U.S. Olympic swimmer Dana Vollmer was so focused on winning gold and breaking the world record in the 100-meter butterfly that she actually lost her cap in the pool. “I’m just so excited right now. I felt good during the first 50… actually lost a swim cap in the pool,” an ecstatic Vollmer told NBC. “It’s in there somewhere. It’s just so exciting about the whole thing.” Vollmer came in at 55.98, becoming the first woman ever to break the 56-second barrier.
When Vollmer touched the wall, there was no doubt that she had won gold, but as she turned to the scoreboard, she was just as eager to make the world record. “It takes me a little bit to able to see the clock, get my goggles unfogged,” Vollmer told USA Today. “And it was just absolutely incredible to be there in front of that crowd with my parents and my husband in the stands. It was everything I could have dreamed it would have been.”
Vollmer’s Olympic record is all the more impressive considering that she was diagnosed with a severe heart condition as a teenager — a health scare that led to surgery and required her to have a defibrillator with her at every competition and practice session. In our exclusive interview, Vollmer talks in detail about the symptoms that threatened her athletic career and her life. “It was definitely a really scary time for me and my family,” Vollmer said. “It wasn’t until my sophomore year of college that they completely cleared me. They didn’t see any of those symptoms anymore. So now I don’t have to carry around that defibrillator, which is a huge relief. I can really just focus on performing and swimming and pushing my body to win, hopefully, gold medals.”
Vollmer has been trying out various alternative training forms. “It’s not just about getting in shape for swimming; it’s about being an overall athlete,” Vollmer says, revealing that her favorite is ocean training. “I’ve really loved ocean training. Just a different kind of being in the water, learning how to deal with currents and waves and outside stressors… and still being able to use the water and learn how to move my body through the water.”
Watch our exclusive interview with Vollmer to learn more about her health scare, her alternative training regimen, and her guilty food pleasure, which she is looking forward to “diving” (!) into after the Olympics.
Watch our exclusive video here:
For more on the London 2012 Olympics:
Alex Morgan, Women’s Soccer Star, Looks Forward To London
EXCLUSIVE: U.S. Olympic Volleyball Player Linsey Berg Is ‘Honored’ To Be Named Captain
EXCLUSIVE: U.S. Olympic Diver David Boudia On London And Thomas Finchum
EXCLUSIVE: U.S. Olympic Gymnast Jordyn Wieber On Training For London Games
PROFILE: The Audacity Of Hope Solo
U.S. Olympic Goalkeeper Hope Solo Fails Drug Test, Issued Warning
Alex Morgan, Women’s Soccer Star, Looks Forward To London
Who Got Kicked Off ‘Dancing With The Stars’?
EXCLUSIVE: U.S. Olympic Swimmer Brendan Hansen Lost His Olympic Gold Medal
The Phelps Family Reflects On Michael Phelps’ Olympic Career
Daniel Craig To Open Olympics At Buckingham Palace
Uinterview | News: Lolo Jones Qualifies For London Olympic Games
Uinterview | News: LISTEN: Muse Song ‘Survival’ Chosen As Official Song For London Games
Michael Phelps To Retire After London Games
Is Michael Phelps’ Rival, Ryan Lochte, Finding Love On The Water?
Ryan Lochte Beats Michael Phelps At World Championships
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