By
BETH HARRIS AP Sports Writer
MESA, Ariz. (AP) - Michael Phelps is aiming to compete in a fifth
Olympics next year in Rio, although the 18-time Olympic champion won't
swim in the world championships this summer.
Phelps confirmed his intention to make one last run at the Olympics on Wednesday.
"You
guys heard it here first," he told reporters at Skyline Aquatic Center,
where he will be competing in his first meet since serving a six-month
suspension by USA Swimming after a second drunken driving arrest last
fall. "I am looking forward to next year. I don't think it's too hard to
really realize why I came back."
But Phelps said he won't be
swimming at the world meet in Russia in August as part of the punishment
set forth by the sport's U.S. governing body. He had already qualified
in three events before being banned from the last major international
meet before the Rio de Janeiro Olympics.
"I really enjoy being on
those trips," he said. "That's why it is painful to think that I won't
have the chance to compete at worlds."
There had been informal
discussions about Phelps being reinstated to the U.S. team for worlds,
but it would have meant removing swimmers that were named to the team in
his absence.
"By no means do I want this to be a distraction
from the team," he said. "No way would I ever want to displace a member
of that team."
Phelps is back in Arizona, where he attended 45
days of inpatient alcohol rehabilitation after being arrested on DUI
charges in his hometown of Baltimore last September. He offered no
specifics about his treatment, which he continued in Maryland. He also
enrolled in Alcoholics Anonymous.
"The last couple of months have
probably been the hardest I've ever had to go through in my entire
life," he said. "I take full responsibility for all of my actions. I've
hurt a lot of people and it's been terrible."
The 29-year-old
swimmer was sentenced to 18 months of probation. He said he's done more
growing up in recent months than he has in his entire life.
"I
have been able to come out on a better end, have a clear head," he said.
"I don't think I've ever been like this once in my life."
Phelps'
longtime coach, Bob Bowman, acknowledged his star swimmer's second
arrest for drunken driving made it "pretty hard to convince me that
anything was going to lead us back to something that we'd be proud of."
Phelps
called Bowman a few times from rehab, which the coach described as
"really weird" because he typically never heard from Phelps away from
the pool. Bowman visited Phelps during treatment, still skeptical that
the swimmer was there for any reason other than he had to be. But Bowman
left thinking differently.
"I just had no doubt that he had
changed in a way that was really meaningful," Bowman said. "He was
completely different and it's been that way every day since he's been
back."
Phelps pleaded guilty after his first drunken driving
arrest in 2004. Five years later, a photo was published of him using a
marijuana pipe at a party, which drew a three-month suspension and
caused some sponsors to drop him.
Phelps knows not everyone will believe he's contrite and has changed.
"If
somebody doesn't believe the words that are coming out of my mouth
that's their choice," he said. "I, of course, would like to show
everybody in the world that I am in a different place and I am much
better than I ever have been. I understand that's going to take a lot of
time. This week will be the first week that I can start that."
Phelps
will be competing in Mesa for the first time since the Pan Pacific
Championships last August. The Arizona meet was where Phelps made his
comeback a year ago after an extended retirement following the 2012
Olympics.
He isn't sure what to expect, having only recently
returned to the kind of hard training he did before the 2008 Beijing
Games, where he won a record eight gold medals. Phelps is falling back
on the mentality he used for much of his career.
"I would just
get up and swim as hard as I could and leave it in the water," he said.
"That's what I'm going to do here. I know I'm more prepared now than I
was at this time last year."
His first event is the 100-meter butterfly on Thursday, when he'll compete against longtime rival Ryan Lochte.
Phelps is surrounding himself with familiar faces this week, including his fiancee Nicole Johnson and family members.
"I'm
a lot happier and in a lot better state and in a lot better physical
shape than I really have been in a long time," he said.
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