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No amount of cajoling, arm-twisting and pleading by his teammates and swimming fans around the world will make Michel Phelps change his mind about retiring after the Rio Olympics.
The great American swimmer made that abundantly clear on Friday after winning the 27th Olympic medal of his career, a three-way dead-heat silver in the men’s 100 metres butterfly.
“No,” he said as the question was still leaving the journalist’s lips, and more ‘no’s followed in close succession.
He added:
Phelps said in 2012 that he was retiring, but he came back for one last hurrah after feeling that he wanted to bow out on his own terms.
That meant winning back the men’s 200m butterfly title that Le Clos took from him four years ago, and he declared ‘mission achieved’ last Wednesday.
He has won four golds and a silver in Rio so far, taking his tally to 22 golds, and is not finished completely yet even if Friday was his last individual race. The 4x100 medley relay on Saturday will be his final farewell.
After that, Phelps will hang up his cap – not the one he ripped in half before the 4x200 freestyle relay – and spend more time with his loved ones.
He added:
With team mate Anthony Ervin winning the 50 freestyle gold on Friday at the age of 35, 16 years after he first won it, there will always be those who wonder if the 31-year-old Phelps might do another tumble turn and turn up in Tokyo in 2020.
He added:
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