15 Years Ago! Jason Lezak and the Greatest Relay Performance in History (Video)

Jason Lezak
Photo Courtesy: Peter H. Bick

On This Date: Jason Lezak And His Beijing Anchor For The Ages (Video)

When Jason Lezak entered the water for the United States on the anchor leg of the United States’ 400 freestyle relay at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, the race was seemingly over. On August 11, Lezak trailed Frenchman Alain Bernard by a body length and overcoming that deficit appeared impossible. But Lezak, behind the greatest anchor leg in history, gradually reeled in Bernard to give the United States an improbable gold medal. 

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History will remember Jason Lezak as an accomplished sprint freestyler, one of the better produced in those events over the past few decades. He’ll be remembered as an individual Olympic medalist, a lengthy journey leading the native Southern Californian to that status. He’ll also be remembered for a shortfall on the Olympic stage, the Athens Games of 2004 hardly memorable.

More than anything, though, Lezak will be remembered for what he managed to accomplish in less than 47 seconds on the morning of August 11, 2008. Putting together what is inarguably the greatest relay performance in the history of the sport, Lezak carried the United States to the gold medal in the 400 freestyle relay. It sounds so simple. It was anything but an easy task.

At the Olympics in Sydney, Lezak was supposed to be part of a 400 freestyle relay which maintained the United States’ legacy in the event. Never before had the U.S., the dominant swim nation in the world, lost the event at an Olympic Games in which it competed. It was perfect, 7-for-7. Claiming gold medal No. 8 was just a formality, right? Wrong.

Racing against an Australian quartet fueled by 17,000 spectators cheering on the home team, the American streak came to a sudden and jolting halt. As anchormen Ian Thorpe and Gary Hall Jr. approached the wall for the finish, the outcome remained in doubt. But when the final result flashed onto the scoreboard, there it was: Gold for Australia, and the end of American supremacy.

Lezak managed a gold medal in Sydney in the 400 medley relay, a reward for swimming the freestyle leg of the United States’ preliminary team. However, Olympic pain again struck four years later. Again, Lezak was able to win gold in the 400 medley relay, this time handling the anchor leg for the United States in the championship final. But what preceded that success was difficult to swallow.

Early in the meet, the United States watched its chance of regaining the 400 freestyle relay title die a painful death. A horrid leadoff leg by Ian Crocker buried the U.S. from the start and while the middle legs were solid, Lezak was passed in the final meters for the silver medal by the Netherlands’ Pieter van den Hoogenband. The United States, in Lezak’s two Olympic appearances in the event, had gone from perfect to silver to bronze.

And the worst was still to come.

Having set the American record in the 100 freestyle at the United States Olympic Trials in Long Beach, California, Lezak was among the top medal contenders in Athens. If he couldn’t stay with van den Hoogenband, the reigning champion and world-record holder, he surely would get in for the silver or bronze. Instead, Lezak bombed completely, unable to advance beyond the preliminaries. It was akin to Tiger Woods – at the top of his game – firing rounds of 83-84 at the Masters and missing the cut by an abysmal margin.

Lezak had no one to blame but himself. There was no illness to cite, nor a botched start or turn. Lezak simply misjudged the swim, thinking he could ease off the accelerator and still cruise into the semifinal round. If there is a place to not make that kind of error, it’s at the Olympic Games.

“I just didn’t swim my race smart, and I paid for it,” said Lezak, stating the obvious.

By the time the 2008 Olympics in Beijing were ready to unfold, Lezak had overcome the disappointments of Athens. He finished fourth in the 100 freestyle at the 2005 World Championships and placed fifth in the 100 freestyle at the 2007 World Championships. Along the way, there were additional gold medals in relay duty, including triumphs in the 400 free relay at each of the aforementioned World Champs. In part due to Lezak, the United States was on the cusp of regaining Olympic glory in an event it once owned.

Despite the United States’ recent success in international action, the road to Olympic redemption was not going to be free of obstacles. Looming largely – both figuratively and literally – was France. Not only had the French posted impressive times throughout the year, they went into the final with what was supposed to be a trump card in anchor Alain Bernard. From a muscular standpoint, Bernard could have doubled for the Incredible Hulk, and he was also the world-record holder in the 100 freestyle. If he had the lead going into the final leg, the race was over.

So confident was Bernard that he engaged in some trash-talking in the days leading up to the 400 freestyle relay. Of an impending matchup with the Americans, Bernard didn’t mince words.

“The Americans?” Bernard asked rhetorically. “We’re going to smash them. That’s what we came here for.”

Not surprisingly, the French commentary didn’t sit well in the American camp. The quartet of Michael Phelps, Garrett Weber-Gale, Cullen Jones and Lezak used the foreign bravado as motivation. For Phelps, it was a common strategy. For years, Phelps used slights – perceived or otherwise – to ignite his competitive fire. Now, he was sharing that tactic with teammates.

The Water Cube was electric as the relay finalists were introduced just before the final and the United States used that energy to bolt to the lead at the midway point. While Phelps led off with an American-record performance, Weber-Gale was equally strong. That tandem provided the U.S. with a cushion of .43 over France. It was an advantage which quickly disappeared. With Frenchman Fred Bousquet splitting 46.63 on the third leg, to the 47.65 of Jones, France had turned its deficit into a lead of .59. And with Bernard on the end of the French relay, few thought Lezak would get the job done. That group included Lezak himself.

“The thought really entered my mind for a split second,” Lezak said. “There’s no way.”

More than a half-second after Bernard entered the water, Lezak flew off the blocks. He flailed through the water like had never done before, producing a superb first lap. Yet, as Bernard and Lezak flipped for the final 50 meters home, Lezak still trailed by a noticeable margin. With 25 meters left, Lezak was still noticeably behind. But that’s when the race started to change.

In a tactical error, Bernard was racing on the left side of his lane. That decision was a faulty one as it allowed Lezak, swimming on the right side of his lane, to get a draft off the Frenchman. With each stroke, Lezak cut into the lead of Bernard and a slam-dunk victory for France became more and more in doubt. Dan Hicks and Rowdy Gaines, the NBC duo calling the swimming action, had to reverse field on their call that Lezak simply couldn’t pull off such a huge comeback. Then again, no one in the venue thought Lezak could track down Bernard. Well…

“I was just thinking to myself, if there’s anyone on this team or in the world that is going to do it, it was going to be Jason,” Weber-Gale said.

With a few meters to go, it still appeared France would earn the gold medal. But as Bernard and Lezak lunged for the wall and stretched their arms out to activate the touchpad, it was Lezak who got there first. Thanks to an epic anchor leg, officially in the books at 46.06, the United States prevailed by eight hundredths of a second. The American team – the relay which won and teammates in the athletes’ section of the stands – erupted. Phelps flexed on deck, hugs were shared and Lezak was fondly patted on the head. In the adjacent lane, Bernard was crestfallen.

No one had ever come close to splitting 46.06 before, and Lezak needed every bit of that swim to send the Americans to the top step of the medals podium. In the United States, where swimming is generally an afterthought on the sporting landscape, the victory became one of the biggest stories of the day. It was only the second final of eight for Phelps during his quest to break Mark Spitz’s record of seven gold medals in a single Olympiad, but it turned out to be a major moment in Phelps’ history-making week.

“It would have to be in the unbelievable category,” said United States head coach Eddie Reese, regarded as one of the world’s best in his profession. “That’s the biggest word I know. It had to be the best ever and it was the best ever. That’s the kind of anchor you dream of. When you put the world-record holder in on the end of a relay and you go into the pool behind him, the chance of you beating him is slim and none. There’s never been (something like that) in my memory – not running down somebody that holds a world record and that’s on their game. That was incredible.”

Part of the reason for Lezak’s comeback was the mentality of atoning for his previous two Olympic experiences in the 400 freestyle relay. He looked at his relay leg in parts, rather than as an overwhelming chore. He needed to chisel away, which is exactly how his leg unfolded. Basically, Lezak was perfect and used all 100 of his meters to come out on top.

“I started thinking, ‘This guy is pretty far ahead, almost a body length. But I’m not going to give up. This is doable,’” Lezak said in analyzing the race. “I really never think at all. My best races, I’ve never remembered. Today, I was talking and talking to myself.”

Just how remarkable was Lezak’s tracking down of Bernard? Three days after the final of the 400 freestyle relay, Bernard recovered from his emotional devastation to win the gold medal in the 100 freestyle. Some argue that Bernard choked under the pressure of anchoring his country at a critical time. But a choke artist does not come back and flourish like Bernard did in the 100 free, which is widely considered the blue-ribbon event in the sport.

No, Lezak simply rose to the occasion like no relay swimmer before him, or since. The 400 freestyle relay had been an albatross, and Lezak competed with the desire to rid himself of the burden of 2000 and 2004. Individually, he also walked away with a jubilant feeling. While Bernard won the gold medal, Lezak earned the first solo medal of his Olympic career, sharing the bronze medal in the 100 free with Brazil’s Cesar Cielo.

“I was obviously shooting for the gold medal, but just to win any medal, it feels really good,” Lezak said. “It feels like everything I’ve done over my career has paid off. The huge mistake I made four years ago by taking the preliminaries lightly has been eating at me. For me to go out there and accomplish that medal, I’m really excited. … Obviously it doesn’t top the relay from the other night, but it’s something that has really pushed me to swim the last four years.”

Photo Courtesy: Peter H. Bick

Lezak followed his heroics at the Beijing Games by narrowly qualifying for the 2012 Olympics in London. While he didn’t get the chance to race in another championship final, Lezak competed during the preliminaries of the 400 freestyle relay. When the United States won the silver medal in the final, Lezak earned the last of his eight Olympic medals. Ironically, it was France which captured the gold medal when Yannick Agnel channeled his inner Lezak and recorded a come-from-behind victory in the closing meters.

Shortly after the London Games, Lezak announced his retirement. As he bid farewell to the sport, Lezak fondly recalled the most special moment of his career, and perhaps the greatest race in swimming history.

“No matter how my individual performances went at Worlds, Olympics, and so on, I always wanted to step up on relays for the team and our country,” he said. “The 400 free relay was one of the greatest moments of my career. I was a part of six consecutive years (1999-2004) of losing that relay at international competitions after the USA had never lost before, which included two Olympics. It felt great to bring the title back to the USA.”

Jason Lezak was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame in 2019.

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Tony Mosca
3 years ago

The look on Bernard’s face when Jason smoked him is priceless! Greatest moment in USA Swimming History IMO.

mascalif
mascalif
1 year ago
Reply to  Tony Mosca

Agree. Never duplicated.

Dick Simpson
3 years ago

Never get tired of watching this!!

Nate Treanor
3 years ago

best race ever

Lisa Yeingst- Biggs
3 years ago

Favorite of all time

Tucker Rivera
3 years ago

I loved these angles

Danielle Nordlicht Allison

Gives me goose bumps every time I see it.

Brent Fletcher
3 years ago

My favorite race ever. The commentary helped this one too 🙂

Gigi I. Broadway
3 years ago

LOVE this video!!!!

Pat Kennedy
3 years ago

Without a doubt, one of the greatest swims of all time.

Gabe Wheeler
3 years ago

Yall should find the Bud Greenspan documentary about him and post that

Jim Avery
3 years ago

The race will live on for many generations

Carlos Lomba
3 years ago

Carlos Berrios Rivera

Carlos Berrios Rivera
3 years ago
Reply to  Carlos Lomba

Carlos Lomba el caballote!!! The real Draft King!!!!

Carlos Lomba
3 years ago

Fernando Delgado Sellas

Diane Pavelin
3 years ago

Actually, it might be a tie between him and Bruce Hayes anchor against Michael Gross in the 800 free relay at the 1984 Olympics.

Bjorn Samson
3 years ago
Reply to  Diane Pavelin

Ironic you mention this relay as I saw an interview with Hayes on the 25th anniversary in 2009 and there was a lot of comparison. Unlike Bernard though, Gross was a class act.

Dave Samuelsohn
Dave Samuelsohn
7 months ago
Reply to  Diane Pavelin

No doubt Jason’s leg will be long remembered. I don’t understand why Hayes’ often isn’t.

Alex Bader
3 years ago

Gabe Faulkner

Susan Huckeby
3 years ago

I love watching this race!!

Dave Horton
3 years ago

I have to agree with Diane

Bryan Keller
3 years ago

Jennifer Keller

Jody Dykes
3 years ago

I remember watching it live and watching this again is just as exciting!

Otto Blanco
3 years ago

“The Americans?” Bernard asked rhetorically. “We’re going to smash them. That’s what we came here for.” ??

Shawn Clark Sabo
3 years ago

Goosebumps Everytime!

John Ian Bobbitt
3 years ago

Wow… How do you double a former swimmers heart rate in 8 seconds while he’s in his car? Have him watch a replay of an Olympic freestyle relay.

Geez…i had to pull over and catch my breath.

Susan L. Lansbury
3 years ago

Yes!!!!! My hero! Greatest swim EVER

Rebecca Maccaro
3 years ago

This is awesome to rewatch!!

edwin pyle
edwin pyle
3 years ago

Super swim by an elder..34? And Jason’s split was 1.3 secs faster than his 3rd place 100 free..and, if I recall his relay start was down to 1/100 per electronic sensors?? I still wonder about drafting. Yes, helped…but only that last 25m …

Stephen Cornillie
3 years ago

I literally watch this about once a quarter. Just insane

Clark Bickling
3 years ago

Leave it to Lezak!! ??

Pablo Valedon
3 years ago

Goosebumps! Every single time I see this relay race!

Troyy
Troyy
3 years ago

I prefer the fastest textitle relay split ever by Duncan Scott even if the moment wasn’t as important.

Lisa Clark
3 years ago

Cool !!

Claudia Tsai Meu Chong

?

Ignacio Cruz
3 years ago

Amen!

Virginia Anne Diederich

Yes it was!

Ja Bounce
3 years ago

Body-length behind on exchange… Rowdy Gaines about see see FAST ACTING KARMA bite him… Michael Phelps CUSSING (LOL)! Storke count per 50’s 30-34!!! I still get Chicken Skin (aka Goosebumps) while watching this!

Dani Daniels
3 years ago

Honestly, I think it’s the greatest moment in swimming ever.

Mary Jane Carboni
3 years ago
Reply to  Dani Daniels

Dani Daniels I agree!

Favi Godfrey
3 years ago
Reply to  Dani Daniels

highly doubt there will ever be another epic swim, as historic as Lezak’s!

Darren Bodey
3 years ago
Reply to  Dani Daniels

Dani Daniels ???

Joel Lotzkar
3 years ago
Reply to  Dani Daniels

Darren Bodey Yep, that moment was better.

Dani Daniels
3 years ago
Reply to  Dani Daniels

Darren Bodey ?? dude. I’m not Australian, so I have to disagree. ?But Ian is still one of my fav swimmers.

Shawna Reed Stevens
3 years ago

Watching this relay never ever gets old!

Rich Davis
3 years ago

No doubt about it. And Phelps owes him big time. ??? 8 for 8.

Jennifer Harris Tolkachev

And my daughter tried to walk away with his medal. ??‍♀️?

Bill Thompson
3 years ago

Showed this footage to age groupers so many times. Greatest anchor.

Dan DiSalle
3 years ago

EPIC

Bob O'Connell
3 years ago

To watch it live was one of the greatest sports memories of my life.

Susie Bender Paul
3 years ago

Agreed!

Ann Laing West
3 years ago

Chills every time.

Wendy Griffin
3 years ago

My favorite race to watch over and over (well, my fav that doesn’t have my son in it lol)

Elizabeth Rising
3 years ago

This never gets old!

Grant Hayball
3 years ago

Greatest relay ever! Absolutely incredible!

Craig Gonzales
3 years ago
Reply to  Grant Hayball

Grant Hayball I still get goosebumps watching that last 25 meters haha

Maliha Hashmi
3 years ago

Can watch this over and over again❤️❤️❤️❤️

Jen Thompson
3 years ago

Seriously it’s the best race ever..

Pablo Valedon
3 years ago

The single most exciting and greatest relay anchor of all time!!??‍♂️?‍♀️!

Craig Lord
3 years ago
Reply to  Pablo Valedon

Barring Shirley Babashoff and teammates, 1976, from the realms of the ‘impossible’ but with much more at stake than pride … (there are a few others contenders down the decades, too 🙂

Kate Hauck
3 years ago
Reply to  Pablo Valedon

Pablo Valedon nah. Last year . Great Britain . Duncan Scott .

Pablo Valedon
3 years ago
Reply to  Pablo Valedon

Kate Hauck nope not a chance. There was lot more at stake and the French where talking smack. Be sides the anchor leg for France was suppose to be fast than Jason Lezak! His swim kept Phelps on track to 8 Gold medals.

Andrew Huerter
3 years ago

“I just don’t think he can do it, Dan”

Pablo Valedon
3 years ago
Reply to  Andrew Huerter

Andrew Huerter ? doubting Rowdy!

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