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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, January 25, 2007

A swimmer's regimen to get into Olympics shape

 •  Stroking for gold

By Michael Tsai
Advertiser Staff Writer

Punahou graduate John Flanagan was the third to finish but the second American finisher in the USA 25K Open Water Swimming Championships. Flanagan is making a bid to compete in the 2008 Olympics.

ADVERTISER LIBRARY PHOTO | June 5, 1999

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FLANAGAN'S OLYMPIC TRAINING

The regimen: Swims five to seven miles in the pool once or twice a day (with distances soon to increase); runs 25 miles per week; complements workouts with paddleboarding, bodysurfing, surfing and ocean swimming.

The diet: Four to five moderately sized meals a day, including lots of fruits and vegetables.

The recovery: Sleeps eight hours a night and takes an hourlong nap with his year-old daughter in the afternoon.

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Competitive swimmer and coach John Flanagan is making a bid, at 31, to compete in the Olympics' debut open-water distance swimming competition. One key to his confidence: his body's reaction to losing roughly 20 pounds, thanks to a combination of running and healthier eating.

Like cyclist Lance Armstrong, Flanagan spent his brief retirement training for his first marathon. And like the seven-time Tour de France winner, he kicked butt, finishing the 26.2-mile race in an impressive two hours and 58 minutes.

"I feel better now than I ever have," says Flanagan, who credits his wife, Rae, with helping him make better dietary choices.

"At first it scared me to be lighter than I've been since I was a sophomore in high school, but it's a good weight. If you think in terms of numbers, if I'm pulling less weight through the water but I still have the same strength, I have to be better."

That might be hard to fathom for those who have followed Flanagan's career. He was a state champion at Punahou, an NCAA champion at Auburn (where he earned his degree in finance), and a gold medalist in Open Water Team World Championships (5 kilometers) and open water team Pan Pacific Championships (25K).

For Flanagan, a master of open-water distance swimming, news of the sport's inclusion in the next Olympics was too alluring to let age get in the way.

"When I retired, I felt like I had gone as far as I could go," Flanagan says. "But when I heard they were going to have (open-water swimming) in the Olympics, it got in my head and I couldn't get it out."

Flanagan's training, coordinated via daily fax by Mainland-based coach Jack Pettinger, includes lengthy pool workouts complemented by running, ocean swimming, paddleboarding and bodysurfing.

While a younger Flanagan might not have blinked, the 31-year-old version has to balance the rigorous regimen against his responsibilities as a husband, father and coach.

Flanagan's bid for a spot on the U.S. Olympic Team won't be easily redeemed. The team is favored in the event, and, as Flanagan says, "if you make the team, you will probably win a medal in the Olympics."

"If I can get back to where I was in 2001, I should be able to do it," he says. "I feel I can be better. I definitely will embrace the challenge. I'm excited for the opportunity to compete."

Reach Michael Tsai at mtsai@honoluluadvertiser.com.


Correction: Bicyclist Lance Armstrong won the Tour de France seven times. A previous version of this story gave an incorrect number.