View Full Version : Bravo Dara!!
Grace
07-04-2008, 08:09 PM
Dara Torres, age 41, is going to her 5th Olympics. That's the most ever for an American swimmer.
She just won the Women's 100m Freestyle in Omaha.
In the stands, cheering her on, her husband, her mother and her 2 year old daughter - along with many other fans.
http://images.usatoday.com/sports/olympics/_photos/2006-08-17-torres.jpg
RICHARD
07-04-2008, 09:07 PM
Dara Torres, age 41, is going to her 5th Olympics. That's the most ever for an American swimmer.
She just won the Women's 100m Freestyle in Omaha.
YOU BEAT ME TO THE POST!
Good on her!
ANd what about all the records set?:D
lizbud
07-05-2008, 09:49 AM
She is an awesome athlete. I saw her being featured on a local sports
report.:)
RICHARD
07-05-2008, 01:34 PM
DT is a local girl from up the road.
Studio City, CA!
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Did anyone see the 16 y.o. gal that set the high school record -1500 meters-in the Oly track qualifiers?
lizbud
07-06-2008, 12:20 PM
I read another report on this event today that discribed the scene after
her win. I really would have loved to be there.:)
(good choice of the song they played too)
Amanda Beard, Dara Torres
Tribune newspapers
9:26 AM CDT, July 6, 2008
OMAHA — They blasted "American Woman" over the public-address system here Friday night after 41-year-old Dara Torres took what had been an intriguing story line and turned it into a comeback story that surprised even her.
This mother of a 2-year-old girl looked like a kid again herself—waving an American flag on the pool deck—in making an unprecedented fifth Olympic team, winning the 100-meter freestyle in 53.78 seconds at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials. American record holder Natalie Coughlin was second in 53.83.
Not only did Torres deliver the bombshell moment of the trials, there was a resurgent sidekick on the deck, a yin to the Torres yang, in the form of 26-year-old Amanda Beard, who made her fourth Olympic team. Beard placed second in the 200 breaststroke in 2:25.13 behind Rebecca Soni's 2:22.60.
"I knew I could make the team, but I knew it was a long shot," Beard said.
The women defied age at Qwest Center. And the men were taking down records, and equaling them. Michael Phelps broke his second world record here, this time in the 200-meter individual medley, and it had striking similarities to his first, in the 400 IM.
On both occasions, he was pushed to the limit by runner-up Ryan Lochte. Phelps won in 1 minute 54.80 seconds, under his old mark of 1:54.98, set at the World Championships last year. Lochte was second in 1:55.22.
"I just tried to hang on," said Phelps, who won his fourth individual race.
RICHARD
07-06-2008, 12:58 PM
http://www.dailynews.com/sports/ci_9798207
In depth story about Torres.
RICHARD
07-07-2008, 03:01 PM
Won another event last night and qualified for three races in Beijing!
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Anyone remeber the story about a woman runner who lost her husband during a marathon.....I can't remember her name now....
It happened during a race back east.
boomersooner
07-07-2008, 04:07 PM
wow...that is amazing....I'm only 6 years older, but I probably couldn't swim 10 feet....in fact, I know I couldn't swim 10 feet....not without having a coronary first!!
lizbud
07-07-2008, 04:27 PM
http://www.dailynews.com/sports/ci_9798207
In depth story about Torres.
Good article. Thanks for sharing it Richard.:)
lizbud
07-07-2008, 04:29 PM
wow...that is amazing....I'm only 6 years older, but I probably couldn't swim 10 feet....in fact, I know I couldn't swim 10 feet....not without having a coronary first!!
I was amazed when I read that she had lifted weights and had a normal
workout the same day she gave birth to her daughter. Wow. I wish I were
half that active.:D
RICHARD
07-08-2008, 07:12 PM
I was watching "Rome is Burning" a sports show where the host is Jim Rome.
Wuss and sports underacheiver. He had some ding dong filling in for him and her take on the DT events was there might be something more to her performances.
Two other dimbulbs that were on the panel suggested-but didn't want to accuse her directly-that a 41 year old woman making the U.S. Oly team was kind of suspect.
In typical media fashion, they take what has happened to all the other athletes that were caught doping and have to paint everyone with the same brush.
I highly doubt that anyone would, with today's doping standards, would take the chance to gain and then lose all the attention, just for a medal.
This gal has a future, family and possibly tons of endorsement money to gain, it don't make sense.:rolleyes:
Grace
07-08-2008, 10:07 PM
She has also volunteered to have as many different types of drug testing as they can think of. And take a lie detector test.
Someone on ESPN Sports Center, earlier today, said that what she does is NOT unusual in a person who swims and works out every day for years - which is what she has done. Also, she started setting records when she was 15, so that is nothing new.
That's what happens when all those others drug themselves. Everyone else becomes suspect.
cassiesmom
07-09-2008, 11:02 AM
Go Dara, go!
- from another 41-year-old
Grace
07-09-2008, 11:10 AM
Read online this morning that she has opted out of the 100 freestyle. As it stands now she will compete in the 50 Free, which is her best, and in both 400 IM.
RICHARD
07-09-2008, 03:06 PM
I have always thought the it's harder for a woman to dope in athletics.
Of course, some women marry a dope.....but I digress.
If they do the steroids they either have to cycle or take a masking agent to keep from getting caught. HGH/testosterone usage is easier to check for because there are "standard levels" found in the blood samples of women.
I really couldn't get over the smarminess of the TV host/woman-instead of elevating DT's accomplishments she's been a suspect, accused of cheating and the jury is out, deliberating on the what the sentence should be.:(:rolleyes:
smokey the elder
07-10-2008, 10:33 AM
I think it's lousy that there is even a whiff of a doping accusation. It has been documented that athletic women who compete after giving birth are often stronger and have more endurance. Swimming is also a no-impact sport so folks can be strong swimmers for their whole lives. The way swimmers train has changed a lot, as well as the swim-suit tech itself.
I hope she blows them away in Beijing!
Grace
07-10-2008, 10:49 AM
I hope she blows them away in Beijing!
AMEN!!
lizbud
07-10-2008, 12:33 PM
I think it's lousy that there is even a whiff of a doping accusation. It has been documented that athletic women who compete after giving birth are often stronger and have more endurance. Swimming is also a no-impact sport so folks can be strong swimmers for their whole lives. The way swimmers train has changed a lot, as well as the swim-suit tech itself.
I hope she blows them away in Beijing!
Absolutely no way, she uses any drugs to enhance her performance.
I too hope she wows them again at the Olympics.:D
RICHARD
07-13-2008, 03:21 PM
I just saw a news piece about DT.
You could bounce quarters off of any part of her body and she'd give you change back.
That chickie-babe has an incredible abdominal area.:eek:
Another article.
http://www.dailynews.com/sportscolumnists/ci_9865860
cassiesmom
08-11-2008, 02:54 PM
The German women's gymnastics team has one member that's 33 years old, Oksana Chusovitina. She has a 9-year-old son. She's from Uzbekistan but moved to Germany when her son needed treatment for leukemia that was not available in Russia. People she knew from gymnastics sponsored him for treatment in Germany and she later became a German citizen. I think they said this is her 3rd or 4th Olympics. I saw her on the vault last night and I think she puts those little teeny tiny young girls to shame. She's right up there with Dara Torres on my list of people who haven't let their age hold them back in areas where youth is good.
RICHARD
08-17-2008, 12:22 AM
SILVER, BABY!!!
That woman rocks......From Helen Mirren to Dara Torres?
They made my year as bathing suit babes!:)
cassiesmom
08-17-2008, 09:24 PM
I think it's lousy that there is even a whiff of a doping accusation. It has been documented that athletic women who compete after giving birth are often stronger and have more endurance. Swimming is also a no-impact sport so folks can be strong swimmers for their whole lives. The way swimmers train has changed a lot, as well as the swim-suit tech itself.
I hope she blows them away in Beijing!
I read in the newspaper today that she was telling the other swimmers that training for Olympic swimming is a piece of cake compared to giving birth! Brava, Dara!
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