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  • Singapore isn't known for being a sporting nation

  • and a lot of people said we'll never win

  • the Olympic gold medal.

  • This 21-year-old Singaporean,

  • Joseph Schooling, what a superstar.

  • History might come in the form

  • of Singapore's Joseph Schooling.

  • Everyone knows the Olympics is the biggest thing.

  • This young man, he has a very strong sense

  • of history and legacy.

  • It takes a tough, courageous person

  • to handle that pressure.

  • Everyone is watching

  • and that's the pinnacle for athletes.

  • He's been so impressive, and now he finds himself

  • in the fastest lane.

  • Keep your nerves, keep composed.

  • Now the scene is set.

  • And having to execute

  • everything that I trained for...

  • ..that was probably the biggest moment in my life.

  • (GAME BREAKERS)

  • (JOSEPH SCHOOLING - SINGAPORE)

  • (GOLD MEDAL 100M BUTTERFLY DOB - 16 JUNE 1995)

  • My name is Joseph Schooling.

  • Growing up in Singapore, I used to live

  • on the east coast, close to the beach.

  • I had my first competition when I was four

  • and it was little 25-meter races.

  • I think I bagged, like, ten medals.

  • I didn't know what that meant at that point.

  • You see all these parents going nuts. It's kind of funny.

  • I loved racing.

  • And from a young age, had that feeling,

  • hated to lose.

  • He was a happy baby, very happy baby,

  • very easy to look after.

  • He loved the water.

  • Every holiday we'd go, it's, like,

  • he stays in the water.

  • It happened in her hometown.

  • He was about eight years old

  • and 4:30 in the morning, he woke me up.

  • I say, "What's happening, son?"

  • He said, "I've gotta go for training."

  • I say, "You gotta go for what?"

  • For an eight-year-old to wake you up

  • at 4:30 in the morning, that is special.

  • Very special.

  • And then I took him seriously.

  • Every meet that he swam was documented.

  • You could see a pattern, how he was advancing.

  • Then every year, I would put the times

  • he had to achieve, target that I put him

  • against American 4As, Triple As,

  • then the Malaysian record,

  • the Singapore junior records,

  • the school records, his PBs, and his goal.

  • (COLIN'S RECORDS OF JOSEPH'S SWIMMING)

  • (CONVINCED THE GOVERNMENT TO GRANT JOSEPH)

  • (AN UNPRECEDENTED DEFERMENT OF THE TWO-YEAR MILITARY SERVICE)

  • (REQUIREED OF ALL SINGAPOREAN MALES.)

  • (THIS ALLOWED JOSEPH TO CONTINUE)

  • (HIS ATHLETIC DEVELOPMENT UNINTERRUPTED.)

  • Singapore, because it's a young nation,

  • they were concentrating on building the country.

  • We don't have enough competitions.

  • I needed to go to a different level

  • of training to improve myself.

  • And the only way to do that, you know,

  • was to go overseas.

  • My dad hosted the US Olympic team in 2008.

  • Before they went to Beijing, they stopped over in Singapore.

  • Every coach he asked pointed to Bolles

  • in Jacksonville, Florida, under Sergio Lopez.

  • It was definitely a little intimidating,

  • coming from a smaller country.

  • That was the first time I'd been to the US,

  • first time away from my parents.

  • Honestly, I hated it, my first year.

  • Just hated it.

  • But for a 13-year-old kid, I was in boarding school.

  • I was a little spoiled in Singapore as a kid.

  • Never had to pick up after myself,

  • never had to do dishes, laundry, that kind of things.

  • It was a huge awakening.

  • And it taught me to mature real quick.

  • Taught me to grow up.

  • Not every parent can afford this kind of thing.

  • I sacrificed my business.

  • But that's my choice, it was nobody else's choice.

  • I don't want to be the richest man in the cemetery.

  • It was difficult.

  • We only have one son.

  • Always I ask him, "So, you want to come back?" "No."

  • He might cry, he might whine, but, "No, Mom.

  • "If I come back, I'm not going to get to the Olympics."

  • That was his standard.

  • I wanted to make an Olympic final.

  • I wanted to be top eight and I thought I could,

  • especially in that 200 fly.

  • I can still remember walking into that call room.

  • Michael's in my heat, 200 fly.

  • I looked up, he was just looking right at me,

  • and you know, for a 17-year-old kid

  • to see Michael Phelps staring him down,

  • that was definitely something.

  • I had lofty expectations for myself.

  • I did some really good training up to then.

  • I think that was the most disappointing part.

  • (MINUTES BEFORE THE RACE, JOSEPH WAS INFORMED BY RACE)

  • (OFFICIALS THAT HIS SWIM CAP AND GOGGLES DID NOT MEET BRAND)

  • (REGULATIONS. HE HAD TO FIND REPLACEMENT GEAR TO COMPETE.)

  • (THE FIASCO DEALT A MENTAL BLOW TO THE 17-YEAR-OLD.)

  • I thought it was going to be the end of the world

  • and I started panicking.

  • And once you start panicking, you lose track of things.

  • You lose focus.

  • And everything goes down from there.

  • That was probably one of the most horrible experiences

  • of my life up till now.

  • I guess I wasn't old enough

  • and I wasn't experienced enough

  • to put that behind me

  • and continue doing what I was going to do.

  • For the next six months,

  • I was, you know, in and out of it.

  • I didn't want to swim any more.

  • I didn't want to go through it.

  • I wasn't focused at all.

  • I remember falling down.

  • I think I broke my ankle.

  • So, things like that.

  • I'm glad I could have great people around me

  • to dig me out of that hole.

  • Sergio, after a while, got pretty mad

  • that I wasn't bouncing back from it.

  • I remember, it was Thanksgiving in 2012.

  • We had a huge falling-out, we didn't speak to each other

  • for a couple weeks.

  • And I think that was when my wake-up call came.

  • In hindsight,

  • I'd say experience would be the biggest thing

  • that I was lacking.

  • But I'm glad it happened.

  • It helped me mature as an athlete and a person.

  • Those are the kind of setbacks we need sometimes

  • to find out what we're really made of.

  • To say, all right, if you really want to do this,

  • put it behind you, start moving on.

  • The clock resets every four years.

  • By the time I arrived in 2016,

  • I'd been to every major games there is

  • and I raced against everyone that I competed

  • in the Olympic final.

  • So I knew what to expect.

  • Actually, we were planning not to go.

  • We said, "We'll watch you from home."

  • Of course, my son says,

  • "Mom, I'm going on the podium. You're not coming?"

  • That's how confident he was. Can you imagine?

  • I'll tell you something.

  • 20 minutes before he swam,

  • Straits Times interviewed me.

  • "What would you wish to say to Joseph?"

  • I would tell Joseph to stun the world.

  • Just stun it.

  • And that I love you, that's all.

  • I still remember how it felt before the 100 fly final.

  • Four years of work coming down to this one moment.

  • There were so many feelings,

  • the combination of being anxious,

  • being nervous, excited.

  • Very emotional.

  • Singapore stopped.

  • Even my friends WHO were playing golf,

  • they all stopped and went to view it

  • on their hand phone.

  • And then the schools had it shown.

  • Factories stopped work so that their workers can watch.

  • - Singapore stopped. - Literally.

  • Take your mark.

  • Schooling's reaction time's the best by far of everyone

  • and he starts well again.

  • Schooling's looking good

  • and right on that world record time.

  • He's transferred the form that he showed

  • in the heats into the semifinals

  • and into the final.

  • And he's a body-length clear, almost.

  • Can he hold on?

  • We were hoping to see history in the pool.

  • But we are, history, because Singapore

  • has won an Olympic gold medal

  • and an Olympic record time.

  • Joseph Schooling, simply sensational.

  • I was overjoyed for him.

  • You couldn't have written a better story, you know?

  • Greatest Olympian of all time exiting and you beat him.

  • A three-way tie at the end.

  • It was a very touching moment.

  • First time we see our national anthem

  • being sang at the Olympics.

  • That was really...

  • That touched my heart.

  • And so did my fellow Singaporeans.

  • A lot of them...

  • ..were very emotional.

  • It was so surreal.

  • We arrived, like, 5am in the morning.

  • The whole Changi Airport was full of people.

  • There were people everywhere.

  • He was in the papers everywhere.

  • The response that I got back home

  • was a better feeling than winning.

  • It was definitely an emotional roller-coaster ride,

  • coming back for all the festivities.

  • On the deck, we called him the King of Singapore,

  • the Prince of Singapore, just to mess with him

  • because we knew...

  • We knew he was a celebrity, but we didn't know, like,

  • the gravity or the magnitude of it.

  • And then when we hit, when we touched down

  • in Singapore, you know, there was people

  • that ushered him from this place to that place,

  • you know, get his bags, bodyguards, everything.

  • He was like a movie star.

  • I didn't think the reception would be as huge as it was.

  • It was that nuts, because something like that

  • has never happened before.

  • It's great to see huge support pouring in,

  • not only from the government, but from the people.

  • Previously, we haven't been a sporting nation at all.

  • So, to see this glimmer of hope

  • for the sporting scene in Singapore, I think,

  • that's excited a lot of people.

  • And they're doing everything they can

  • to help more people get to that point.

  • I think he's really shown that culture

  • that you don't have to be a doctor, a lawyer,

  • or a successful businessman, you know.

  • There's success outside of those mediums.

  • And he's achieved it to the fullest extent.

  • An Olympic gold medal for such a young country,

  • it's incredible.

  • (AUSTIN, TEXAS)

  • (AFTER RIO, JOSEPH RETURNED TO THE US TO TRAIN UNDER COACH)

  • (EDDIE REESE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS, AUSTIN,

  • (WHERE HE'D BEEN ENROLLED SINCE 2014.)

  • After Rio, and after he won, and set the Olympic record,

  • he had accomplished all his life goals.

  • He had to reset more goals.

  • And we didn't catch that until first semester

  • was almost gone.

  • He had a rough first semester, getting back into work.

  • But if you can imagine, at age 20,

  • your life goals in the sport of swimming

  • have been answered.

  • Olympic gold medal, Olympic record,

  • I mean, that's unheard of, because he had never

  • even finaled in the Olympics.

  • And he just stepped up, qualified first

  • after the heats, first after the semifinals.

  • I was scared to death, and then he won.

  • And so that's been the main thrust,

  • trying to get over that and get back in the...

  • If you want to get better, you gotta work harder.

  • His parents have been positive with him,

  • and I think that may be the most important thing

  • that parents could do or should do.

  • You gotta get it somewhere

  • so that you keep striving to get better.

  • And May and Colin are excellent at that.

  • I always tell him,

  • "Whatever you do, you're doing for yourself.

  • "It's not for me." You just have to support them.

  • - That's what we did. - There's no fixed formulation.

  • It's a sacrifice that you've got to be willing to make.

  • We were lucky, because Joseph

  • met some of the best coaches in the world.

  • Sergio Lopez was a coach that was good for development.

  • And then Eddie Reese brought him to another level.

  • All I want to do is get him to go faster.

  • If I can do that,

  • that'll take care of everything else.

  • And he's nowhere near as fast as he can go.

  • My love for racing

  • is the biggest reason why I get out of bed in the morning.

  • I hate practice, I'm not going to lie,

  • but I know that if I want to get to that point,

  • I'm going to do whatever it takes to be the best.

  • I'm looking forward to starting this new part of my life

  • and trying to inspire as many people as I can

  • to do things that previously thought they couldn't do.

Singapore isn't known for being a sporting nation

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