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Swimmers Ledecky and Bacon praised for how they represented the USA and their Catholic parish and schools at Tokyo Olympics

U.S. Olympic swimmer Katie Ledecky is seen swimming in the Women's 400-meter freestyle final at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre July 26, 2021, during the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. She earned a silver medal in that race. Ledecky won two gold medals and two silver medals in swimming at the Tokyo Olympics, and in three summer Olympics she is a 10-time medalist with seven gold medals. She is a graduate of Little Flower School and Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart in Bethesda, Maryland. (CNS photo/Antonio Bronic, Reuters)

After a week of historic and electrifying swimming events at the 2021 Tokyo Summer Olympics, local Catholic Olympians Katie Ledecky – winning two gold and two silver medals – and Phoebe Bacon, with a strong fifth place finish in the 200-meter backstroke, will return to their hometown having proudly represented their parish community, their schools and the USA.

 Both Olympic athletes attended Little Flower School in Bethesda, Maryland, and are alumnae of Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart in Bethesda. Stone Ridge hosted a July 19 pep rally for Ledecky, class of 2015, and Bacon, class of 2020, that drew hundreds of enthusiastic supporters. 

Three-time Olympian Ledecky, 24, now a 10-time Olympic medalist, is one of the most decorated female U.S. Olympians ever and also one of the most dominant female swimmers in history. 

In the women’s 1,500-meter freestyle swim on July 28, a first-time Olympic event, Ledecky swam into the history books as the race’s inaugural gold medal winner. For her final swim event on July 31, Ledecky continued her undefeated streak in the 800-meter freestyle race over the past 11 years, touching the wall at 8:12.57 and winning her seventh gold medal.

Katie Ledecky of the United States gets ready enter the pool for the women's 1500m freestyle final during the 2020 Tokyo Olympics on July 28, 2021. The 2015 graduate of the Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart in Bethesda, Maryland, won the gold medal in the Olympic debut of the event. (CNS photo/Marko Djurica, Reuters)

On July 26, Ledecky took silver in the 400-meter freestyle, and on July 29, she also took silver in the 4x200-meter freestyle relay. A 2020 graduate of Stanford University, Ledecky is a 14-time world record breaker in 400, 800 and 1,500-meter freestyle swimming races. 

Bacon, 18, a rising sophomore at the University of Wisconsin, was only .23 seconds from reaching the medal podium in her event, following a second place finish the day before in her semifinal heat. She holds the 2020 NCAA title in the 200-meter backstroke and is expected to continue training for future national and international competitions.

Phoebe Bacon swims in Omaha, Nebraska on June 18, 2021, during the U.S. Olympic Team Trials Swimming competition at CHI Health Center Omaha. She is a 2020 graduate of Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart in Bethesda, Maryland. (CNS photo/Rob Schumacher, USA TODAY Sports via Reuters)

“What a thrill it has been to watch Katie and Phoebe compete this week. Stone Ridge is incredibly proud of these alumnae athletes, not only for what they accomplish in the sport of swimming, but for the values and character they represent,” said Catherine Ronan Karrels, head of Stone Ridge School. “...I am so proud of how they both swam in these Olympic games and how they represented the USA.”

Sister Rosemaron Rynn, of the Congregation of the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary and the former principal of Little Flower School, said the parish and school communities are delighted with Ledecky’s and Bacon’s Olympic journeys and their overall fantastic achievements in their sport. 

“They got a lot of prayers...We are very proud of them. They are a credit to their families and a credit to Little Flower,” she said. “They are great role models and showed such good sportsmanship...They are really good people.”

Sister Rosemaron said she and the five other Immaculate Heart of Mary sisters who live in the Little Flower School convent were excited to tune in live to watch each swimming event and cheer for their former students – who years ago were “school buddies” at Little Flower and are now U.S. Olympic teammates. 

Prior to the Olympics, Sister Rosemaron said she and the sisters had fun sorting through old photographs of the Olympians as elementary school kids to share with NBC for their Olympic television coverage of the athletes.  “It was a real family affair,” said Sister Rosemaron, adding that she stayed in close touch with both families during their Olympics run. 

Katie Ledecky reached out to her former principal via e-mail on Aug. 2 after the swimming events in Tokyo had concluded. Ledecky wrote to Sister Rosemaron that she hopes to visit the sisters as soon as she returns to Bethesda in the coming weeks. In previous Catholic Standard interviews, Ledecky spoke of her deep Catholic faith and how the Immaculate Heart of Mary sisters who taught her at Little Flower School are her role models in the faith. 

“We are thrilled and pleased for both our daughters of the parish,” said Msgr. Peter Vaghi, pastor of Little Flower Parish, where the Bacon and Ledecky families are parishioners. He said the young athletes’ skill and dedication to their sport shone throughout the Olympic swimming events, but also in how they graciously and gracefully handled the media spotlight during world’s largest sporting event.

Rhyan White and Phoebe Bacon, at right, react in Omaha, Nebraska on June 19, 2021, after finishing first and second during the U.S. Olympic Team Trials Swimming competition at CHI Health Center Omaha. Bacon is a graduate of Little Flower School and Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart in Bethesda, Maryland. (CNS photo/Rob Schumacher, USA TODAY Sports via Reuters)

Following her 800-meter gold-medal winning race, Ledecky told NBC she planned to compete in the Paris Olympics in 2024 and possibly four years later at the Los Angeles games in 2028. “That was not my last swim. I’m at least going to ’24,” she said.

The next day on Twitter, Ledecky said, “Thank you Tokyo, and thank you all for the tremendous support this week and over the years! I could hear you all! Bringing 2 Golds, 2 Silvers, and countless memories back to the USA.”

In an Aug.1 Instagram post, Bacon expressed her thankfulness to be able to compete in the Tokyo Olympics, and hinted too at what’s in store for her in the future. “That’s all folks! I am so grateful to have had the honor of representing my country in the Olympics! Onto the next! #teamUSA,” she wrote.

“Katie and Phoebe are both true ambassadors of what it means to be a Stone Ridge student-athlete, and even more importantly a U.S. Olympic athlete,” said Stone Ridge athletic director Andrew Maguire, describing the young ladies as role models for future U.S. swimmers. 

“Katie and Phoebe have taken their humble and faith-based roots with them to this Olympic stage, and it has proven to serve them well,” he said. “I could not be more proud of them, and we cannot wait to welcome them back to campus in the future to share stories of their Olympic experience with our current students... Both will always be Stone Ridge Gators!”

 

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