Phelps earns 200m IM silver in Berlin; 10 WRs fall

Michael Phelps is still without a gold medal. He swam in the 200m individual medley final on Sunday and earned silver, over two seconds behind winner -- and new world record holder -- Darian Townsend. Is it Phelps' old-school suit? Is he tired from heavy training? Or is it a combination of both? Ten world records fell on Sunday in Berlin.
By Associated Press | Posted: Nov 15, 7:11a ET | Updated: Nov 15, 12:11p ET

Related to this article

Video

Photos

BERLIN (AP) -- Racing in an old-style swimsuit and with little practice, Michael Phelps didn't join the swimmers in high-tech suits who went on a world record binge at two short-course World Cup meets this week.

Phelps had to settle for second place in the 200m individual medley final on Sunday behind Darian Townsend of South Africa, who broke one of the 16 world records set in two days of competition in Berlin.

Those records followed the nine that were set in Stockholm earlier this week as swimmers continue to rewrite the record books before the high-performance suits are banned on Jan. 1. More records are likely to be broken at the upcoming World Cup meet in Singapore, the European short-course championships and an All-Star meet in December.

Phelps ended his weeklong European tour with no wins in two meets, let alone any records. Still, the American wasn't complaining -- at least not that much.

"I prefer not to lose, but I knew coming in that it would be very, very hard to win anything," Phelps said.

"I raced as hard as I could, I've gotten some racing under my belt and that's what we set out to do. Maybe it's better for me that I lost today, it gives me better motivation for the future," he said.

"I am pleased with the week as much as I can be, with how much training I've done, which is little. And it shows."

Phelps won an unprecedented eight gold medals at the Beijing Olympics wearing a high-tech suit. While his rivals continue to swim in the soon-to-be banned suits, he has gone back to the old-style, textile knee-length suit, hoping he'll have an advantage when the rest of the swimmers return to them.

"Considering the suit he's wearing and the shape he is in, I'll take it," Phelps' coach, Bob Bowman, said of his swimmer's performance in the two meets. "It could have been worse."

In Stockholm, Phelps also finished second in the 200m IM and missed three finals. In Berlin, he missed two finals and was fifth in the 200m butterfly Saturday.

Townsend also beat Phelps in Stockholm and on Sunday the difference was again more than 2 seconds.

The South African powered home in 1 minute, 51.55 seconds to break Ryan Lochte's world mark by one-hundredth of a second. Phelps clocked 1:53.70.

Earlier Sunday, Phelps failed to qualify for the 200m freestyle final and spoiled an anticipated showdown with rival Paul Biedermann. The German beat Phelps in the same event at the world championships in Rome in August and took away his world record. Until this week, Phelps had not competed since.

Biedermann shattered his second world record in two days when he won the 200m butterfly final in 1:39.37, slashing nearly 1.5 seconds off his old mark.

The German also broke the 400m freestyle record Saturday.

Several other swimmers broke two records in two days in Berlin: Cameron van der Burgh of South Africa in the men's 50m and 100m breaststroke; Shiho Sakai of Japan in the women's 100m and 200m backstroke; and Leisel Jones of Australia in the 100m and 200m breaststroke.

Among the 10 record breakers Sunday was Jessica Hardy of the United States, who lowered her own 50m breaststroke mark to 28.80, after swimming 28.96 in Stockholm four days ago.


Focus on

Sand stories

Sand stories

Recap the beach volleyball season with the top stories from the sand.

Poll

Universal Sports on Facebook
Universal Sports on Twitter