Sports
Huntington Beach Swimmer Tom Shields Seeking Spot on U.S. Olympic Team Today
Tom Shields, a Huntington Beach, CA swimmer, is seeking a spot on the Team USA Olympic Swim Team in men's 200 meter butterfly today.

Huntington Beach, CA--Three Orange County swimmers are seeking their spots on the U.S. Olympic team at the Omaha, Nebraska Olympic trials.
Tom Shields of Huntington Beach had the third fastest semifinal time Tuesday in the men's 200 meter butterfly, one minute, 56.35 seconds, finishing second in his heat. Shields lowered his time from his preliminary swim earlier Tuesday by 1.61 seconds to improve from 12th place to third.
Shields, who will turn 25 on July 11, is competing in his third Olympic trials. His best finish was fourth in the 100 butterfly in 2012 in a race when the top two finishers qualified for the Olympics. Shields swims 7,000 meters or yards -- nearly four miles -- a day, six days a week. He began swimming when he was 8 years old in an effort to be safe in pools.
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Shields graduated from Edison High School in 2009, the year he was selected as the National High School Swimmer of the Year. Shields swam four years for California, winning six NCAA individual championships and one in a relay.


McLaughlin, who will turn 19 on July 9, fractured two vertebrae in her lower neck in a beach accident in January diving into the Pacific Ocean while on a training trip to Hawaii with her California teammates. She graduated from Santa Margarita Catholic High School in 2015.
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The winners of the 200 butterfly and 200 individual medley are guaranteed spots on the Olympic team, while the second-place finishers will likely be added later in the week, pending swimmers qualifying in multiple events.
The top four finishers in the 200 freestyle will officially be added to the Olympic roster today, with the fifth- and sixth-place finishers will likely be added later in the week, pending swimmers qualifying in multiple events.
Additional 200 freestyle swimmers are needed for the Olympics to comprise the 800 freestyle relay team.
As a side-note, if eighteen-time Olympic gold medalist Michael Phelps, who turns 31 Thursday, wins the final, he would qualify for his fifth Olympic games, a first among U.S. male swimmers.
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