U.S. Olympic swimmer Ryan Lochte apologized
Friday for his behavior surrounding an incident at a Rio de Janeiro gas
station, saying he should have been more "careful and candid" about
how he described what happened after a night of partying with his teammates.
But he didn't explain why he embellished
details of an encounter with armed security guards and called it a robbery, and
why he omitted to say that he and three teammates had vandalized a gas station
restroom.
"Regardless of the behavior of anyone else
that night, I should have been much more responsible in how I handled myself
and for that am sorry," Lochte said in a lengthy post on his Instagram
account. "This was a situation that could and should have been avoided. I
accept responsibility for my role in this happening and have learned some
valuable lessons."
Whatever they were, for now, he's keeping them
to himself.
The situation raises questions about the future
for Lochte, who is planning to take time off from swimming but wants to return
to compete in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Usually known for his party boy image
and love of the limelight, he now is facing a line of nervous sponsors, the
possibility of legal charges in Brazil and sanctions from USA Swimming and the
International Olympic Committee.
The robbery flap deeply hurt Brazilians, who
were eager to prove they could get street crime under control and host a safe
Olympics. And it overshadowed the efforts of U.S. Olympians, who have dominated
the medal count. Swimmers alone piled up 16 golds and 33 medals total at the
games.
Known for his outsized personality and regular
'bro' behavior, Lochte has always been about having fun. This is the guy who
gleefully admitted eating McDonald's three times a day while winning four
medals at the 2008 Beijing Games. For Rio, he dyed his dark hair white, not
realizing the pool's chlorine would turn it light green.
His memorable props — diamond grills on his
teeth on the medal podium, crazily colored high-tops, sunglasses bearing his
favorite made-up expression of "Jeah!" — and easygoing, goofy nature
has made him a popular and relatable star with the public and his teammates.
"I think that is why I do so many different
things with the hair, the grills, the crazy shoes," he said in Rio,
"It's just my personality coming out there."
Lochte's success led to his own 2013 reality TV
show called "What Would Ryan Lochte Do?" It had a short run and left
some viewers with the impression that its star was nothing more than a
good-looking dim bulb. Still, lines for his autograph sessions at meets
routinely stretch longer than anyone else's.
As hard as he plays, Lochte works hard, too.
His 12 Olympic medals are second only to Michael Phelps among U.S. male
Olympians.
This time Lochte was only a small part of the
show. He finished fifth in his only individual event and swam on the victorious
4x200-meter freestyle relay. Instead, the biggest memory of the 32-year-old
swimmer in Rio will be the grainy security video of him and teammates Gunnar
Bentz, Jack Conger and Jimmy Feigen exiting the gas station restroom and
sitting on the ground, some with hands up.
Like other pro swimmers, Lochte is reliant on
sponsors to foot his bills so he can focus on year-round training and travel to
meets without having to hold a regular job.
His sponsors, including Speedo, Ralph Lauren
and airweave premium bedding, have been in no hurry to cut ties with him,
though have said they are monitoring the situation.
The incident feeds a lot of American clich?s of
the bad-boy athlete, and while it was relatively minor, it is
"unsavory," says Thomas Ordahl, chief strategy officer at the brand
consulting firm Landor.
Ordahl believes it's probably a good idea for
companies to hold off on making decisions until the issue surrounding the
dispute is sorted out. But he suspects that eventually, sponsors will probably
drop Lochte.
"The truth is that there are enough
celebrities to be attached to without bringing that kind of baggage with
you," said Robert Passikoff, president and founder of the research firm
Brand Keys.
USA Swimming is expected to convene its
executive board to discuss likely punishment, as it did when Michael Phelps was
arrested for a second DUI two years ago. Technically, the four could be fined,
suspended or expelled. In the Phelps case, the board announced a week after the
arrest that it was suspending the sport's biggest star for six months, banning
him from competing in the 2015 world championships and taking away six months
of his funding stipend.
For Phelps, it was his third strike.
This is Lochte's first major gaffe, and
whatever sanctions the national governing body passes down could have little effect
on the professional swimmer. He's already said he plans to take the first
extensive break of his career following the Olympics and move from North
Carolina to California. A suspension could keep him out of next year's world
championships — often bereft of big stars following an Olympic year — and the
Arena Pro Swim Series, a five-meet circuit in the U.S. But that would hardly
impact Lochte should he decide to resume training for the 2020 games.
As for the other three, Feigen has indicated he
would retire after Rio and the 26-year-old is looking forward to attending law
school somewhere in Texas. He made a $10,800 payment to a Rio charity that
teaches martial arts to poor children after the incident, and his passport was
returned. He left Brazil Friday night.
Bentz and Conger stumbled just as they were
getting started on the international stage, so the repercussions could linger
longest with the Olympic rookies. They, along with Feigen, swam in preliminary
heats, and earned gold medals when their teammates won relays in the finals.
They returned home to the U.S. Friday.
Bentz will be a 20-year-old junior majoring in
business at Georgia this fall and Conger will be a 21-year-old senior majoring
in corporate communication at Texas. They remain amateurs and presumably will
continue their NCAA careers with their respective programs, which also could
hand out punishment.
What may take longer for everyone to forget is
how the four stole the spotlight.
"While we are thankful our athletes are
safe, we do not condone the lapse in judgment and conduct that led us to this
point," USA Swimming executive director Chuck Wielgus said. "It is
not representative of what is expected as Olympians, as Americans, as swimmers
and as individuals."
———
AP Retail Writer Anne D'Innocenzio in New York
and AP Sports Writer Stephen Wilson in Rio de Janeiro contributed to this
report.
url: http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory/american-swimmers-leave-rio-robbery-scandal-41505456
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