BEVERLY HILLS, Calif: Michael Phelps is ready to put an up-and-down post-Olympic year behind him and focus on the challenges that await in 2010, including adjusting to a ban on the high-performance suits that rocked his sport.
Michael Phelps of the U.S. competes in the men's 200 metres individual heats at the swimming World Cup in Berlin, November 15, 2009. [Agencies]
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The 14-time Olympic gold medalist will compete in one final meet, Duel in the Pool on Dec 18-19 in Manchester, England, before closing out the year.
"The biggest thing right now is me getting back in shape," he said at Sunday night's Golden Goggle awards, where he collected two trophies.
In preparation for the Jan 1 ban on high-tech suits, Phelps wore an old-style suit, making him look even slower against his polyurethane-clad competition.
"In a way I'm kind of happy that happened, to light the fire a little bit more," he said. "That's something that's going to excite me."
Phelps donned the old-style, textile knee-length suit, trying to gain an advantage before the rest of the world returns to them. Still, losing every final he was in surprised some people but not him or coach Bob Bowman.
"I knew going over there I wasn't prepared. I wasn't in the kind of shape to go over there and break a record or let alone even win," he said.
"I'm fine with it. The big meets aren't in October, November. They're at the end of the summer."
The year began on a down note after a British tabloid published a photo of Phelps using a marijuana pipe, causing an uproar that didn't play well with some of his sponsors or his image as a role model for youngsters. USA Swimming suspended him for three months.
Phelps rebounded in July to win five golds and a silver at the World Championships in Rome. He was busy the next month too, injuring his ankle when his SUV was hit by a car that ran a red light and being challenged by Shaquille O'Neal in the pool, giving swimming a prime-time TV boost.
Upon returning home last week, Phelps shaved the beard he sported in Europe and returned to the kind of serious training that earned him a record eight gold medals at the Beijing Olympics.
"I haven't really been in the kind of pain that I was this last week but it's good for me," he said.
"This is my first real week where I've had decent training and been happy in the pool and wanted to work out. That's good and something that is definitely needed."