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Missy Franklin: 'Olympic delay creates level playing field'

The five-time Olympic champion had to retire at the age of 23 due to injury.

American swimming superstar Missy Franklin shares the pain of those athletes who have been forced to put their dreams of glory at Tokyo 2020 on hold.

The five-time Olympic champion is still haunted by her enforced retirement at the age of just 23 in 2018 due to a shoulder injury – wrecking her own hopes of becoming the most decorated female swimmer of all time.

Franklin told laureus.com: "I never expected that my career was going to be over at 23. I never wanted it to be.

Missy Franklin
Missy Franklin believes the Tokyo 2020 delay could help new stars emerge (Tony Marshall/PA)

"My ultimate goal was to be the most decorated female Olympic swimmer of all time, and I didn't get that.

"That was something that from the moment I stepped on to the Olympic stage in London, I really, really believed I could do.

"It makes a dream and a goal even harder to lose, when you really, truly believe that you can do it, and you don't."

The 17-year-old Franklin was seen as a potential future history-maker when she swept to four gold medals at the London 2012 Olympics, but injury meant she was unable to repeat the feat in Rio, settling for a single relay gold.

Injuries wrecked Missy Franklin's hopes of more Olympic glory (Laureus)

Franklin believes the new generation of swimming greats will also face significant challenges after the one year Olympic delay due to the coronavirus pandemic.

She added: "Every athlete from every country in the world is going to have to deal with this.

"There is not one country or one group of athletes that is going to have an advantage. It's going to be a level playing field on day one of the Olympic Games in Tokyo '21.

"Sport is sport and you never know what is going to happen in a year. Look at Katie Ledecky in 2012. No one knew who she was in March, and she won a gold medal in August. Then she went on to become the Katie Ledecky we all know."

Franklin, a Laureus Academy member is currently sitting out the coronavirus lockdown with her husband Hayes Johnson in their home near Denver, Colorado.

She added: "What's hard is when you're really close to your loved ones and you can't hug them, that's a really weird feeling to have.

"I'm going to take away so much gratitude for every hug that I get with my parents for the rest of my life."

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Philip Hindes pictured in 2016
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Olympic medal table header
CountryGold medalSilver MedalBronze MedalT
ChinaChina1671033
JapanJapan154625
United StatesUnited States14161141
Olympics flagOlympic Athletes from Russia912930
AustraliaAustralia921122
Great BritainGreat Britain58821
Today's Olympic highlights header

Friday's key events


ATHLETICS
· The athletics schedule begins, with 100m sprinter Dina Asher-Smith among the names in action on the opening day. The men's 10,000m final concludes the action, with Team GB's Sam Atkin and Marc Scott taking part in the absence of 2012 and 2016 champion Sir Mo Farah (1am-2.30pm)

ROWING
· Victoria Thornley is Team GB's representative in the women's single sculls final (1.33am)
· Great Britain will be going for gold in the men's eight final (2.25am)

SWIMMING
· Team GB duo Molly Renshaw and Abbie Wood take part in the women's 200m breaststroke final, but new Olympic record-holder Tatjana Schoenmaker of South Africa is the hot favourite (2.41am)
· Luke Greenbank has very realistic ambitions of picking up a medal in the men's 200m backstroke final (2.50am)
· There is also British representation in the women's 100m freestyle final, although any medal for Anna Hopkin would be a surprise (2.59am)
· With one gold and one silver already under his belt at these Games, Duncan Scott goes again in the men's 200m individual medley final (3.16am)

TRAMPOLINE
· Bryony Page will be looking to repeat her 2016 heroics in the women's event (5am-7.30pm)

CANOE SLALOM
· Bradley Forbes-Cryans will be looking to emulate Rio gold medallist Joe Clarke in the men's kayak event (6am-9am)

FOOTBALL
· The women's tournament enters the quarter-finals, with Great Britain facing Australia at the Ibaraki Kashima Stadium (10am)

> Today's schedule in full
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