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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Intense Scrutiny Has Phelps Weighing Whether He Will Swim in 2012 Games
Title:US: Intense Scrutiny Has Phelps Weighing Whether He Will Swim in 2012 Games
Published On:2009-02-05
Source:Baltimore Sun (MD)
Fetched On:2009-02-09 08:16:38
INTENSE SCRUTINY HAS PHELPS WEIGHING WHETHER HE WILL SWIM IN 2012 GAMES

Swimmer Speaks Out in First Interview Since Photo of Him Smoking From
Marijuana Pipe Was Published in Tabloid

In his first interview since a photo surfaced showing him smoking
from a marijuana pipe, Michael Phelps said yesterdaythat the intense
public scrutiny has him contemplating whether he will swim in the
2012 Olympics.

Phelps, who said that he "clearly made a mistake" and that the past
week has been both embarrassing and uncomfortable for him, spoke with
The Baltimore Sun inside Meadowbrook Aquatic Center after finishing
his daily workout. While he still has goals he wants to achieve in
the sport, he said, he's going to discuss it with his family and his
coach, Bob Bowman.

"This is a decision of mine that I'm not going to make today and I'm
not going to make tomorrow," Phelps said. "It's going to require a
lot of time and energy and a lot of thinking for myself - but also
talking to Bob and talking to my family and just deciding what I want to do.

"Yeah, there are still goals that I have in the pool, 100 percent.
But I'm not going to let anything stand in my way. If I decide to
walk away, I'll decide to walk away on my own terms. If it's now, if
it's four years, who knows. But it is something I need to think about
and decide what I want to do."

Bowman said that he doesn't foresee Phelps retiring until after the
2012 London Olympics but that he understands how difficult it is for
the 23-year-old to live up to the public's expectations.

Phelps, who grew up in Rodgers Forge, said he realizes that his
actions seem that much more foolish considering that this is his
second public slip-up, after a drunken-driving arrest in 2004. He
said it "definitely wasn't easy" to tell his mother, Debbie, a
principal at Windsor Mill Middle School, about the picture.

"Seeing my mom reminded me of how it was the day after I got my DUI,
and I swore to myself I'd never do that again," he said. "This is
just a stupid thing of mine that I did, and I have to live with it."

Phelps said he has spent the past few days with his mother and two
sisters after the photo was published in Britain's News of the World
over the weekend. "We've been talking a lot," he said. "I've been
able to get back to my family. It's part of my life I need back."

When asked whether he regularly smoked marijuana, Phelps said he did not.

"This was stupid, and I know this won't happen again," he said. "It's
obviously bad judgment, and it's something I'm not proud of at all. I
will say that with the mistakes that I've made in my life, I've
learned from them. Every one of them. And I've become a better
person. That's what I plan to do from here. It's definitely not what
I wanted, and it's clearly not what my mom wanted."

It's been an intense week for Phelps, who won eight gold medals at
the Beijing Olympics. A majority of his sponsors have vowed to stick
with him despite the controversy, and yesterday, swimming's governing
body, FINA, praised his apology. But scrutiny of his public life has
become that much more prominent.

Sheriff Leon Lott of Richland County, S.C., has told reporters that
he will press charges against Phelps if he can prove the swimmer
smoked marijuana in his jurisdiction, where the bong photo was allegedly taken.

Pursuit of Phelps' first public comments has been fierce. "I've been
waking up to guys yelling into megaphones outside my window at 7
o'clock in the morning," he said. "I've been through just about
everything you can go through. I've had paparazzi people following me
from my house to my mom's house. People knocking on the door. It's crazy."

Returning to the pool and training has brought a certain calm back to
his life, he said. He spent yesterday afternoon swimming laps with a
kickboard, working on his butterfly, doing dry-land training with a
medicine ball, and joking around with Bowman and fellow Olympian Katie Hoff.

"It makes me happy," Phelps said. "It's a part of me I've always had,
and I've always been happy doing it. I like getting up in the morning
and having something to do. On Monday we get back to two-a-day
[practices], and I'm looking forward to that. I feel more comfortable
here. This is my home."

Phelps, who started a foundation after the Olympics to help teach
children how to swim, acknowledged that he feels as if he's let some
people down, especially younger fans who look up to him.

"I think this is like the DUI, in that it's something I can talk more
about and make sure that nobody makes the same mistakes I made," he
said. "What I've gone through in the last week, no one wants to go through."

While he doesn't condone Phelps' actions, Bowman said everyone makes mistakes.

"Nobody's perfect," Bowman said. "It's not acceptable, and this is
not to excuse it. He definitely, from this point forward, has to
decide what he wants to do. But for Michael to go through our trials,
our training camp, and then the Olympics, which is unbelievably
stressful, without any downtime, that's hard. Still, it's not an excuse."

If anything, Phelps said, this has reminded him that he's subject to
being watched, photographed and talked about each time he enters a room.

"There are always people you can't trust," he said. "During the whole
thing, I've really been able to see who my friends are, who my family
are, and who really loves and supports me. They've stood by my side,
from the countless text messages, phone messages, e-mails, those are
your friends. All those people who are around during the good times?
Those aren't your friends."
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