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Michael
Phelps may not have matched Mark Spitz's record seven gold medals, but
the Olympic swimmer has him beat hands-down when it comes to style.
The
19-year-old -- who won six gold and two bronze medals at last month's Olympic
games in Athens -- set tongues wagging when he competed in Speedos that
rode down so low on his hips they made Britney Spears' outfits seem demure
by comparison.
Which
begs the question -- just how do those trunks stay up when he's
swimming at mach speed?
"They're
pretty form-fitting so there's really no fear of them slipping off his
body," says Craig Brommers, Speedo's vice president of marketing. "The
fabric is a lycra/nylon combo. I wouldn't suggest that the average Joe
swimmer wear them that low, because it does take getting used to. But Phelps
likes them."
Laughing,
he adds, "It certainly created a buzz among female spectators."
Um,
yeah.
The
teenage girls attending "Disney's Swim With the Stars" tour have been screaming
as much for the way Phelps and fellow Olympians Ian Crocker and Lenny Krayzelburg
look as for their awesome abilities. The tour makes a stop tonight for
two sold-out shows at the John B. Norris Recreation Center in west suburban
St. Charles.
Aesthetics
aside, there's a reason why the swimmers at Athens only wore traditional
briefs (like the kind Spitz wore at the 1972 Olympics) during warm-ups
and preliminary races. The technologically advanced material used today
allows swimmers to go faster the more their body is covered -- with the
right material, that is. Speedo -- which supplies Phelps' swimwear -- creates
suits with V-shaped dermal denticles to mimic sharkskin so water flows
over the body more efficiently.
Brommers
points out that while Phelps and his teammates choose to wear their suits
down low on their hips, the more discreet recreational swimmer can wear
the same suit with the waistband pulled up higher.
But
before you run out and get a pair, remember that while you can buy high-end
Speedos (which range from $180 to $400), duplicating Phelps' physique is
a whole different story. |