Mind-blowing facts about what makes Michael Phelps so good in the Pool?

LEKSHMAN S P
7 min readAug 22, 2016

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Do Phelps’s body shape and flexibility give him a physical edge in swimming over others?

Beyond Phelps’ drive to succeed, as reported by the Australian Broadcasting Company, and his undoubtedly good training, could it be that a good bit of his talent just boils down to simple anatomy?

There’s his proportionally longer wingspan.

Phelps’s arms extend 80 inches (203 centimeters) tip to tip, and his body measures in at 76 inches (193 centimeters) in height. Most of the time, a person’s height normally corresponds closely to the distance between his outstretched hands. (Recall Leonardo Da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man, that famous sketch of a naked male showing his arm-leg-torso ratios.) Maybe this extra reach gave Phelps that narrowest of victories against Serbia’s Milo Cavic in the 100-meter butterfly final on Saturday, August 16, 2008 when the American won by just one one-hundredth of a second.

Phelps is also said to be double-jointed, according to a Detroit News blog. His size-14 feet reportedly bend 15 degrees farther at the ankle than most other swimmers, turning his feet into virtual flippers. This flexibility also extends to his knees and elbows, possibly allowing him to get more out of each stroke.

Do any of these alleged anatomical advantages matter? Here is an analysis in the form of an interview from H. Richard Weiner, an internist and former team physician who has practiced sports medicine at the University of Wisconsin — Milwaukee — and who also happens to be a former acclaimed All-American swimmer.

What do you think about the notions about Phelps’s built-in, anatomical advantages?

When someone does something statistically impressive, like winning eight gold medals in an Olympics like Phelps, we try to come up with some far-fetched reason for it, like he or she has to have some bizarre physiological adaptation or freaky anatomy. But most things that you measure in human beings fall within predictable ranges.

What do you think about the “wingspan” argumentthat Phelps’s long arms give him an edge?

All things being equal, a taller person [with longer arms than a shorter person] will swim faster. A lot of the thrust in swimming comes from arm propulsion and not the kick. But then again, the person who won [the men’s 100- and 200-meter] breaststroke is a five-foot, eight- [1.78-meter-] tall Japanese man [named Kosuke Kitajima]. Matt Grevers, a U.S. swimmer from Northwestern University [in Illinois], is six foot, eight [2.03 meters]. I stood next to him and his arms are, heaven knows, more proportional to a guy who is seven feet [2.13 meters] tall. When he does [the] backstroke and you’re standing on deck, it looks like a tree is coming out of the water. And [Grevers] has done well, but not as well as Phelps. So height in and of itself does not intrinsically confer success.

What about bodily ratios, as in the length of one’s legs compared to torso size, and so forthany advantage there?

So we’ve been hearing how Phelps has a long torso with shorter-than-expected legs and how that gives him a powerful push when he turns off the wall. There’s a problem here: If two fellows of same height are trying to turn [off the wall after a lap in the pool], the guy with the longer legs will hit the wall from farther away and should also have the better kick going back the other way.

What about the claim that Phelps’s ankles can bend more than other people’s ankles?

It’s true that more supple joints do give you an advantage, and so that’s why stretching helps athletes out a great deal. But I’m not satisfied that Phelps has more flexibility than the other guys swimming in his events. Yes, compared to the average 23-year-old walking down the street, Phelps probably is more flexible that they are, but he’s also in far better shape. If he has some pronounced laxity in his ankles, he is not likely to be that much more flexible.

As for double-jointedness…?

Having elbows and wrists that bend easily should not be an advantage, mechanically speaking. If you put force through a joint that is unstable, you are in danger of hurting the joint. His joints may be somewhat looser, but that could put him at a disadvantage in the weight room.

Another specious claim is that there’s been some talk about him being able to utilize oxygen better than other people. Not having been to [Phelps’] autopsy, I think that’s rather hard to say at this point.

What do you think accounts for Phelps’s success then?

Phelps has very good stroke mechanics — that certainly goes a long way. Some people also have better “locomotive genius” — this is when swimmers have that sense of moving the water around them and how much water they are displacing. By analogy, think of someone who is stroking a backhand in tennis who just seems to know better [than other tennis players] where the ball will go. Mark Spitz [the swimmer who won seven gold medals in the 1972 Munich Olympics] was claimed to have anatomical advantages. [Spitz] and I swam the same events, though he did them a whole lot quicker. But it was not like he had six fingers. Almost everyone who has success [in sports] is said to have some unusual property, though I have not seen this borne out.

You can compare it to the Ted Williams [urban legend in baseball] — they say he could see the stitching on the ball [of the incoming pitch] rotate, and that he would know by the rotation whether he was getting a fastball or a curveball. I’m inclined to be a little bit skeptical of that. It is the same as saying people have some special intellectual gift. Why is it these people tend to be the ones to close down the libraries and study all the time? Tiger Woods probably was not born being able to hit a ball 250 yards in a straight line, but hundreds of buckets of balls later, he developed such a skill.

Why do you think these ideas of physiological advantage are often repeated?

I guess it’s hard for people just to believe that it can just be stroke mechanics for Phelps or any other swimmer. Unless a seemingly suitable explanation comes up, people then think that this individual must be cheating or doping. It couldn’t just be that the guy trained his guts out.

So do you think there is anything to these “natural physical gift” arguments?

I’m sure if we could measure Phelps as much as we would like, we would find attributes better than average for swimming, but I don’t think we would find any glaring abnormalities. I suspected if we could comprehensively measure all Olympians in finals, we would see significant differences [when compared to non-Olympians], but we would not see them having freakish things like 200 percent more lung capacity, or muscles that can contract at twice the [maximum] force of a normal human muscle. I mean, come on,that sounds too far fetched to believe.

Mind Blowing Facts about Michael Phelps

Michael Phelps is truly a phenomenal athlete, which is no secret. But here are some interesting facts about him:

  1. He did not take one day off for six years of training. Even other elite swimmers will take Sunday off, but he did no such thing. His dedication to the sport was immense.
  2. For the 2008 Olympics, his typical week of training consisted of 80000 meters. A day for him would be 2 hours of morning swimming, napping, a 1–2 hour session in the gym, napping, and finally a 3 hour swim practice in the evening.
  3. As he mentioned in one of his Facebook live videos, he was so focused on his goal of 8 gold medals in Beijing, he was quiet and kept to himself, often shutting others out. This happened to such an extent that he rubbed Ronda Rousey, a famous Judo star, the wrong way: Olympian and fighter Ronda Rousey calls out Michael Phelps’ behavior in Beijing
  4. He was so fast when he was young that he broke a 15–16 age group record when he was only 14. He is also the youngest male swimmer to break a world record at 15 years of age. Anyone who is a swimmer knows how insane this is.
  5. One of his hardest workouts was a 10000 meters for time. 2.5 hours of him swimming as fast as he could. Unbelievable.
  6. His coach, Bob Bowman, hates long tapers, so will only tone down yardage 1–2 weeks out from a major competition.
  7. To improve his lung capacity and endurance, he has a chamber surrounding his bed that simulates high altitude/elevation. That way, breathing less oxygen becomes natural for him, and the moments of oxygen debt in his races (last underwater) don’t hurt him as much.
  8. He is extremely close to Bob Bowman. His coach was like a father to him in many ways, teaching him how to drive and discussing personal issues with him.
  9. His idol is not a swimming star, but a basketball star: Michael Jordan. He is also very close to Ray Lewis, a Baltimore Ravens football star.
  10. He also faced off against Shaquille O’Neal in a friendly swimming competition in which Shaq had some handicaps and other Olympians to assist him! You can watch the first part here: Shaquille O’Neal vs Michael Phelps.
  11. Lil Wayne dedicated a song to him called “No Quitter Go Getter”, a tribute to his insane performance at Beijing (he begins it with, “Michael Phelps, this one’s for you”). You can listen to it here: No quitter Go getter.
  12. He also guest starred in the popular comedy drama, Suits. I couldn’t find the scene, but it’s in Season 3, Episode 11.
The Phenomenon : Michael Phelps

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