Home » Features » Swimmer says having ‘world’s best’ friends, family keeps her grounded

Swimmer says having ‘world’s best’ friends, family keeps her grounded

 

For swimmer Missy Franklin, a rising senior at Regis Jesuit High School in Aurora, “there is nothing like wearing a cap with my country’s flag on it.”

“I always remember, though, that I’m not just representing the U.S. but also my family, friends, team, school and Colorado.”

She made those comments early this year in a Q-and-A interview with the Denver Catholic Register, newspaper of the Denver Archdiocese.

That was before she earned a spot on the U.S. women’s Olympic swimming team, before she was a gold medalist.

Ranked first in the world in the 200 freestyle and 200 backstroke, first in the country in the 100 freestyle, and second in the 100 backstroke, she was at that point still some months away from the Olympic swim trials in Omaha, Neb. She had just set a record-breaking performance at the girls’ 5A Colorado championship swim meet in Fort Collins.

It would be an understatement to say a lot has happened to her since then. The youngest member of the women’s swimming team, the 6-foot-1 Franklin won the gold medal in the women’s 100 backstroke final Monday.

After her spectacular win, Washington Post reporter Janice D’Arcy called her “one of America’s new sweethearts” and said the teen “is rewriting the Olympic script” with the way she and her family have approached her training. Unlike so many athletes, Franklin has stayed with the same coach she has had since childhood and has remained part of her same swim club all these years, according to D’Arcy.

When it comes to her high school teammates at Regis, Franklin told the Register: “I love swimming with my Regis Jesuit sisters. I’m so proud of each and every one of them. Nick Frasersmith, my high school coach; and Todd Schmitz, my club coach, worked together so I could fit high school swimming into my training.”

Franklin started swimming competitively when she was 5 years old.

Asked how she has stayed grounded with all her success and the attention it has brought, Franklin said: “I have the best friends and family in the whole world.”

“I love being with them and having fun. My friends and I do all the usual high school activities including going to dances, out to see movies, and shopping,” she said.

At home, she and her parents, Richard and D.A. Franklin, “don’t talk about swimming, but enjoy just being together,” she said. The Franklin household includes Ruger, an 8-year-old Alaskan Malamute.

“We support each other and enjoy great family moments such as cuddling on the couch, in front of the fire, watching ‘The Sound of Music,’” she told the Register. “I have the best support system in the world.”

Franklin is not a Catholic, but she said life as a student at a Jesuit-run high school has her considering joining the church.

“My experiences at Regis Jesuit have absolutely impacted my spiritual life, in so many ways. I am considering converting to Catholicism; I’m currently Protestant,” she said.

“Going into Regis Jesuit, my faith was not a very big aspect of my life. Taking my first theology classes, going to my first Masses, going on my first retreats, I began to realize how important God is in my life and how much I love him and need him,” she continued. [more]

SOURCE

CNS

 
 
 
 

6 Comments

  1. Joanna says:

    The University of Notre Dame is not a Jesuit university. It is run by the Congregation of the Holy Cross.

  2. Nancy de Flon says:

    Considering the trashy, narcissistic “celebrities” that usually pollute the newswaves, it is very refreshing and inspiring to read about a young woman like this.

  3. James Francis says:

    All of us should pray for this wonderful young women that God’ graces bring her closer to him, Jesus, and Mary in his church. That would be a real gold medal.

  4. Joseph L. Bolea says:

    As a cradle Catholic, it’s been my experience that most converts make some of the best Catholics. They enter with a true love of the Church. Hopefully, Missy will continue here journey in to the Catholic Church.

  5. joe says:

    This is a great story very typical of the jesuit experience

    • Jim says:

      Joe — not really. Typical Jesuit instxtxtions such as Georgetown and Notre Dame lead people away from the truth.

 
 

Leave a Comment

 




 
 

 
 
 

Switch to our mobile site