• The Gator Slant: New ChompTalk All-Sports Podcast Debuts in August

    ChompTalk.com to add another podcast this August

    The Gator Slant logo by Georgeanne Paris

    On the heels of the successful launch of football-based podcast, The Gridiron Growl Podcast, last year, ChompTalk.com has announced the formation of a new, All-(Gators)Sports podcast entitled The Gator Slant.

    The Gator Slant, co-hosted by Brian Fox, Jr. and Ryan Haley, will debut on Monday, August 2, and cover all Florida sports from football to lacrosse and everything in between. The show will be broadcast in a live video format (airing on YouTube and Facebook Live) each week and will be available on all traditional podcasting platforms including Spotify and Apple Podcasts the next morning.

    The success of The Gridiron Growl Podcast paved the way for the idea that a podcast covering all the action on campus was a necessity. The Gridiron Growl Podcast has been listened to nearly 10,000 times in its short history and is set to air its anniversary special episode in the coming week.

    Brian Fox, Jr. is the founder of ChompTalk and edits each article submitted to the website. He has covered each program for the website and looks forward to continuing to build the site and these two podcasts.

    Ryan Haley is a rising junior at UF studying journalism with a sports and media specialization. He covered men’s basketball for ChompTalk this past season and served as the assistant sports editor of the Independent Florida Alligator in Gainesville this summer.

    Check out the debut of The Gator Slant on August 2, 2021 at 8:00 PM. You can follow The Gator Slant on Twitter and all of your favorite podcast platforms.

    *Special thanks to Georgeanne Paris for designing the logo for The Gator Slant.

    *Also, special thanks to David Soderquist for all of his contributions to the ChompTalk team.

  • Report: Gators and Central Florida ‘Close’ to Football Series

    Photo by Frederick Breedon | Getty Images

    After years of hostility between the two programs, it appears that Florida and Central Florida will finally agree to a football series.

    The Orlando Sentinel’s Mike Bianchi was the first to report the story.

    Bianchi shares that the series is a two for one series meaning that Florida will host two games and travel to The Bounce House for one, something that was fought hard by the previous athletic director at UCF.

    The Gators are expected to host in 2024 and 2033 and will travel to Orlando in 2030.

    Shortly after the Knights’ undefeated season in 2017, then AD Danny White sought a series with Florida, but felt that anything but a 1-1 series was unfair to his program. Talks between the programs broke down ever since. Former Knights QB (and current FSU QB) McKenzie Milton even stated, “We’re the better program,” while scoffing at the notion of playing a two for one series against the Gators.

    Earlier this year, White took the AD position at Tennessee and UCF hired Terry Mohajir, who immediately opened the conversation with Scott Stricklin.

    Note: Tennessee has not offered UCF a 1-1 series.

    The two programs have met on the football field twice, with the Gators handily winning both games. The last meeting was in 2006, a 42-0 UF victory.

  • MLB Draft: Seven Gators Selected on Day 2
    Photo via SEC Media Portal

    The Gator signees stole the show in the first round of MLB Draft. But it was the Florida players who took the spotlight on second day. Seven Gators were taken for the lead among college selections through the first 10 rounds.

    After not hearing his name called Sunday night, Jud Fabian got the ball rolling for Florida Monday. The Boston Red Sox selected the Gator center fielder in the second round with the 40th overall pick. That’s definitely a slip from where he was projected for so long. But as the strikeout numbers rose, his stock likely fell because of it. However, the pick’s slot value sits at $1,856,700 but Fabian might sign over slot considering Boston has the sixth-highest bonus pool.

    Florida’s Friday night guy was the second Gator to go in Round 2 as the Cleveland Indians took Tommy Mace with the 69th pick. The Gator right-hander pitched to a 4.38 earned run average in 16 appearances with 113 strikeouts in 90.1 innings in 2021. MLB.com had him as the 45th overall prospect and noted how he made efforts to improve his entire four-pitch mix and showed it in 2021.

    Jake Fox was the only Gator signee selected on the second day of the draft. The Indians selected the Lakeland Christian shortstop at 95th overall in the third round. His slot value sits at over $610,000. Not only does he have a great name, but his bat’s garnered him plenty of attention. A great approach and fast hands to generate plenty of bat speed, Fox can also smash some extra-base hits. MLB.com comps him to current Gators infielder Colby Halter.

    The next Gator selected was slugger Nathan Hickey. Hickey chose Florida after going undrafted out of high school in 2019. So, he worked his way up to be selected in the fifth round and 136th overall. The pick’s valued at $410,000. MLB.com mentions how he raised his offensive profile and it is likely what will carry him to the big leagues as he’s viewed with a Kyle Schwarber-like trajectory.

    Christian Scott went six picks later at 142 to the New York Mets. A reliable presence coming out of the bullpen, Florida relied on Scott a lot as the starting pitching and sometimes other relievers ran into trouble several times in 2021. And he projects as a bullpen guy too at the next level. He’s a fastball-slider pitcher with plenty of ability to miss bats but does own a curve and changeup too.

    The Washington Nationals then selected Gator left fielder Jacob Young at pick 203 in the seventh round. The Florida leadoff man, and one of Kevin O’Sullivan’s most consistent bats, can spray the ball all over the field. He’s definitely a throwback kind of player as the three-year Gator showed nothing but hustle on the diamond. He could play center if he doesn’t stay in left but some even think he could play second base like he did in 2019.

    And apparently there must be some law about drafting Gator pitchers together. Logan Shore and AJ Puk to Oakland, Brady Singer and Jackson Kowar to Kansas City and now Tommy Mace and Jack Leftwich to Cleveland. The Indians took Leftwich at 216 overall. A fourth-year junior, Leftwich saw himself moved to the bullpen after struggling as a starter and effectively became the Gator closer and a great multi-inning reliever. His fastball sits at 94-96 mph and that deadly slider (which could be an absolute weapon if he can get it over for strikes) will play as he’s seen to likely continue his days a bullpen arm.

    Franco Alemán rounded out the Gators’ day as evidently Cleveland decided to take its third Gator pitcher. After stints with FIU and St. Johns River State College, the 6-foot-6-inch righty was projected as a late-inning, high-leverage reliever for Florida in 2021. But, as he and the starting rotation had their issues, Alemán found himself as the Sunday starter. He owns a nice sinker but opted for four seamers up in the zone and more velocity. MLB.com says “While Alemán throws hard, his fastball has had a tendency to get hit up in the zone because he doesn’t command the pitch well enough, leading some to think he might need to go to the sinker, which still can get ground balls, more at the next level, where he could be a sinker-slider type reliever.”

    The final day of the MLB Draft starts at noon on Tueday. From there, it’ll finish off with rounds 11-20.

  • MLB Draft: Three Florida Signees Selected in First 30 Picks

    Photo via SEC Media Portal

    It wasn’t the best night possible for Florida head coach Kevin O’Sullivan, but it was likely better than expected by most pundits.

    The opening night of the MLB Draft saw three Gators signees selected in the first thirty picks, but none of those three were expected to make it to Gainesville.

    The night could have been worse, but CF Jud Fabian went undrafted in the opening round, leaving the possibility that he may return to UF open.

    RHP Andrew Painter was the first of Florida’s signees to be drafted as the Philadelphia Phillies selected the Fort Lauderdale, FL native with the No. 13 overall pick. Painter has four plus pitches and was never expected to go the college route.

    Fireballer Chase Petty was taken at No. 26 overall by the Minnesota Twins. In his senior year, the RHP from New Jersey struck out 99 batters in just 48.2 IP. He has regularly clocked at 100+ mph.

    Fort Pierce, FL outfielder Jay Allen was the final player with a UF connection taken as he was drafted No. 30 overall by the Cincinnati Reds. Allen was a three-sport star in high school and has the potential to be a five-tool player at the next level.

    Over the next two days, the draft will go on for 19 more rounds and a number of Gators (and signees) are likely to hear their names called.

    Gators:

    • Jud Fabian, OF
    • Tommy Mace, RHP
    • Nathan Hickey, C
    • Jack Leftwich, RHP
    • Christian Scott, RHP
    • Franco Aleman, RHP
    • Jacob Young, OF

    Signees:

    • Michael Robertson, OF
    • Philip Abner, LHP
    • Karl Hartman, RHP
    • Jac Caglianone, LHP
    • Rene Lastres, C
    • Jake Fox, SS
    • Brandon Neely, RHP
  • Several Gators Ranked Among MLB’s Top 250 Draft Prospects

    Photo via SEC Media Portal

    The MLB Draft is set to get underway on Sunday at 7 PM and several Gators (and signees) are hoping to hear their name called over the course of the three day event.

    The following Gators players and signees are ranked in the MLB’s Top 250 prospect rankings.

    #18 Andrew Painter (signee), RHP

    • Fort Lauderdale, FL
    • 6’7, 225 lbs
    • Fastball 94-97 mph
    • Also equipped with change-up, slider, curve
    • Mocked at #13 to Philadelphia

    #23 Jud Fabian, OF

    • Draft eligible sophomore
    • 6’2, 190 lbs
    • Slashed .249 / .364 / .560
    • 20 HR, 46 RBI
    • Mocked at #29 to Los Angeles Dodgers

    #27 Chase Petty (signee), RHP

    • Somers Point, NJ
    • 6’1, 200 lbs
    • Fastball up to 101 mph
    • Also equipped with slider and change-up

    #33 Jay Allen (signee), OF

    • Fort Pierce, FL
    • 6’3, 190 lb
    • Slashed .357 / .491 / .571 in senior season
    • Big arm in OF

    #45 Tommy Mace, RHP

    • 6’6, 230 lbs
    • Plus fastball, up to 96 mph
    • 6-2, 4.38 ERA, 113 K, 21 BB in 2021
    • Mocked late first-early second round

    #93 Michael Robertson (signee), OF

    • Venice, FL
    • Bats: L / Throws R

    #116 Philip Abner (signee), LHP

    • Charlotte, NC
    • Fastball up to 95 mph

    #141 Nathan Hickey, C

    • Draft eligible freshman
    • .317, 9 HR, 50 RBI in 2021

    #156 Jack Leftwich, RHP

    • 6’4, 220 lbs
    • 7-4, 3.36 ERA in 2021

    #163 Karl Hartman (signee), RHP

    • Rockledge, FL
    • 6’4, 222 lbs

    #175 Jac Caglianone (signee), LHP

    • Plant, FL
    • 6’5, 217 lbs

    #185 Rene Lastres (signee), C

    • Fort Lauderdale, FL
    • 6’3 205 lbs

    #198 Jake Fox (signee), SS

    • Lakeland, FL
    • 6’0, 185 lbs

    #205 Brandon Neely (signee), RHP

    • Spruce Creek, FL
    • 6’3, 200 lbs

    #228 Christian Scott, RHP

    • 6’4, 215 lbs
    • 4-2, 3.00 ERA

    #243 Franco Aleman, RHP

    • 6’6, 235 lbs
    • 2-4, 5.74 ERA
  • M/WBB: Gators To Participate in Inaugural Jumpman Invitational in 2022

    Photo by Michael Hickey | Getty Images

    Florida’s men’s and women’s basketball programs will compete in the inaugural run of the Jumpman Invitational in December 2022.

    The holiday tournament will include the four original schools signed to Jordan Brand apparel deals: North Carolina, Michigan, Oklahoma, and Florida.

    The first event will take place in Charlotte, NC on December 20-21, 2022. The event is currently scheduled for three years with all four teams set to square off against each other over that timeframe.

    The possibility exists that other Jordan-affiliated schools can join the tournament in the future.

  • WGYM: Wong, DiCello Named as Alternates for the U.S. Olympic Team
    Photo by Carmen Mandato | Getty Images

    The Olympic Trials process has concluded for all disciplines of gymnastics, and two future Gators have been named as alternates to the women’s artistic gymnastics team: incoming freshman Leanne Wong and five-star 2022 commit Kayla DiCello! Both will travel to Tokyo with the team, and though they will train separately, current USAG plans have them staying in the same accommodations as the team, which has not been the case in the past and may present a problem if COVID-19 become a factor.

    On the off chance they are called up to compete, both Wong and DiCello are strong all-arounders that could make the AA final depending on who they were called upon to replace. Both had one miss apiece over the two-day competition, Wong on beam and DiCello on bars, but both showed floor scores that have event final potential as well – again, depending on which other Americans were competing. That qualifier is necessary, unfortunately, because international elite competitions like the Olympics have a “two per country” rule, where only two competitors from each nation are allowed to qualify to a final, thus preventing a full podium sweep from any country. If Wong or DiCello were called in in a non-COVID-related replacement situation, it would be very possible that they could be left out of an AA or FX final because they would have two higher-placing teammates. Below are Wong and DiCello’s best floor performances from the weekend.

    This is Wong’s floor at Nationals, as the video of her Trials routine has been taken down from YouTube.

    Still, Wong and DiCello both earned their places on the replacement team for their merit as all-arounders, as National High Performance Director Tom Forster merely took the top 9 athletes in the all-around standings to compose the team and replacements. If a COVID-related situation were to necessitate a quarantine of the full team but not the alternates, these future Gators would be called upon as the top two all-arounders on the replacement team to hopefully qualify to the all-around final, though their fellow replacement athletes Kara Eaker and Emma Malabuyo are very close behind them in terms of scoring potential.

    As it stands now, the report is that Wong will come to Gainesville in January, potentially in order to make a run at the 2021 World Championships, which the FIG chose not to postpone when the Olympics were moved to this year. With Biles likely focusing on her tour and then retiring, Jordan Chiles taking part in Biles’s Gold Over America tour throughout the fall, Sunisa Lee and Grace McCallum also headed to NCAA this coming season, and Mykayla Skinner’s stating that her body needs a rest after Tokyo, it’s possible that Wong could go into World selections as the top-ranked all-arounder in the U.S, which would make her a strong contender for the first World AA title in a post-Biles gymnastics world.

    DiCello still has until the 2023 season before she dons the Orange and Blue, so it’s likely she will also make a run at the 2021 World Championships, as well as potentially 2022. With such a large class of athletes going to college, it’s entirely possible she could also become the first new U.S. national champion since Ragan Smith in 2017. Of the Olympic delegation, both competitive athletes and alternates, she may be the only one still competing once 2022 rolls around. Chiles, Lee, McCallum, Carey, Wong, Eaker, and Malabuyo are all headed to NCAA, and it’s likely Biles will retire. Mykayla Skinner, however, just announced that she will not be returning to Utah for her senior year, but the wording in her announcement was a little unclear regarding her status in elite going forward, so whether she is competition for DiCello going forward is, as of now, unknown.

    Overall, the future looks bright for both Wong and DiCello, and it sounds as though they both have gas left in the tank for more accolades in elite gymnastics before making the transition to college. While we look forward to their years as Gators as potentially some of the most talented and dominant in Florida Gymnastics history, we can’t wait to see what they do on their elite journey until then.

  • MBB: Colin Castleton announces return to Florida
    Photo by Maddie Meyer | Getty Images

    Florida’s frontcourt solidified Sunday when forward Colin Castleton announced he would return to Gainesville for another year via Twitter.

    The former Michigan Wolverine transferred to UF ahead of the 2020-21 season and made an immediate impact in the SEC with 12.4 points and 6.4 rebounds per game on his way to a second-team All-SEC selection.

    Castleton amassed three double-doubles, including both of Florida’s games in the NCAA Tournament, and four 20-point games. He led the Gators in rebounds and blocks (2.3 per game).

    A two-time SEC Player of the Week, Castleton won the award on January 4 after a pair of 20-point games against Vanderbilt and LSU to open conference play. He won the award again February 1 after a 21-point, seven-rebound, five-block performance pushed the Gators to a road win over No. 11 West Virginia.

    Castleton declared for the NBA Draft after the season, but retained his NCAA eligibility. His 25.8 minutes per game a year ago rank second among returning Gators, and he expects to feature heavily in Florida starting lineups again in 2021-22.

  • The Gridiron Growl Podcast: Hot on the recruiting trail with Conner Clarke

    Check out the latest episode of The Gridiron Growl Podcast as David Soderquist and Brian Fox are joined by Rivals’ GatorsTerritory.com recruiting enthusiast Conner Clarke.

    The trio discuss some of the premier recruits Florida football has its eyes on, including defensive lineman Walter Nolen, as well as breaking down some of the program’s commitments in the past month.

    Then, Jake Hitt and Ryan Haley join the discussion to talk about the impending name, image and likeness legislation, which goes into effect on July 1, and speculate on which Florida athletes might make deals.

    Jake, Brian and Ryan also talk about the College World Series as NC State was forced to forfeit after a COVID-19 outbreak within the team, the possibility of such changes carrying over into the football season and some alternative ideas for the College Football Playoff to avoid such a dilemma, including another playoff bubble.

    Finally, the trio discusses former Gator athletes representing their countries in Tokyo this summer at the Olympic Games, including Caeleb Dressel’s march to swimming history, Grant Holloway scaring hurdles world records and more.

    The Gridiron Growl also approaches it’s one-year anniversary soon! Head to Twitter @gridiron_growl to learn more about the podcast’s anniversary giveaway.

    Click play on the following audio player to listen to this week’s episode of The Gridiron Growl Podcast:

    You can also follow The Gridiron Growl Podcast on the following platforms:

  • One final swim — Ryan Lochte comes up short in Olympic shot after years of controversy
    Photo by Tom Pennington | Getty Images

    Ryan Lochte gazed across the pool at CHI Health Center in Omaha, Nebraska, his arms resting on the lane lines. His black goggles still sat over his eyes and his matching swim cap atop his head as the final results sprawled across the screen.

    1 minute, 59.67 seconds. In the 200-meter individual medley, the event which gifted Lochte a trio of Olympic medals and in which he still holds the world record for both long and short courses, the 36-year-old was more than two seconds too slow.

    The second-most decorated Olympic swimmer of all time, Lochte’s pursuit of gold medals may have ended on June 18 in that pool in Omaha, but his many accolades still lie wrapped in a cloud of controversy the former Gator may never outrace.

    Lochte, a Daytona Beach, Florida, native, joined the UF swim team in 2002 as a four-time individual Florida Class 3A state champion at Spruce Creek High School, taking the crown in the 200-yard and 500-yard freestyle twice each. A freestyle and IM specialist, Lochte readied for his first season under coach Gregg Troy.

    Lochte’s freshman year exceeded any expectations his high school resume could have offered. In his first campaign with the orange and blue, he took home SEC Freshman Swimmer of the Year honors. He won SEC Swimmer of the Week in January, was the high-point scorer at the conference championship with 57 points and captured a pair of individual conference wins in the 1,650-yard freestyle and the 400-yard individual medley, the first of three consecutive SEC victories in the latter event.

    He ended his debut as an All-American and a First Team All-SEC member, honors he would be bestowed with all four years at Florida.

    The following year, Lochte won his first national championship in the 400-yard individual medley, a further harbinger for future IM dominance. The star swimmer, across his four years carving through the water in The Swamp, walked away from UF swimming with nine individual conference titles, six individual national titles, and a trio of NCAA records, including the 100-yard backstroke, 200-yard IM and the 400-yard IM. He won SEC Swimmer of the Year and NCAA Swimmer of the Year both of his final two seasons in Gainesville.

    After his 2003-2004 sophomore campaign, however, Lochte began to break out on the international stage as well. He qualified for the 2004 Athens Olympics as a 19-year-old in the 200-meter individual medley and as a member of the 4×200-meter freestyle relay. He turned 20 two weeks before the competitions and took home medals in both events, teaming with Michael Phelps, Peter Vanderkaay and Klete Keller to take home the relay gold before finishing second to Phelps in the medley.

    Lochte’s career blossomed from that week in Greece onward. He held five short course world records between 2006 and 2012, including the 100-meter, 200-meter and 400-meter individual medley and the 100-meter and 200-meter backstroke. His 200-meter short course IM record stands to this day. He set a long course world record in the 200-meter IM at the 2011 World Championships as well, the first world record set after the full-body swimsuit ban.

    Lochte’s most notable success came from his triumphs bearing the stars and stripes. The 6-foot-2 Olympic stalwart won 10 more medals on sport’s biggest stage between the 2008, 2012 and 2016 Olympics, including six total golds. His 12 medals are second-most among male swimmers, trailing only Phelps’ staggering 28. He helped bring home the 4×200-meter freestyle relay gold in four straight games and topped the podium alone in the 2008 200-meter backstroke and the 2012 400-meter individual medley.

    Lochte’s personality out of the pool brought him crossover appeal to the general public as well, partly stemming from his eyebrow-raising Twitter presence. He guest-starred as a parody of himself in an episode of NBC’s “30 Rock” in 2012 and landed an appearance in the CW’s 90210 that same year. National Public Radio described the swimmer as the “platonic ideal of bro-dom” in 2013, and he starred in his own reality TV show, “What Would Ryan Lochte Do,” for a season that same year.

    However, the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio began the start of the second chapter of Lochte’s career, one less defined by his internet persona and in-pool excellence, but rather one riddled with tension and the specter of controversy.

    Five days after Lochte earned his fourth consecutive gold in the 4×200-meter freestyle relay, on August 14, 2016, the Floridian swimmer said he and three of his teammates were robbed at gunpoint in Rio de Janeiro. The American star said the athletes were stopped in their taxis by men who flashed badges, but as the days crept by, Brazilian police refuted Lochte’s report.

    Civil Police chief Fernando Veloso said there wasn’t a robbery committed, but rather the USA athletes vandalized a bathroom and damaged property at the gas station, and any gun involved was a legal weapon used by a security guard. In a span of four days, Lochte went from the victim of an international incident to a liar and a perpetrator.

    While further investigation cast Veloso’s account into doubt as well, Lochte said later in an interview he had been drunk and embellished his account of the night’s events.

    Lochte apologized and USA Swimming suspended him from international and domestic competition for 10 months. Speedo, Ralph Lauren, Airweave and Gentle Hair Remover all dropped their sponsorship of Lochte in response to his behavior. Darren Rovell tweeted that Lochte lost about $1 million dollars of endorsement deals in a single day.

    “Lochtegate”, as the event was colloquially called, came to define the 2016 Rio Olympics and Lochte’s career. In a sport with very little crossover mainstream interest, all of the former Gators’ NCAA titles and world championships washed away in a few sentences, an exaggerated account of a night out.

    It wasn’t the end of Lochte’s legal issues, either. In 2018, the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) handed him a 14-month suspension from competition after he violated anti-doping legislation for failing to get a Therapeutic Use Exemption before he received an intravenous infusion of over 100 milliliters within a 12-hour period.

    Lochte posted a photo of the injection on his Instagram, which he swiftly deleted, and though the substance he used wasn’t banned, he accepted the suspension. An ESPN story cited him as the third athlete suspended for such an offense in the USADA database and the first year-long swimming suspension levied out in over a decade.  

    “I know it sounds like a harsh penalty for something unintentional and where I didn’t put anything prohibited in my body,” Lochte said in a statement accepting the suspension, “but a rule is a rule and I accept that there is a technical violation…I am hoping other athletes will learn from my mistake and be mindful of this rule.”

    By the end of the suspension in July 2019, Lochte had been suspended from competition for 24 of the previous 35 months dating back to the 2016 Olympics.

    Lochte’s troubles took a grounded turn in October 2018, when he entered a rehab program to help with alcohol addiction. Police had responded to a California hotel where he reportedly attempted to kick down his door after locking himself out. In an interview with The Guardian, Lochte admitted he was heading down a dark path and saw a dangerous pattern in his behavior.

    Lochte’s focus on the 2020 Olympics never wavered, and though he had to wait an extra year to do so, the 36-year-old finally got his last gasp at Olympic glory in that Omaha pool. One race stood between him and the ability to end his international career with a proper note rather than a whiff.

    He got his chance in the 200-meter IM. He’d grabbed silver in the event twice, in 2004 and 2012, and a bronze in 2008, the only individual event he’d medaled in three times, not to mention four consecutive world championships from 2012-2015. Lochte couldn’t have asked for a better event to make his final run at glory.

    With only the top two finishers in the final heat advancing to the Tokyo Games later this summer, Lochte never had the pace. While Michael Andrew flirted with the one world record Lochte still holds, 1.16 seconds ahead of pace entering the final 50 meters, Lochte hung near the back of the pack and finished seventh of the final eight contestants.

    Andrew didn’t break Lochte’s world record in Omaha, but it felt symbolic seeing Lochte chase his own world record line from several seconds behind. In a sport which so few men can, Lochte couldn’t fend off Father Time again, and his dream of rewriting the end of his Olympic career came to pass.

    Despite the weight of the expected end of a legendary Olympic legacy, Lochte didn’t seem melancholic about his future. With his children Caiden and Liv in attendance, whom he embraced on-camera after his semifinal performance, an older Lochte viewed the time to come in a different light.

    “This ain’t the end of the road,” Lochte said in an interview after the race.

    Lochte expanded upon what he envisions for himself in an Instagram post he shared on June 24 on the steps of Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in the heart of his alma mater’s campus. Lochte thanked his family and fans for their support throughout his career, and while he may not represent the stars and stripes on the global stage again, he feels he has more to offer the sport.

    “I’m not done, I’m not retiring,” Lochte said. “There’s so much more I want to do in the sport of swimming whether it’s in the pool or outside of the pool, trying to grow the sport because of the love and passion that I have.”

    “I want to put swimming in people’s living rooms all the time, so I’m still going to be doing that, I’m still going to be in the sport and I’m still going to be trying to teach kids how to swim.”

    Lochte’s vows and promises in his video expose the flaw of examining his legacy in 2021 — it isn’t complete. From his first day as a Florida Gator to the steps of Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in June, Lochte’s summitted the highest peaks and explored the deepest valleys the sport has to offer, his successes and failures coming at his own hand.

    The lasting impact he leaves on swimming as a whole, however, remains to be seen. He won’t get the chance to end his Olympic career on different terms, and he might never escape the controversy from that fateful night in Rio.

    In his own words, however, he isn’t done. His final Olympic trial may have ended a chapter of his life, but it didn’t end the book, a sentiment he emphasized after his final race in Omaha.

    “There’s a lot more I want to accomplish in the sport of swimming,” Lochte said.