In swimming, the U.S. Olympic Trials stand alone.
Typically held every four years, the meet is “by far the most pressure-packed, intense, emotional competition in the world,” said Todd DeSorbo, head coach of the University of Virginia’s swimming and diving teams.
“Nothing compares. NCAA Championships isn’t even close,” DeSorbo said. “The Olympics isn’t even close. I think that’s why the U.S. does so well at the Olympics, because of the pressure cooker of our Olympic Trials.”
Swimmers call it the “Meet of Tears,” said Paige Madden, “because you’re either crying happy tears or you’re crying sad tears because you didn’t perform to your expectations, and there’s just so much pressure involved with that. It’s crazy intense.”
The COVID-19 pandemic forced the Olympic Trials that were originally scheduled for 2020 to be postponed until this year. The meet concluded last Sunday at the CHI Health Center in Omaha, Nebraska, and Madden was one of five swimmers with ties to the UVA program to make along with Alex Walsh, Kate Douglass, Emma Weyant and Catie DeLoof.
Did she cry tears of joy in Omaha?
“I did,” Madden said, laughing.
The swimming competition at the Olympic Games will start July 24 in Tokyo. Madden will compete in two events: the 400-meter freestyle and the 4×200 freestyle relay. Walsh and Douglass will swim in the 200 individual medley, and Weyant made the U.S. team in the 400 IM. DeLoof, a former University of Michigan standout who trains at 鶹ƽ Aquatic and Fitness Center, is on the 4×100 freestyle relay team.

