Post by aaosmts19 on Feb 5, 2009 10:35:32 GMT -5
I have started a new string to continue the discussion that we was spawned in 'Apolo Articles". This was pertaining to MIchael Phelps.
I had put an entry in "Apolo articles" because indeed Apolo made some quotes that applied, indirectory, to Michael. As the story flushes out over the next few days, it seemed more appropriate to turn the discussion to what it means to be an Olympian....
Follow this link to the actual story and you'll see a picture of him leaving the pool yesterday. He looks lost....
www.usatoday.com/sports/olympics/2009-02-04-phelps-speaks_N.htm
By David Ginsburg, AP Sports Writer
BALTIMORE — Olympic champion Michael Phelps said Wednesday it has been difficult coping with the fallout from a photo of him smoking from a marijuana pipe.
"It's something I am going to have to live with and something I'll have to grow from," Phelps told The Associated Press outside the pool where he trains. "I know with all of the mistakes I made, I learned from them and that is what I expect to do from this. By no means it is fun for me, by no means is it easy."
BRENNAN: Money buys Phelps love, not guidance
MEETING: USOC wants sit-down with Phelps
It was the first time Phelps had publicly addressed the photo since issuing an apology Sunday after it surfaced in a British tabloid over the weekend.
Wearing a black sweat suit and shaking off the remaining drops of water in his hair after a workout at the Meadowbrook Aquatic Center, Phelps said the most important thing for him is that he was back in the pool training.
"I'm back to my routine, the thing I love, the thing I care about most," Phelps said. "To be able to get back in the water and get back to a normal schedule is what I am happy about most."
Phelps and his coach, Bob Bowman, in November took over operation of Meadowbrook and the North Baltimore Aquatic Club, where the swimmer began training at age 7.
Phelps declined to address the possibility of criminal charges and reiterated his desire to put the furor behind him.
"You know, it happens," he said. "When stupid things are (done), bad judgment is made and mistakes are made, it happens."
Phelps apologized to his fans and sponsors after the tabloid News of the World published a picture that appeared to show the Olympic champion smoking marijuana during a November house party at the University of South Carolina.
The photo wasn't the first time Phelps has been in trouble for his activities away from the pool. After the 2004 Athens Games, an underage Phelps was arrested for drunken driving, pleaded guilty and apologized to his fans.
Several of Phelps' sponsors — including Visa, apparel company Speedo and luxury Swiss watchmaker Omega — have expressed their support of the athlete, who won a record eight golds medals at the Beijing Olympics last summer.
"I have a relationship with all of my sponsors and they are really like family," Phelps said. "It's been like that for our whole partnership together. And it's good to have support in a time like this. This is when you most need it." it."
He was also appreciative of the backing he's gotten from those close to him.
"Right now, at a time like this, this is when you really know who are your real friends and family," said Phelps, 23. "At a time like this, you really notice who is there in good times and in bad. And I have had a lot of support and that is something I am thankful for."
On Wednesday in Switzerland, swimming's governing body praised Phelps for his public apology.
"As a citizen, Michael Phelps displayed inappropriate behavior," FINA said in a statement. "But his sincere regret and the promise that such a situation will not happen again are sufficient guarantees that this great star will continue generating respect and appreciation to all fans of our sport around the globe."
But the CEO of the U.S. Olympic Committee said Wednesday he'd like to have a face-to-face meeting with Phelps, and spokesman Darryl Seibel said the federation was sending the Olympic star a letter offering its assistance.
Phelps has apologized. Now the USOC wants to help him avoid a repeat.
"Based on this occurrence, we at the USOC, as we said in an earlier statement, are exceptionally disappointed in him, as he is in himself," Jim Scherr said during a conference call that was set to preview the 2010 Winter Olympics, but also included several mentions of Phelps. "We'll follow up and have a direct conversation with him and people close to him."
The USOC can't do much to penalize him. Anti-doping rules don't call for sanctions against athletes who test positive for marijuana when they're not competing. And the USOC's code of conduct doesn't apply to athletes once the games are over.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
----------------------------
The article below also has a picture of Eric Heiden speedskating with the caption:
"Like Michael Phelps, five-time gold medalist Eric Heiden had the world at this fingertips, but he opted to walk away from the money."
www.usatoday.com/sports/columnist/brennan/2009-02-04-phelps_N.htm
By Christine Brennan, USA TODAY
A steady stream of lavish praise has been bestowed upon beleaguered Michael Phelps this week, much of it coming from companies and sports organizations that desperately need him to be loved again.
We shouldn't be at all surprised that Speedo chimed in with its unwavering support for Phelps, or Omega watches (he was wearing their product in the famous marijuana photo, after all) or the International Olympic Committee.
While we can only hope these people truly care about the 23-year-old who is having so much trouble balancing his life as both role model and playboy, we can be absolutely certain of this:
They need him. They need him for their bottom line. (Imagine, for a moment, the Beijing Games without him.) They need him to swim again, and win medals, and become America's next great story of redemption.
And so they will use him. They will praise him, hoping consumers ignore the pot-smoking photo from November and the photos with the Las Vegas strippers in September and the DUI from 2004 and get on with all of their Michael Phelps adulation as soon as possible.
It should be noted, however, that the succession of unabashed sponsor love for Phelps officially ended Wednesday when two of his newer sponsors, Subway and Kellogg's, did not support him when asked for a comment.
The e-mail from Subway spokeswoman Megan Driscoll was about as brief as it could be: "Subway is not commenting or releasing a statement right now on Michael Phelps."
Kellogg's comment was "no comment" — and it required two phone calls to drag even that out of them. So Subway and Kellogg's are not saying no and they're not saying yes, which probably means they are: 1. not happy, and 2. thinking about their options. Thank goodness a smidgen of sanity remains in the corporate world.
Let's go back to 2008, and let's envision the many meetings Phelps had with his management team. This would have been the time for Phelps and his agents to have had a frank conversation about what Michael wanted to do, have fun or make money. Did he want to let loose after all those years of having his head under water — to live the life of a single 23-year-old, running around and going to parties? (A perfectly understandable choice, of course, since he already had plenty of money.)
Or did he not want to do that and instead turn himself into America's pitchman, inviting the nation's eyes to constantly be upon him, actively courting children like a latter-day Pied Piper?
In today's world of instant information, anyone could have told you that to avoid trouble, he had to pick one: A or B.
He chose A and B.
There were millions of dollars to be made, and he and his team decided to make them all, cellphone cameras be d**ned. Now, months later, as we near the end of Phelps' miserable week, one question lingers above all others: While many were looking out for Phelps' financial well-being, who was looking out for him?
Those of us who have had the pleasure of covering his athletic exploits the past nine years know he is not a complex man. He's a 6-4 little brother who, in season, basically swims, eats, sleeps and hangs out with his teammates, then does it all again, day after day. He is a high school graduate who enrolled in just a few classes at the University of Michigan in the four years he swam there. Simply put, he's a guy who needs guidance, perhaps lots of it.
Phelps needed someone to say one name to him: Eric Heiden. In 1980, Heiden was Phelps. He won all five men's speedskating gold medals at the Lake Placid Winter Olympics and was almost as big a deal as Phelps was last summer. But Heiden didn't cash in on any of it. Wanting his life back at 21 (two years younger than Phelps), he walked away from the money. Today he's a successful orthopedic surgeon in Utah.
Michael Phelps has become all things to all people. Hero, role model, pitchman, meal ticket. These days, mostly meal ticket. NBC needs him to drive ratings for the 2012 Games. Speedo needs him to sell swimsuits. Kellogg's needs him to sell Corn Flakes. The IOC needs him for the small task of selling the Olympics.
It's time for someone to realize everyone is using Michael Phelps. We can only hope that someone is Michael Phelps.
I had put an entry in "Apolo articles" because indeed Apolo made some quotes that applied, indirectory, to Michael. As the story flushes out over the next few days, it seemed more appropriate to turn the discussion to what it means to be an Olympian....
Follow this link to the actual story and you'll see a picture of him leaving the pool yesterday. He looks lost....
www.usatoday.com/sports/olympics/2009-02-04-phelps-speaks_N.htm
By David Ginsburg, AP Sports Writer
BALTIMORE — Olympic champion Michael Phelps said Wednesday it has been difficult coping with the fallout from a photo of him smoking from a marijuana pipe.
"It's something I am going to have to live with and something I'll have to grow from," Phelps told The Associated Press outside the pool where he trains. "I know with all of the mistakes I made, I learned from them and that is what I expect to do from this. By no means it is fun for me, by no means is it easy."
BRENNAN: Money buys Phelps love, not guidance
MEETING: USOC wants sit-down with Phelps
It was the first time Phelps had publicly addressed the photo since issuing an apology Sunday after it surfaced in a British tabloid over the weekend.
Wearing a black sweat suit and shaking off the remaining drops of water in his hair after a workout at the Meadowbrook Aquatic Center, Phelps said the most important thing for him is that he was back in the pool training.
"I'm back to my routine, the thing I love, the thing I care about most," Phelps said. "To be able to get back in the water and get back to a normal schedule is what I am happy about most."
Phelps and his coach, Bob Bowman, in November took over operation of Meadowbrook and the North Baltimore Aquatic Club, where the swimmer began training at age 7.
Phelps declined to address the possibility of criminal charges and reiterated his desire to put the furor behind him.
"You know, it happens," he said. "When stupid things are (done), bad judgment is made and mistakes are made, it happens."
Phelps apologized to his fans and sponsors after the tabloid News of the World published a picture that appeared to show the Olympic champion smoking marijuana during a November house party at the University of South Carolina.
The photo wasn't the first time Phelps has been in trouble for his activities away from the pool. After the 2004 Athens Games, an underage Phelps was arrested for drunken driving, pleaded guilty and apologized to his fans.
Several of Phelps' sponsors — including Visa, apparel company Speedo and luxury Swiss watchmaker Omega — have expressed their support of the athlete, who won a record eight golds medals at the Beijing Olympics last summer.
"I have a relationship with all of my sponsors and they are really like family," Phelps said. "It's been like that for our whole partnership together. And it's good to have support in a time like this. This is when you most need it." it."
He was also appreciative of the backing he's gotten from those close to him.
"Right now, at a time like this, this is when you really know who are your real friends and family," said Phelps, 23. "At a time like this, you really notice who is there in good times and in bad. And I have had a lot of support and that is something I am thankful for."
On Wednesday in Switzerland, swimming's governing body praised Phelps for his public apology.
"As a citizen, Michael Phelps displayed inappropriate behavior," FINA said in a statement. "But his sincere regret and the promise that such a situation will not happen again are sufficient guarantees that this great star will continue generating respect and appreciation to all fans of our sport around the globe."
But the CEO of the U.S. Olympic Committee said Wednesday he'd like to have a face-to-face meeting with Phelps, and spokesman Darryl Seibel said the federation was sending the Olympic star a letter offering its assistance.
Phelps has apologized. Now the USOC wants to help him avoid a repeat.
"Based on this occurrence, we at the USOC, as we said in an earlier statement, are exceptionally disappointed in him, as he is in himself," Jim Scherr said during a conference call that was set to preview the 2010 Winter Olympics, but also included several mentions of Phelps. "We'll follow up and have a direct conversation with him and people close to him."
The USOC can't do much to penalize him. Anti-doping rules don't call for sanctions against athletes who test positive for marijuana when they're not competing. And the USOC's code of conduct doesn't apply to athletes once the games are over.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
----------------------------
The article below also has a picture of Eric Heiden speedskating with the caption:
"Like Michael Phelps, five-time gold medalist Eric Heiden had the world at this fingertips, but he opted to walk away from the money."
www.usatoday.com/sports/columnist/brennan/2009-02-04-phelps_N.htm
By Christine Brennan, USA TODAY
A steady stream of lavish praise has been bestowed upon beleaguered Michael Phelps this week, much of it coming from companies and sports organizations that desperately need him to be loved again.
We shouldn't be at all surprised that Speedo chimed in with its unwavering support for Phelps, or Omega watches (he was wearing their product in the famous marijuana photo, after all) or the International Olympic Committee.
While we can only hope these people truly care about the 23-year-old who is having so much trouble balancing his life as both role model and playboy, we can be absolutely certain of this:
They need him. They need him for their bottom line. (Imagine, for a moment, the Beijing Games without him.) They need him to swim again, and win medals, and become America's next great story of redemption.
And so they will use him. They will praise him, hoping consumers ignore the pot-smoking photo from November and the photos with the Las Vegas strippers in September and the DUI from 2004 and get on with all of their Michael Phelps adulation as soon as possible.
It should be noted, however, that the succession of unabashed sponsor love for Phelps officially ended Wednesday when two of his newer sponsors, Subway and Kellogg's, did not support him when asked for a comment.
The e-mail from Subway spokeswoman Megan Driscoll was about as brief as it could be: "Subway is not commenting or releasing a statement right now on Michael Phelps."
Kellogg's comment was "no comment" — and it required two phone calls to drag even that out of them. So Subway and Kellogg's are not saying no and they're not saying yes, which probably means they are: 1. not happy, and 2. thinking about their options. Thank goodness a smidgen of sanity remains in the corporate world.
Let's go back to 2008, and let's envision the many meetings Phelps had with his management team. This would have been the time for Phelps and his agents to have had a frank conversation about what Michael wanted to do, have fun or make money. Did he want to let loose after all those years of having his head under water — to live the life of a single 23-year-old, running around and going to parties? (A perfectly understandable choice, of course, since he already had plenty of money.)
Or did he not want to do that and instead turn himself into America's pitchman, inviting the nation's eyes to constantly be upon him, actively courting children like a latter-day Pied Piper?
In today's world of instant information, anyone could have told you that to avoid trouble, he had to pick one: A or B.
He chose A and B.
There were millions of dollars to be made, and he and his team decided to make them all, cellphone cameras be d**ned. Now, months later, as we near the end of Phelps' miserable week, one question lingers above all others: While many were looking out for Phelps' financial well-being, who was looking out for him?
Those of us who have had the pleasure of covering his athletic exploits the past nine years know he is not a complex man. He's a 6-4 little brother who, in season, basically swims, eats, sleeps and hangs out with his teammates, then does it all again, day after day. He is a high school graduate who enrolled in just a few classes at the University of Michigan in the four years he swam there. Simply put, he's a guy who needs guidance, perhaps lots of it.
Phelps needed someone to say one name to him: Eric Heiden. In 1980, Heiden was Phelps. He won all five men's speedskating gold medals at the Lake Placid Winter Olympics and was almost as big a deal as Phelps was last summer. But Heiden didn't cash in on any of it. Wanting his life back at 21 (two years younger than Phelps), he walked away from the money. Today he's a successful orthopedic surgeon in Utah.
Michael Phelps has become all things to all people. Hero, role model, pitchman, meal ticket. These days, mostly meal ticket. NBC needs him to drive ratings for the 2012 Games. Speedo needs him to sell swimsuits. Kellogg's needs him to sell Corn Flakes. The IOC needs him for the small task of selling the Olympics.
It's time for someone to realize everyone is using Michael Phelps. We can only hope that someone is Michael Phelps.