Lydia Jacoby, after surprise Tokyo Olympic gold, misses out on Paris: āIt hasnāt quite hit me yetā
INDIANAPOLIS ā Lydia Jacoby looked up, stunned. Only 27 hundredths of a second separated her from Emma Weberās second-place finish in the womenās 100-meter breaststroke final, but the two might as well have been two continents apart.
Veteran swimmers often describe U.S. Olympic trials as the hardest swim meet in the world ā tougher than the Olympics themselves. In some events, the third-fastest American might be the third-best swimmer in the world. But only the top two make Team USA.
That razor-thin margin sets up the greatest of stakes; itās make-or-break, all-or-nothing.
And Jacoby ended up with nothing, just three years removed from shocking herself and the world by winning gold in Tokyo in the same event. On Tuesday morning, she announced that sheād scratched the 200-meter breaststroke, which meant her meet was over. The 20-year-old wonāt be going to Paris.
āI feel weirdly fine,ā Jacoby said Tuesday. āI think it hasnāt quite hit me yet. I definitely had a little cry last night, but Iāve been doing pretty well today. Iām sure thereāll be a lot of time to process emotions in the next couple of weeks and Iāll ā¦ try to line up some fun things to look forward to this summer.ā
Two-time gold medalist Lilly King, who took gold in the event in Rio de Janeiro, touched first Monday night in 1:05.43. Weberās second-place finish was a shocker, one of the true upsets of the meet thus far. After King congratulated Weber, she swam over to hug Jacoby.
āMy heart absolutely breaks for her,ā King said. āBut on the flip side, what a performance from Emma Weber ā and thatās just kind of how this meet rolls. It will make your career and break your career in a minute. Itās the hardest meet in the world. Itās a lot harder than the Olympics, in my opinion.
āI hope she can move forward from this, and Iām rooting for her always.ā
In recent months, Jacoby has opened up about the severe depression she experienced after winning that gold medal in Tokyo. She felt like everyone wanted a piece of her, and she couldnāt say no. She couldnāt tell which people around her genuinely cared about her well-being and which just wanted to be associated with a gold medalist. There were days and weeks she didnāt want to get out of bed back home in Alaska.
āI was feeling like my identity was locked up in sports,ā Jacoby said Tuesday. āThe biggest thing for me lately is (remembering) that being a swimmer is something I do. Itās not something I am. I have so many interests and passions. I have amazing friends and family outside of the sport. Remembering those things is a big thing for me.
āA lot of people outside of sports see this and think this is everything. Itās important that people realize, yes, this is something I do, and Iām very invested in it. Obviously, I put a lot of emotion into this, and it is pretty devastating. But at the end of the road, itās not going to change my life.ā
Jacoby said she seriously considered quitting swimming after Tokyo and even debated whether she wanted to swim at trials at times during the past year. Sheās glad she stuck with the sport and swam here, despite the disappointing result.
Jacoby said she was frustrated with her performance here at Lucas Oil Stadium. Her time of 1:06.37 was more than a full second slower than her Olympic qualifying time at trials in 2021. Sheād been training well, and sheās disappointed that her output Monday didnāt match what sheād been putting into the event. Jacoby said she had focused all of her training on the 100-meter breaststroke and was planning to scratch the 200 regardless.
āI donāt feel like I put up a swim that was a good representation of what I can do, which is the most frustrating part to me,ā Jacoby said.
She said she plans to take a break from swimming to āget in a better place with where I am in my life outside of swimming and then reapproach the sport in a healthy way for myself.ā She doesnāt think sheās done with the sport entirely, nor does she think the sport is done with her.
But thatās in the long term. Right now, Jacoby isnāt sure if sheāll watch the event on television next month. Sheās not sure she can bear it, sitting at home on the wrong continent while her friends and former teammates wear red, white and blue.
āI feel like I havenāt really processed the fact that I wonāt be swimming there,ā Jacoby said. āIām honestly not really sure if I want to watch my event. Itās something I havenāt really put a lot of thought into. But the people that are making the team ā like, Iāve been crying like the past week, tears of joy for all my friends making the team ā¦ so, I am absolutely looking forward to seeing everybody do amazing things in Paris.
āMy not being there is definitely going to be tough, but I wish them all the absolute best.ā
GO DEEPER
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(Top photo: Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)
Olympics
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