough to do, you know?
And I think the last thing is to be able to have that trust,
to build that trust with that athlete. That athlete has to trust that coach implicitly.
Can I tell you a very quick story?
The athlete has to trust that coach implicitly. Can I tell you a very quick story?
So the, I swam the third day of the Olympics
and that's a long story, I'll make it short.
But I started the track start, you know,
I was the first swimmer.
You were the only one doing it.
In 84, yeah, yeah.
And, but the whole idea was in 82,
I had a really bad start at the World Championships
where I first started it.
And so for the next two years, man,
I was the last one out of the water every day.
You know, it was like my goal, I had this noble goal that,
so for that 15 minutes every day, I'd practice my start,
but I do the same cadence, Rich.
So I'd take your mark and I'd go real slow
and try to time it, you know, when this gun went off.
Anyway, long story, third day of the Olympics,
back then there were three starters.
Well, one starter Richard noticed on the first day
was very quick, guy from Panama, take your mark, man.
Came to me the next day, we have changed your start.
You've been working on this for two years,
but you've got to come down fast.
If you don't, there's a chance, maybe not,
but there's a chance that this guy starts your race.
So he literally, the day after the first day,
that whole second day before I swam the third day,
we practiced coming down quicker.
Wow.
The last thing you want as an athlete
at the Olympics is to change anything, right?
Dude.
Yeah, that must have freaked you out.
At the Olympics, I mean, a week before or whatever,
but like a day before.
And, but it gets back to what I was saying about trust.
I trusted him implicitly.
At first I was taken aback,
but once he said, trust me, I was all in.
So I think the trust is incredibly important.
But trust is built as a result of a relationship, right?
There's something different about a coach telling a swimmer
what to do, they do it and they succeed
versus like a dynamic where there's a back and forth where the coach is
listening to the athlete as much as the athlete is listening to the coach.
For thing communication. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Critical.
So everybody knows, or most people know that you had this successful 1984 Olympics, three goals,
you won the hundred freestyle and you were on two gold medal winning relays,
four by 100 freestyle and four by 100 medley relay.
10 world records, I think, along the way.
Is that right? Don't know.
I really, I couldn't tell you.
I like that you don't know.
Something like that. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I think people probably don't appreciate the fact
that you were actually at your peak in 1980 and 1981,
and you were a victim of the 1980 Olympic boycott.
I wanna understand that I have,
we have some mutual friends who were also members
of that team, John Moffat.
Yeah.
I think he was 60, I think he was the youngest person
to make the 80 team.
He was like 16 years old.
Yeah.
And through John and others have met others
who were members of the 80 team.
At the time you were supportive of President Carter
and the boycott.
I know there's a documentary that just came out.
There was a screening that both of us,
you're a protagonist in this movie.
You weren't able to go, I wasn't able to see it.
But walk me through like that whole like experience.
Well, the problem with the boycott for those that are not old enough to remember
was our country decided not to attend the Olympic games,
which were in Moscow, in Russia,
because the Russians had invaded another country,
Afghanistan, ironically.
And so at that time, our country thought,
they were hoping for two things to happen.
A, for the Olympics to be moved from Russia
to another country, another city,
or B, influence the Russians to leave Afghanistan.
And it's just hard for me to believe, and hindsight's a beautiful thing, that somebody
much smarter than me say, this is not going to work, guys.
You really think the Russians loved it that we didn't come because they just, their propaganda
promoted more medals for them.
They loved it.
They didn't have a problem with it because they could promote what they wanted to.
And the second thing is,
do you really think the Russians
were gonna leave Afghanistan
because we weren't going to the Olympics?
Do you think Putin really cares
that his athletes weren't able to come to Paris?
It's hard to imagine that now
with our kind of fractured attention spans.
It was a monoculture there.
I mean, the world really did stop
when the Olympics were going on in a way
that isn't the case now.
No.
But even so, it's such a stretch.
Yeah, and again, you know,
I understand my hindsight on it all,
but the best scenario would have been
to go over there and kick their ass.
And then it would have been a much better situation for us
that we could promote and they would see
and they could not deny.
It didn't happen obviously.
So the problem with us is it's every four years.
We don't have a World Series or Super Bowl,
it's the Olympics and it is every four years.
And an athlete's life can come and go in a span of four
years. Imagine playing the Super Bowl every four years. It's sort of like World Cup in soccer.
That's why it's so big because it's so rare. And I had my day in the sun. I was blessed because I
had 1984. The real true heroes, the ones that I constantly think of
are the ones like Craig Beardsley,
who we were talking about.
A lot of your audience probably doesn't know
who Craig Beardsley is,
but he would have won the gold medal
by a second and a half in 1980.
One of the greatest swimmers in history.
He gets third at our Olympic trials.
They take the top two only in 1984
and will always be a part of that ghost Olympic team.
So yeah, the boycott broke my heart in many ways,
but again, I feel very fortunate and blessed that I had 84.
In the wake of that, I mean,
I think you were like world swimmer of the year in 1980.
Yeah, 1980.
So, I mean, this really was meant to be like this,
this was your moment, right?
And you were stripped of it.
Did that take you back to some of the, you know, harder kind of emotional spaces that you would work so hard
to, you know, kind of graduate from as a teenager?
It did a little bit, Rich, but I will tell you,
I was 21 in 1980, that spring and summer.
And, you know, my times that year
would have won five gold medals.
You never know when you get there.
But again, I was so young.
I didn't know what the Olympics were.
I remember I just started swimming four years earlier.
So I knew I missed something big,
but I didn't realize, you know, Olympics.
I mean, okay, I've got NCAAs next year.
So I didn't appreciate it until after 84. It was more heartbreaking, believe it or not,
after I had the experience in 1984, knowing what I missed in 80 and so many others obviously missed
in 80. I mean, I knew it was big and I was heartbroken and all of that. I had taken a whole year off of school basically to train for the game.
So if I had to do it all over again, I certainly wouldn't have done that.
And, but I didn't have the real breakdown like so many did because I was still pretty young
and felt like I've got my senior year in college and, you know,
college swimming was much more important to me anyway.
Sure, but at 21 or however old you were
when you graduated from college, swimming is done.
Nobody was continuing to swim.
And I quit too, I retired.
Not only because there was no sponsorship dollars,
you weren't allowed to even take money
even had it been made available.
So nobody would continue into 22, 23, 24 at that point.
So it was quite radical for you to decide,
I'm gonna keep going.
It was.
Which is so difficult to wrap your head around now
because you see these medalists all over the place
who are in their late 20s and like,
oh, well they got a couple,
maybe they have two more Olympic,
it's like that would just blow the minds
of anybody back in 1984.
Yeah, I agree.
But again, I lived so much in the present as a kid at 21,
I didn't think so much about my future, you know.
So I was just thinking about the summer nationals and summer trials of 80.
And, you know, I just, I didn't have the wherewithal to be able to peek ahead and know how much it affected me.
But, yeah, I retired after 81.
For six months, I retired.
It wasn't quit, I just retired like everybody else did.
But I think it was my father who kind of came to me
at the end of that six months.
It was the end of the summer,
right after my NCAA championships, that's when I retired.
And he said, are you gonna be able to live with yourself
for the rest of your life? And say, what if, you know, are you going to be able to look in
the mirror or listen to the national anthem or watch the Olympics down the line and consistently
ask yourself, what if, what if I had done this? What if I had gone for it? And it really woke me
up to saying, you know what, you're right. I need to do this win, lose, and draw.
And that's when I went to Richard and said, I want to come back and try to make a run for this.
And he said, you need to do this, this, and this, and let's give it a run.
And it was not easy.
I mean, I remember moving off to Texas and working about a year and a half.
I worked as a night clerk in a hotel.
I had the 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. shift.
Going right to morning workout after that?
Pretty much and then sleep all day.
And then go to afternoon workout and rinse and repeat.
In 1983, the rules changed a little bit though,
with respect to finances.
But it was still tough.
What happened in 1983 was our sport came to us and said,
"'You can make money outside of swimming.
"'The money has to come to our federation
"'and you turn receipts in for your cost of living.'"
So in the end of 83, for about six months, which worked perfectly,
because I was flat broke, lived off macaroni and cheese and Cap'n Crunch cereal. I was able to turn
my receipts in for my electric bill and gas for my car. It's just like you do now. And then I would
do a clinic and make $500. I'd have to send it to USA Swimming,
but then they would send me funding back.
So it all had to, it had to funnel through the organization.
Yeah, it had to funnel through the organization.
Yeah.
So that's so weird.
I know.
I laugh about it now, can you imagine?
I know, I know.
I mean, they don't even do that in college anymore
for crying out loud.
High school.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it's funny, you go on social media,
and everyone's, here's how you optimize your diet.
It's like, these guys are broke.
They're eating Captain Crunch and ramen
and just staying up all night, like working late shifts
just so they can, I mean, you know,
how many Olympians out there who are here in Paris
have some version of that story?
Absolutely.
I still think there are a lot of athletes
that still have to do that.
I think there's some myth busting that has to happen.
Absolutely.
There's this idea that these guys are all, you know,
like living on big sponsor dollars.
And it's really just the top 0.1% of the athletes
that you're seeing on TV.
And the vast majority of everybody here
has endured some version of your story in order to be here.
Especially those-
Three or four jobs, two jobs or whatever it is.
Exactly, especially those sports
that don't get a lot of recognition at all,
rowing and weightlifting, et cetera, et cetera.
I'm sure they have-
Well, there's much more obscure sports than those too.
Yeah.
Nonetheless, you show up at trials,
you don't qualify for the team in the 200,
but you do make it in the 100.
You end up in 84.
We don't have to rehash all of the races,
but you experience Olympic glory.
I'm curious now as a commentator,
when you see guys like Caleb or, you know, I don't know,
the guys who are older, like, you know, Ryan Murphy,
guys who've been around for a long time,
do you have like a kind of an extra layer of empathy
for those guys because of your own personal experience
and knowing what it's like to, you know,
kind of like be eking it out and holding on
and then, you know, just getting that last final victory
before you ride off into the sunset.
Yeah, sure.
I always have a little special place in my heart
for those guys that have stuck around longer
than even I did.
And you take a look at somebody like Murph,
who guys like an engine, man,
I can't imagine going three Olympics.
Look at Katie.
I mean, it's just, yeah, crazy, unbelievable
what they go through in day in and day out.
And they have to make a living doing it pretty much.
And that's tough.
I didn't swim for money.
And that was, I think that was fortunate.
I think the pressure of swimming for money
would have weighed too heavily on me.
I literally swam for the love of it,
but now you have to swim for the love of it
and swim for money and to try to etch out a future perhaps
because of swimming.
So yeah, I always feel a certain amount of love
for those kids that's been sticking around for a long time.
The other thing that's really hard to fully appreciate
unless you've lived it is what it must be like
to focus your entire life on this performance goal
all leading up to this Olympic games
and succeed, win or lose, whatever happens,
one day you're in it and there's all this attention on you
and it's all about you and your performance.
And then the next day you're a civilian.
And that transition has got to be extremely difficult,
even for people who have done their best to prepare for it.
And I think there's a lot of athletes
and I know it's changed and we can get into kind of
mental health, a mental health discussion.
But for those athletes who feel like it's an indulgence
to even think about what you're gonna do next,
because it's taking your eye off the ball
and might undermine your performance,
you can almost foresee the existential crisis on the horizon
when reality sets in. And for the first
time they have to think, well, what am I going to do now? Yeah. I mean, that's what I was saying
earlier about the fact that I was so much about living in the present, like tomorrow. Okay. What
am I going to do tomorrow? Yeah. I had long-term goals, but I was just trying to get through day by day.
It was just such a grind.
All you could think about was just making it through the next practice.
You certainly didn't have any long-term goals as far as outside the water.
I mean, you knew you were getting your degree and stuff,
but I didn't have any idea what I was going to do.
My father was a motion picture director
and I thought I wanted to go into filmmaking somehow,
but I didn't know specifics
because I was so wrapped up in what I was doing.
And that's the way they are now.
And it's no different.
And then all of a sudden it comes to an end.
And again, it may be somewhat first world problems,
but they're real first world problems.
And the fact that there is a tremendous amount of letdown.
And for me, I went into real depression, I think.
Back then it wasn't analyzed
or we didn't have the kind of mental health help
that we do now. Back then it wasn't analyzed or we didn't have the kind of mental health help
that we do now, but man, for about two months,
I was not suicidal or anything.
I would have to believe
that's an incredibly common experience.
I mean, I'm reminded of the HBO documentary,
Michael, The Weight of Gold,
that yeah, Michael was behind and Peter Carlisle.
It's a great documentary.
Yeah, which kind of goes into that whole thing.
It really did.
If you haven't seen something about
what we're talking about, you need to go watch that.
That will explain everything in an hour and a half.
I can't let you just gloss over the fact
that your dad was a motion picture director.
You were named after from Rawhide, right?
Is that true? Yeah.
That's a true story.
Clint Eastwood.
Your dad, like in Florida was directing motion,
like directing movies?
Well, he directed a couple of movies,
but he mostly did television commercials.
So you remember the, he had some commercials.
You remember the Die Hard Battery commercial by Sears,
you know, frozen on a lake for six months.
He did all those.
He did all the Wausau insurance commercials. He did a lot of Chicago city commercials,
Dodge trucks, Farrah Fawcett, all the Farrah Fawcett Dodge car commercials. She did all the Jack Nicklaus commercials for all the stuff he did. Jack liked him the best. So yeah, he was mostly a commercial television director,
but he's directed a film called Scuba
and another small film.
And so with Lloyd Bridges back then, Lloyd Bridges.
Yeah, so he was-
And you thought, so that was interesting to you.
Yeah, I'd go on shoots with him and be a runner.
And so he'd like, he'd give me a stack of $20 bills rich.
And he'd say, I need quiet on this set.
He's shooting a outdoor commercial on something
and said, you know, I need quiet.
Do what you have to do with these 20s
and make sure it's quiet.
So this guy started a lawnmower,
I'd go give him $20, be quiet for now.
I, you know, some guys start his car
and I'd be like, you have to hear you.
So yeah, that's what I do.
So then I guess it's not as much of a leap
to imagine a career in broadcasting,
but how did that come about for you?
I did a battle of the network stars swimming
for a fledgling network called ESPN, like in 1985, early 85.
And I did the swimming part.
It was in Orlando.
I got called by it.
I had an agent back then.
He said, you know, they want you to, are you interested in doing that?
I said, yeah.
Anyway, there's more weeds to it than that.
But I just loved it and got asked to do another battle of the corporate stars. And
again, these were all kind of little ESPN things back in the ESPN days of what do they call now?
And they show the old classic ESPN stuff anyway. Uh, and I started and I did goodwill games,
Ted Turner, big thing and tried out, I auditioned for 92, didn't get it.
And, but I got the triple cast, which was awesome.
John neighbor was doing it before you.
Is that?
88 John did it.
And then in 92, Michael Bryan and Mary Waite did it.
And they were kind of thrown to the wolves,
never had any kind of experience.
And, you know, it was tough on them. And they were kind of thrown to the wolves, never had any kind of experience.
And, you know, it was tough on them.
And I felt really,
and if I had done the same thing they had done,
I wouldn't be doing commentating anymore.
But because I did triple cast,
I was able to, everything was live, no editing,
just down and dirty, you do it and leave, you know?
And for me, that really helped me a lot,
gained the experience I needed. And then I auditioned in 96 with Greg Gumbel, called some race. They didn't tell me what race. They said, okay, you're just going to call a race.
And I got 96 and been doing it ever since.
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Greetings, devotees of the Rich Roll Podcast universe.
It's me, Rainn Wilson.
And if you ponder what it means to be a human being with a body and a soul,
give my new podcast, Soul Boom, a listen.
I sit down with big thinkers, artists, philosophers, entertainers, and more,
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So subscribe to Soul Boom on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts.
What do people not understand or appreciate about how difficult this job is?
Because it looks like you're just cheering or whatever, but there's a lot going on.
I got to spend a little bit of time with Craig Hummer,
you know, Craig Hummer.
I know Craig Hummer very well, very dear friend.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I know you guys are buddies.
For a very long time.
Yeah.
And you know, he's, you know,
he was an incredible swimmer,
but he, most of his broadcasting is in rodeo, you know,
it's like he's doing this sport that's totally different,
but he was back here doing,
calling swimming for the Olympic Broadcasting,
what is it called?
Olympic Broadcasting Network, OBN.
OBS, yeah, yeah, World Feed.
And he was just giving me kind of a primer
or a quick lesson on like the challenges of,
you gotta know everything about all these people,
it's coming at you fast,
you gotta have it right on your fingertips.
Like what's going, like, are you being fed information?
Like, how does it work?
What are the brass tacks of the process?
So, yeah, you know, the criticism is justified a lot
sometimes when I don't read the people
that live in their parents' basement and-
Good for you.
And I don't read that stuff.
Nor should you, Rowdy.
No, no, I don't read that stuff.
I don't read the good stuff very much either,
but I get it, you know, where people say,
God, this guy, what is this guy talking about?
But I challenge people.
Sometimes I've had a troll or two that I've heard about
and then invited them to the booth
and it really changes their perspective.
Have at it.
Yeah, it's a little bit different.
In fact, we have like an auction item every year,
our golden goggles for USA Swimming.
And the item is to commentate a race
with in the booth at one of the pro swims.
And usually it's person that, you know,
been a little critical, not all the time,
but they go, oh my God, I had no idea. I'm so sorry.
Because that's the pro swim.
The reason is you have three or four people
talking into your ear
and you have to listen to all those people
while you're talking.
So I have my producer.
I have Dan, Tommy Roy, our longtime producer,
who's the best in the business.
I have Mike Unger, who is usually the guy that,
did you ever see that movie, Broadcast News?
Holly Hunter and William Hurt.
And William Hurt's calling the news.
He's really good at doing the news, but he's an idiot.
Right.
And so she's kind of telling him what to say. And he's so good at doing the news, but he's an idiot. And so she's kind of telling him what to say.
And he's so good at listening and telling the audience
what she's telling him.
So he's kind of my Holly Hunter.
He didn't tell me what to say, but he'll say,
oh, he was 32, three on that split.
You know, and I can say without looking 32, three,
watch lane eight, I can say watch lane eight.
So he's talking and then our director every once in a while
chimes in. So I have three, four people talking
and sometimes they're all talking at the same time.
And they're all asking me questions.
That would cause an anxiety attack.
So my wife has gone in the booth with me before
and she's listened for like two minutes.
She has to take the headset off, she can't do it.
It creates so much anxiety, but I'm used to it now,
but it's a lot to handle.
Elizabeth did it with me in Tokyo for the first time.
And she'll tell you, it's not for the faint of heart.
It's not digging ditches, not pulling weeds or whatever,
but it's a lot more challenging and difficult
than people think when they watch the rowdy cam It's a lot more challenging and difficult
than people think when they watch the rowdy cam or whatever and just say,
all I do is get to jump up and down, which I do.
But at the same time,
I'm listening to people at the same time.
And when Michael comes into the booth,
I mean, he's wearing headphones also.
So is he like, is Dan, Mike, like, yeah,
you're balancing who's talking next,
what are they gonna say?
How are we gonna make this all work?
Are they hearing something different in their headphones?
Are they hearing the same thing you're hearing?
No, they don't talk to Michael very much.
I see.
They kind of leave because again, it's very disorienting
if you haven't been able to do that before.
You know, I remember Michael early on,
he doesn't do this anymore, but early on when we were in Tokyo, you know, I remember Michael early on, he doesn't do this anymore,
but early on when we were in Tokyo, you know,
the producer would answer, ask him a question,
yes or no, and he'd go, yeah.
Because he didn't know that.
You forget, you got a hot mic.
But Michael's awesome now, he's like,
he's such a great expert, but yeah, you have to be prepared for that.
So I think for me now and Dan,
they know that they can talk to Dan is just,
he is the goat.
It is unbelievable.
You think-
What makes him so good?
Like what is the talent?
Well, the first and foremost talent
that he has, Rich, is preparation.
When I sit here with you, you are prepared.
When I watch your stuff, I go, man, that dude is prepared.
He knows more than the guy he's talking to.
But only through preparation.
You know, you can't, I don't,
it's, you learn that from swimming too.
Like you can't, you can't fake, you don't,
you can't and you don't wanna fake it. No, and he doesn't fake it's, you learn that from swimming too. Like you can't, you can't fake, you don't, you can't.
And you don't want to fake it.
No, and he doesn't fake it.
That's why he's so prepared.
If you understood what he did,
you talk about a day in the life,
he will get there in Paris.
He got there, well, first of all, he'd watch prelims,
take notes all during prelims.
And he'd get there about one o'clock, 8.30.
I mean, right after prelims, he'd go to the pool.
8.30 is finals, right? And he'd meet from one to four with our stat people, our researchers.
There's two of them along with Mike Hunger, but they sit there for three hours and talk.
Nothing but that night in finals and each swimmer who's swimming and kind of the history of that
swimmer. And he'd make
notes and everything. And then we had a production meeting from four to six. And then he'd go back
and take more. He'd spend six hours just doing notes, man. The guy is ultimately prepared.
And plus he's so good at talking. I still get flustered sometimes when people are talking to me and count
me down. Okay. You need to fix this edit. We have five seconds. Okay. Five, four, three, two, one,
go. And you can see him in lane number four doing this. What a great asset he's been to USA Swimming
and they're counting me down five, four, three, and I have to end it before Dan talks on the next link. So it's complicated, but the point is he's so good at it.
It's mind boggling.
I get anxiety.
I have anxiety listening to him when he have fixes to do.
It's a thing of beauty.
It really is.
At the same time, I feel like if you were at home
watching the Olympics,
you'd be yelling at the TV in a similar way, right?
That would still be going on because you. Because you are, you know,
this incredibly knowledgeable person about the sport
and knows how to communicate what's going on
in a way that not only informs the public,
but gets them excited.
But at the same time, you're a super fan
and you have personal relationships
with like probably all of these people, right?
And I would imagine maybe you have favorites
or some of these kids better than others,
but you've got to maintain some level of objectivity
in the booth at the same time, right?
I do, I get excited about in-ease swimming.
I mean, I get more excited about American winning.
I'm not gonna lie, I do.
But you should have seen me when Leon won.
I mean, it was so bloody cool.
I was jumping up and down just like I did
when they showed the other one a couple of days ago
with the women's relay or mixed relay, I guess it was.
I was jumping up and down just as much of Leon.
They might not have shown it,
but I love great swimming and Summer McIntosh.
I was going crazy.
I love it.
But we are broadcasting to primarily an American audience.
I'm not doing the world feed.
I'm not doing what Craig Hummer's doing.
I'm doing an NBC feed to America.
And I'm gonna get excited when an American does well.
Just the way I am, I'm not going to change.
Sure, but even amongst the Americans,
because you know all these kids so well.
And I do know some better than others.
So I know more about their journey than others.
I know, for example,
I don't know about Aaron and Alex Shackles journey.
They were brother sister that made the team this year, very young, 17 and 19.
But I know their dad so well.
Nick swam for Auburn, Olympian, just a great guy.
Loved that guy.
I've known him forever.
So I get a little bit more excited about his kids.
I don't know his kids.
I met him.
We went to Croatia for their camp, spent three or four days with the camp.
And you get to know him a little bit.
for their camp, spent three or four days with the camp. And you get to know them a little bit,
but I don't know them like I know Reagan Smith
or like I know Kieran Smith who swam the 400 men
and Reagan swam the 200 fly that Alex Shackle swam.
So, but I got excited about Alex making that final
and that 200 fly, that was cool, it was awesome.
It was cool also to see Michael so excited about Leon.
There's something really cool about that.
Obviously Leon swims for bowmen and the likes
so there's connectivity there.
It was pretty cool, pretty incestuous there, wasn't it?
In a way it was like Bob was his father
and now he's like a brother of Leon.
And yeah, it was awesome.
And so I think that's one reason why he knew so much
about the race itself, obviously,
and Leon's relationship, Bob's relationship.
And so in that 400 and I am,
I kind of let him do his things.
I kind of shut down for the most part.
If you listen to that race, I'm not talking very much.
I'm characteristically quiet. I know. Let the for the most part. If you listen to that race, I'm not talking very much.
Uncharacteristically quiet.
I know.
Let the goat say his piece. Yeah, let the goat do what he does best.
You mentioned Summer McIntosh.
I think she is a gigantic breakout star.
I think LA 28 is gonna be all about her.
She is, she's huge.
She's the whole package.
She is the whole package.
And it reminds me a little bit of Kate Douglas,
you know, doesn't get real excited about,
doesn't have these huge highs or lows.
It's very, very consistent.
And just one of the true superstars in our sport
in the future, 17 years old, got great genes
and is gonna continue to have great success.
One of the things that I haven't heard you speak
that much about is the fact that in 1991,
you contracted Guillain-Barre syndrome.
That's how you say it, right?
Guillain-Barre.
Guillain-Barre.
I said it completely wrong actually.
Most people say Guillain-Barre,
but it's two French guys who discovered it actually, Guillain andBarre, I said it completely wrong actually. Most people say Guillain-Barre, but it's two French guys who discovered it actually,
Guillain and Barre.
Tell me what that is.
I know you spent like two months in the hospital
and suffered some pretty serious, but temporary paralysis.
Yeah, I'm walking around one day and feeling great.
And within 24 hours, everything just shut down.
You know, it was sort of like I started doing everything
in slow motion.
I got this tingling feeling in my fingers and toes.
Like when your foot falls asleep or something
and it just didn't go away.
So I thought I was just had the flu or something.
I didn't know that it was anything too serious,
but my wife, again, the hero that she was,
she said something's wrong because I was starting
to not be able to even walk.
And she literally picked me up, put me in the car,
took me to the emergency room.
And how compressed of a time period was that?
24 hours.
Wow.
Yeah, it happens very fast for the most part.
Sometimes it's a weird disease,
it's an autoimmune disease.
It's not something that's contagious
and people still don't know how you get it.
It's a lot of people think you get,
you've had the flu or cold and it mutates into this virus.
I had some doctor tell me I got it from eating sushi
in Japan, cause I was in Japan the two weeks prior,
but nobody really knows.
But I know what basically there's a mylon sheath
that protects your nerves and it shreds that sheath.
So your nerves short circuit.
So yeah, I completely paralyzed for,
I spent three or four months in the hospital
and then got out and had a relapse
and spent another month or so.
So yeah, it took a while before I was able to kind of
relearn how to do all.
Like all your motor skills.
All my motor skills.
How long did that take?
Till I felt completely normal again, about a year
to where the tingling, I still have tingling.
That's never left.
I'm used to it now.
It doesn't affect me, but it's like when your foot falls
or hand falls asleep, I still have those feelings.
But we had two children, two young children,
Emily and Madison, and I got it in 91.
Oh yeah, and Savannah must've been born too.
She was born in, no, no, she wasn't born yet, 94.
So that was tough on my family.
How is that treated?
Is there some kind of antiviral?
They used a plasma for reeses treatment back then.
Again, I don't know the scientific part of it.
I wish I had somebody from the Guillain-Barre syndrome
organization, but basically it's like a dialysis.
They take, they go in with a tube,
get all the antibodies out of the blood
and then have it flush back in with clean blood.
And so I had to go through that, which was really painful,
at least in the beginning.
After about three or four weeks, it started getting less,
but it was...
And had to relearn how to do everything all over again.
I didn't be fed.
It was just like being paralyzed.
I couldn't move anything, but I could feel the pain.
It was paralysis, but if you stuck a needle in my hand,
it hurt.
Wow.
That was the difference.
It wasn't paralysis, like couldn't feel anything.
So the pain was excruciating because the pins and needles
feeling was at an all time high.
So when you touch, you know how your foot falls asleep
and you kind of slap and go, ah, that hurts.
That's how it was, but times a million.
And is there a risk of recurrence
or are you cured and it's in the past?
I have a higher risk of occurrence,
10 times more likely for it to reoccur
than the average person,
but it strikes one in a hundred thousand people
is the stats on it.
So even though I have a more likelihood,
I've never had any issues with it.
You're not supposed to get a flu shot.
Even had a neurologist a few years.
In fact, when you get your flu shot,
it says, have you ever had a Guillain-Barre
and you're not supposed to get a flu shot.
But I had a neurologist tell me several years ago,
you're fine now, you go ahead and get it.
Here's the ripple though.
After that, this period of time in which you have to
relearn all your motor skills,
you end up getting back in the pool
and you break these age group national records
in the 53 and the 100.
Was not big a deal.
Do they still stand, do you know?
I have no idea.
You don't know.
What did you go like 12, 20, 21?
Well, I was, let's see, 91, I was 32.
So yeah, in fact, that age group, 30 to 34
in master swimming, I broke every world record
from 50 to 1500.
Of course, there's only three people in my age group
in master swimming.
But also, I read in 2011, okay, much later,
you broke a couple of records in the 50 to 54,
and you went like 21.3 in the 53.
I like it.
You were like 54 years old.
Yeah.
100 meter long course, 54.6.
Yeah, maybe.
Do you know if those right?
Are those records still around?
Do we know?
I don't know.
You don't know? I don't know. You don't know?
I don't know, Rich.
But here's the thing.
All right, going back to-
I'm sure they've been broken.
91, in the wake of that,
learning how to move again and do everything.
Same obsession.
You do get back in the pool.
And in 96, you qualify for the Olympic trials.
Yeah, I did.
Swimming basically- To swim, I was part time. Part time. Yeah, I know. You qualify for the Olympic trials? Yeah. Like swimming basically.
To swim, I was part time.
Yeah, I know you make the,
you end up not competing in trials though.
Right.
Because NBC offered me the job.
You made the cut, you were 35,
you were the oldest at that time, you know.
And I never hear anyone talking about this.
No, I don't talk about this.
No, I don't know if I've ever talked about it,
but yeah, in 96, I, yeah, I was just swimming masters
and I made the cut and I thought, oh, this would be cool.
I think I may go to trials just for the fun of it.
Right, right.
But then I had to audition already
and NBC offered me the job and they kind of said,
hey, listen, you can either swim
or you can come do work for us.
And I said, ah, it's not that important.
So I wasn't gonna make the team, so.
Your real job is water safety.
Yeah.
You're known for these NBC gigs,
but there's a lot of time in between these, right?
And I was surprised to hear how much you travel
in regards to your responsibilities with stepping to swim.
So let's talk a little bit about like water safety,
why you're so passionate about it.
Yeah, dude, I'm so glad you asked me about it
because it really is my passion now.
It breaks my heart when I see a child drown.
And we were talking about it before we came in the studio.
And I said, you know, a lot of people don't know
it's the number one cause of death in children,
ages one to four.
It's number two in the five to 14 age group.
Is that global or is that US?
US, it's worse global.
Vietnam, it's through the roof.
I get a Google alert every time a child drowns
and I get four or five a day.
And the reason why it's so heartbreaking I get a Google alert every time a child drowns and I get four or five a day.
And the reason why it's so heartbreaking is because I know how unnecessary it is
or how unnecessary it was when I read about it
for the most part, not all the time,
but for the most part, it was so unnecessary
because if that child had just known
and had taken swim lessons,
they would have been able to save their own lives.
Because the key to life-saving skills
for that child to float on their back,
that's a natural skill that a child has
to be able to float on their back.
And it's easily taught.
It's not hard to teach a child to do that.
And so our goal at Step Into Swimming
is to be able to provide that kind of funding
to those grant organizations,
those learn to swim organizations to be able to provide those children, especially in those low income areas,
the ability to take swim lessons.
Because if they take a swim lessons, it reduces that risk of 90%.
So I'm not trying to throw too many stats at you, but I beg parents, please,
I beg you never take your eye off your child
because 70 to 80% of drownings happen in front of adult.
We were talking about that.
Within 10 feet of that adult, it's because of this.
It's because of this right here.
Looking at your phone.
Right?
That parent becomes distracted.
A child can drown in as little as 30 seconds.
We don't have time to do that right now.
But if I started to stopwatch right now
and did 30 seconds, it wouldn't take long.
30 seconds, it could take longer,
but it can take as little as 30 seconds.
So that parent has to be that first line of defense.
Secondly, barriers, which are critical. But the third thing is put your kids in swim lessons
because we can't watch our kids 100% of the time.
It's been proven.
There's so many drownings happen
because a parent, and no fault of their own,
but there's distractions in life.
But if you have that child,
they're usually not missing more than a few minutes.
And most drownings with children
happen with their clothes on.
So my granddaughters took this ISR class.
You don't have to go that far,
but at the end of their course,
they put them in the water with all the,
in fact, winter clothes, right on their back.
Wait 30 seconds, a minute, and the parents gonna be back.
And they save a life of incredible heartache.
So I'm very proud of our organization
and what we've been able to do.
We'll give a million and a half dollars away this year
and hopefully give a lot more in the future.
Yeah, that's great.
Drowning doesn't discriminate.
If you don't know how to swim, you don't know how to swim.
You're at your peril, but it's certainly impacts
at-risk youth and lower socioeconomic communities,
communities that don't have access to swimming pools.
We were talking earlier about the fact that
it's a systemic issue as much as it is one of parental
or personal responsibility,
because a lot of these municipal pools are closed.
Public pools are, you know, when I was a kid,
there were public pools everywhere.
There aren't so many anymore.
So access is a problem.
Affordability is a problem.
It's an economic problem.
Even if you have a pool in your area, can you afford that?
And when you have parents who never learned how to swim
or there's a weird relationship with pools or water,
there's an intimidation or, you know,
some other kind of emotional barrier there,
you have to contend with that as well.
So it's a complicated issue that I think in order to solve
is more than just like, well, we just need to make swim lessons
accessible to people because there's a lot, there's kind of a lot going on right there.
And we were also chatting, like I had the opportunity to see Cullen Jones do a panel
on this very issue and also just the issue of inclusion writ large in swimming, right? Like
representation matters.
There aren't that many people of color in this sport.
At this Olympics,
we had a couple of really interesting stories,
Josh Leando, this star ascendant, of course,
and Simone Manuel and some other people,
but they're few and far between.
And I think we need more people like that
that inspire these young kids,
people of color who are living in these communities
and don't share that kind of equal access.
Because when people see people like Colin,
it inspires them just like Tiger Woods inspired
a generation of young golfers.
So.
Wouldn't it be cool though one day
that we wouldn't have this conversation?
Yeah. That's the whole idea.
I would like to not have this, yeah, I would like to not have this.
Yeah, I would like to not have this conversation.
I mean, I had this conversation
with other people 20 years ago
and it's a bummer that we're still talking about it.
One day I'd love to be able to just say that's the norm.
We don't have to talk about getting more people of color
involved in the sport and we're still not there.
We've got a long way to go.
And this old white guy's not gonna be able to help,
but somebody like Colin Jones,
who's such a hero to that community
and such a hero to the water safety advocacy effort
is a guy that can do it.
Simone Manuel can do it.
Josh Leando can do it.
There's so many out there.
Maritza Crye, I can think of a million names
that have been so good at that.
But I can tell you, our organization really
is trying to concentrate on that black community,
that African-American community,
especially because an African-American child
is much more likely to drown
than their Caucasian counterpart,
five times more likely in fact.
And so we did a study a few years ago,
I say we, USA Swimming and the University of Memphis
and UMLV, and not to get into details too much,
but they found the number one reason
that African-Americans don't know how to swim
is because it's generational fear.
That fear is passed down from one generation to the next.
So it was your point just a minute ago
that we need to do more on the education part, as well as just giving money out to organizations for swim lessons. We need to
change that first and foremost. If you're afraid to swim, please don't be afraid to put your child
in swim lessons, but access is incredibly important because that's the number two reason.
We want to try to bring the lessons to the children because these are working parents.
It's hard to get to a kid to swim lessons at a local Y.
They work.
And how do you do that?
So we want to try to go to those apartments,
those abandoned pools, get them refurbished.
And I think our organization,
the Pool and Hot Tub Alliance,
which is the kind of the governing body
of Step in to Swim,
is trying to think of ways to do that.
How do we rehab pools?
How do we get those pools open in those communities?
Yeah, just driving around Los Angeles.
There's tons of them everywhere and they're just empty.
Crazy.
New York City.
I think that's one of the legacies
that LA 28 should really build on.
So Janet, wherever you are, Janet Evans,
along with Casey Wasserman, if you're listening to me,
I want you guys to help me out in this plan here,
this four-year plan.
Have you talked to Casey about this?
I haven't talked to Casey, I've talked to Janet.
Yeah, I saw Casey at Charles, but I didn't talk to him.
He was too busy, but yeah,
I've talked to Janet several times,
but it doesn't matter whether they partner,
they got enough on their plate.
It's not gonna stop us.
It's such a monumental obligation to pull off LA 28.
Can you imagine?
I just.
Here's what I heard.
You probably already know this, but this was news to me.
We've seen the news reports
that the pool is gonna be in SoFi, but.
Second week.
Right, that's the thing I didn't know.
Swimming has always been the first week
and track has always been the second week
and they're flipping it.
Like when was the last time that happened?
So they're gonna have track and SoFi
and then when that's done,
then they're gonna build the pool and host the swimming.
No, I don't- Is that right?
No, maybe, I'm not 100% sure,
but my understanding is they're going to have
opening ceremonies in SoFi.
The track is gonna be in the Coliseum.
Oh.
And after opening ceremonies,
they're gonna build the pool.
They have that week to build the pool.
That makes a little more sense.
They can't do that in a day.
No, no, no, no.
So I think the track isn't gonna be in the Coliseum.
And I think they're gonna have the swimming
the week after the opening ceremony.
And the village is going to be at UCLA?
I don't know, good question.
Yeah, it's gonna be interesting.
It makes sense to have probably two like we did in 84.
We had one at UCLA, the big one was at USC,
but I don't know where-
It just occurred to me,
it should have struck me immediately earlier,
but LA 28 being your last commentating,
84 being your first Olympics.
And as an athlete, there's a real beauty in that.
When you think of we are here for a purpose,
there is more going on than maybe we realize.
Like there's a certain poetry to that.
Yeah, it's gonna be a great way to wrap things up, Rich.
It really will be.
LA is such a great town
and I know they're gonna do a wonderful job.
It was magical in 1984
and I don't expect anything less in 2028.
What is your daily fitness health regime?
Like how do you take care of yourself?
Do you get in the pool still?
Swim every day.
What's it look like?
You do every day.
I have an endless pool at my home.
Oh, you do.
And so I swim and when I'm at home, I swim in that.
But buddy, I find a pool.
Here, no.
Forget about it.
Yeah, it's not happening. But I swim six days a week. I, no. Forget about it. And it's not happening.
But I swim six days a week.
I'm pretty religious on it, if I can.
When I'm traveling to a city,
I'll swim in my residence in 20 foot pool,
if I have to just do this.
I'll do whatever it takes to find a pool.
I haven't been able to do it here because of work.
But I did swim in the warmup pool here at the Olympics
a couple of times.
But yeah, I swim every day.
I don't do anything else.
I just swim.
No gym work, no strength training,
no cold plunge sauna, any of that kind of stuff?
I love cold plunge.
Yeah, it's pretty good.
I love cold plunge.
Do you have one?
I know, but I'm working with a company, Soap,
that's gonna help me out, I think.
And I love it.
It's hard, do you do it?
I do, I love it.
How long, what temperature and how long?
I keep it at 41.
Oh my, get the hell out of here.
Get in for like, just like three to five minutes.
No way.
And I'll have a sauna and I'll go back and forth.
But you can build up to it.
You can build up to it.
Oh my God.
But you really need like 90 seconds
is sort of the minimum effective dose.
Oh, then it was worthless.
I got in here, they had them at the warmup pool
and it was 50 and I don't think I lost 30 seconds.
But the difference between 50 and 41,
you can't really tell the difference.
It's not, when it's cold, it's cold.
So you're recommending it be that cold, 41?
It doesn't have to be.
I just keep it that like, that's the lowest,
that's the coldest setting.
So you have one at your home and do you have a,
you say you have a hot tub or a jacuzzi?
I have a sauna and the plunge.
Oh, sauna and plunge.
It's a lot easier if you're in the sauna
and then you get in the pool just cause you're boiling hot. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's a lot easier if you're in the sauna and then you get in the plunge
because you're boiling hot.
It's a little bit easier to get in.
So you don't do hot tub, but you sauna.
Correct.
Is that better than doing hot tub?
I think it's better.
It's better, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, there's a whole new world waiting for you
out there.
I can still discover it at 65.
I have no doubt about that.
I have no doubt. that. No doubt.
The final thing I wanted to ask you about
is how all of your experiences have impacted your role
as a dad, as a father.
Family's clearly like, you know,
number one priority for you.
So being around all these high performers,
being an Olympic champion,
that can be intimidating for a child, right?
Do I have to live up to this?
How do you think about how you've parented,
being a girl dad and having all these,
being in a household of women?
I mean, they're grown now, but.
Well, the great line I have is,
I play with Barbies and I like it.
That's my line.
That will now be the title of this podcast.
I know, a better title is I sit down to go pee now.
That's how bad it is.
I've made a lot of mistakes as a father.
If I had to do it all over again,
I would do things differently.
My wife has been the rock.
She's been the one that's, you know, been the steady guiding force in, in choosing the right
path. I've been, you know, I travel so much and it's, it's tough. And so I have to give her a lot
of credit. I think maybe my biggest problem and maybe my biggest asset in the same way is I
have unconditional love for my kids. And that's a two-edged sword, you know. But it's just,
I just, being a girl dad, maybe that's part of the problem. Maybe part of the problem is I'm
still dealing issues
with my kid and I don't want them to suffer
in any kind of form or fashion.
So I've made mistakes, but I got four amazing girls.
I love each and every one of them.
Five granddaughters that I'm addicted to.
But none of them really swam.
Madison's sitting right over there.
She said her line is, I'd rather eat dirt than swim, dad.
Yeah, not interested.
Not interested.
Any athletes or no?
They all played sports
and we had sort of a rule in our house, my wife did,
is they had to choose something in afterschool activity.
We had one daughter that played in band
her whole high school career
and another one that did soccer. Madison was in the drama club for years and
Isabel did stuff. And so they all did stuff. But swimming really wasn't one of them. Our oldest
swam for a while in high school and stuff, but nothing real serious. And you're right, it was
tough. And I don't think I put pressure on them,
I probably should have,
but I would kind of remove myself from the swimming.
They all tried swimming,
but it was like they show up and they go,
you know, the peers, you're not as good as your dad.
And what's the deal?
Where's your-
Why play in this sandbox
where there's always gonna be this measuring stick
that you could never live up to.
That's exactly right. That's exactly right. Why play in this sandbox where there's always gonna be this measuring stick that you could never live up to.
That's exactly right.
That's exactly right.
And I think that kind of pressure they just didn't like.
So they never really went for it.
My wife was better.
I think there's a fine line between shoving and nudging.
My wife was really good at nudging.
She never shoved, but really good at nudging.
I was never good at anything and I should have nudged more. It's hard. It's hard to know. I feel like
we all parent, we either parent exactly the way our parents parented or we parent in opposition
to them. We all have certain emotional needs that weren't met. Right. And so when we become a parent,
we make this promise to ourselves, like, well, I'm not going to make that mistake,
but we often, you know, go too far in the other direction.
Like I'm a huge softy.
No way.
I think like,
oh, maybe I could have been a little bit pretty soft
with my kids. You have four.
But I have the unconditional love thing.
Right.
But I don't, I'm not a-
You have girls, boys?
Two girls and two step-sons.
Two step-sons.
But I'm not a disciplinarian. On the boys? I mean, I'm easiersons. Two step-sons. So are you a little easier on the boys?
I mean, I'm easier on the girls?
I'm easy on all of them.
Oh, are you?
Yeah, I'm pretty easy on all of them.
Sound like me.
But then I see, you know, I'm like,
oh, maybe I should have laid down the law.
I don't know, I just say, I can't find it in me to do it.
You know, and they're not- I'm the same way.
I mean, the boys played sports on and off,
but none of them were seriously in athletics.
The girls couldn't care less.
They're all artists, musicians, painters, sculptors.
They're doing other things.
And I want them to pursue their dream
in the same way that I was blessed
with the opportunity to do that.
Like that's all I want for them.
And those dreams might take longer for some. They might take longer. They, you know, the opportunity to do that. Like that's all I want for them.
And those dreams might take longer for some.
They might take longer.
They may not manifest.
I try to tell them.
But there is no circumstance
in which it's gonna be some version of my dream for them.
It's not supposed to be that way.
Right.
That's exactly right.
That's a great philosophy.
It can't be your way.
Listen, I made a lot of mistakes too.
I'm not trying to say like, I've got this all figured out. It's hard. It's really hard to be your way. And listen, I made a lot of mistakes too. I'm not trying to say like,
I've got this all figured out.
It's hard, it's really hard to be a parent.
I know I don't.
And then they get older
and it's not like the problems go away.
They become just more complicated.
And then you realize,
well, this is just the way it's gonna be
for as long as I'm alive.
Especially girls.
Yes.
Girls, piece of cake up until about 12
and then they turn 13 and they become the devil.
Oh no, I'm not kidding.
They're Satan.
I've lived through this, yes.
I understand.
And then they come back to angels around 18 or 19.
Yeah, they come back around.
Boy when they can.
But you don't think they're going to and then they do.
I think boys, I don't have any,
but my sister has two boys.
They were like the devil until they turned about 13 and then they become. I think boys, I don't have any, but my sister has two boys. They were like the devil until they turned about 13
and then they become great.
It's just the opposite for girls.
In general, don't write to me and say, it's not true.
I'm just speaking from personal experience.
And I'm kidding about Satan, by the way,
don't write me about the devil or anything.
I'm kidding.
Yeah, you're gonna get in trouble old man.
I know.
But we have Madison here to keep you safe.
She's been running your social media
and doing a bang up job.
Like you have won the hearts and minds
of millions of people all over the world.
The way that you're kind of translating
Rowdy's personality into these video clips.
I said this to you before the podcast,
but I absolutely love it.
You're doing a great job.
She's done a great job. She had three companies hire her here. I was gonna to you before the podcast, but I absolutely love it. You're doing a great job. She's done a great job.
She had three companies hire her here.
I was gonna say like, after this,
you're gonna be in high demand.
Like people are gonna wanna hire you to do this.
It's good stuff.
And I'm not much on social media.
That's why I said I followed you for so long on Twitter
and you've kind of drifted away from that.
And I just still can't do Instagram or Facebook.
I just, but she's done a great job and it's good.
I need to do it.
I'm just so guilty.
Do you need to do it?
No, you're right.
I don't really need to.
You don't have to.
I don't think you have to.
Only if it's fun and there's something nourishing about it.
But I do think I would say that it's enjoyable
for someone like me and I'm sure a lot of other people
to like, I like seeing your videos.
I mean, it's incredible. My wife, I can tell you, dude, I'm serious a lot of other people to like, you know, I like seeing your videos. I mean, it's incredible.
My wife, I can tell you, dude, I'm serious when I say this,
I'm not just saying it.
She has been inspired by you.
And that's pretty cool to be able to say,
this is my wife, she's not a swimmer,
but she talks about some of the great,
she's talked to me along the way.
And I knew your name obviously,
and, but I just didn't pay attention,
but I started, I told you before we came on,
I started doing a deep dive on you last night.
I was going, holy shit, this guy's amazing.
I appreciate that.
That means a lot, man.
I wanna release you back to your life.
We're in Paris.
We shouldn't be stuck in a studio here.
You should be with your family, enjoying yourself.
No problem.
But I'm not gonna let you go
without just acknowledging this gift
that you've blessed all of us with.
You have this beautiful infectious enthusiasm for sport.
It comes through the screen and it allows all of us
to not just understand the beauty of the sport of swimming,
but to fall in love with sport.
And this thing that means obviously so much to both of us.
And it's a real gift that you have
and you share it so liberally.
And I just, I appreciate it, man.
And I adore you, I'm a huge fan.
And I've been following you, like you,
even though we haven't, maybe we met,
I don't know if we've ever met.
I think we have met.
We might have met at some meet
or somewhere along the way.
Well, we definitely met online.
We definitely had a couple of things over the years online,
but I was trying to remember
if we actually had met in person.
If we had, it was in passing quickly.
Yeah, maybe.
But I feel like you're this person who,
you've been present in my conscious awareness,
like my entire adult life, right?
So it was a real honor to spend this time with you.
The only nice, definitely mutual my friend.
Thanks. Definitely mutual.
Cheers.
And if not beforehand,
I will definitely see you in Los Angeles in 2028.
You got it brother.
All right, go enjoy Paris.
Peace.
Awesome. Yeah.
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