Olympic Champ Tries Again - At 41
Four-Time Olympian Still In Swim Of Things - And Trying For A Fifth
-
Play CBS Video Video Older Olympian Makes Waves Most Olympians are considered over the hill by their mid-20s, but one swimmer is shattering that perception - and records. Kelly Cobiella reports.
-
(REUTERS)
-
Photo Essay Holding A Torch Beijing welcomes Olympic flame, kicks off longest-ever torch run with elaborate ceremony
-
Photo Essay Beijing Bash China celebrates one-year countdown to start of 2008 Olympic Games.
But Torres is not the "retiring" type. Twenty-four years after her first Olympic games, she's back in the swim again.
"You have nine Olympic medals. You have the records. I mean, you've done it all!" CBS News correspondent Kelly Cobiella said.
"I'm just selfish," Torres said. "No, I'm just kidding. You know, I get … asked that a lot. Like, why? Why are you doing this? And the best answer I can give is, 'because I can.'"
Torres is now prepping for an unprecedented fifth Olympic trials - a dream born in that community pool in Florida, where she swam to stay fit while carrying Tessa.
"These middle-aged men would start racing me, and I would look down at my belly and I'm like, 'do they not see that I have like six months of belly here?' or, 'what are they doing?'" she said.
It all stoked her competitive juices and at the U.S. Nationals last August, wearing goggles older than some of her teenaged competitors, Torres stunned everyone, including Torres.
"Torres! A new American record!" an announcer said.
That American record? It was one Torres herself set - eight years ago.
"And the first thing I thought was, 'wow, can I go faster? How do I get faster?'" she sid.
You might thing that because Torres is twice the age of her competitors, she has to do twice the work in the pool. Not true. She actually does half.
Most of her training is on dry land ... 90 minutes of grueling "core" exercises, twisting, pulling and hurling her body into shape.
It's an unconventional approach for an unconventional athlete.
Cobiella said to Julie Strupp, Torres' 23-year-old teammate, "she was in the Olympics before you were born."
"Looking at what she does in the weight room, outside the pool, in the pool, and she has a daughter - it's unbelievable what she does," Strupp said.
A little "too" unbelievable for some, who question whether a 41 year old can do all this without chemical help. Which is why Torres went to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency herself. To prove she can.
"I don't care," she said. "You can DNA test me, blood test me, urine test me. I'm an open book. Just test me so I can show people I'm doing this the right way."
The right way isn't the easy way … even for her.
"This is a big challenge for me," she said. "And I'm hoping that I can pave the way for other athletes or even everyday people who think they're too old to do something that they really wanna do."
Like perhaps win a little more jewelry, gold jewelry, for daughter Tessa.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- Oh and Dara. Kick their butts in the Olympic trials. We will be rooting for you.
- Reply to this comment
- Dara, what an inspiration you are to this 40 something. I am still active and competitive at 45. Not anything on the level she is. However I love the answer to the why question. "Because I can." She has also inspired my co-worker at age 42 to get back into competitive tennis. Great Story CBS.
- Reply to this comment
- Dara Torres is one hot lady. I mean HOT, HOT, HOTTIE HOT LADY!
- Reply to this comment
Mike Huckabee on GOP "rock stars," 2012, health care reform and more.




