Last night, Michael Phelps won his 10th and 11th gold medals at the Olympics, the most all-time. We talked a little about this yesterday, but I wanted to extend the conversation and do some polling. For my money, Carl Lewis remains the greatest Olympic champion of all time and personally, I'd much rather have his collection of nine gold medals than whatever Phelps's total ends up after these games.
Why? Because Lewis won some of the most glamorous gold medals one can win. He showed the ability to win a large number of medals at one Games and sustain his brilliance over the long haul.
Prior to Lewis, two of the biggest names in Olympic Track and Field history were Jesse Owens and Al Oerter. Owens won four Olympic gold medals in Berlin in 1936: the 100, 200, 4X100, and the long jump. The cultural significance was clear -- here was a black man winning four gold medals in front of Adolf Hitler, the ultimate White Supremacist (although sadly, there were plenty of those in Owens's homeland as well). Oerter is certainly less well known, but he achieved the stunning feat of winning the discus in four consecutive Olympics (1956, '60, '64 and '68). In each of those Games, he set an Olympic record.
Lewis basically did what both of these men did. At the 1984 Olympic Games, Lewis won the same four events that Owens won, setting an Olympic record in the 200 and a world record in the 4X100. At the 1988 Olympic Games, he won the 100 in world record time (although the later disqualified Ben Johnson hit the tape first) and the long jump, grabbing silver in the 200, while his relay team was disqualified because of a bad handoff.
In 1992, Lewis again won two gold medals in the long jump and the 4X100 meters, run in world record time, a record that still stands. In 1996, Lewis qualified for the long jump for fifth time (he was unable to go to the Olympics in 1980 due to the American boycott). He shocked the world by winning the gold medal, his fourth in the long jump at the age of 35 (Oerter was 32 when he won his fourth gold). Lewis has been somewhat of an unsympathetic figure, but his stunning achievements should not be forgotten. Indeed, Sports Illustrated named him Olympic Athlete of the Century and the International Olympic Committee named him Sportsman of the Century.
What Phelps has done is great, remarkable. But, there so many more swimming events and thus, opportunities to win gold. World records fall like dominoes in the sport. I personally watched about five or six swimmers break the existing world records in swimming just last night. In fact, one relay race in these Olympics saw five teams break the existing world record. Twice last night, a world record was set in preliminaries in the same event. Track and field world records are much harder to attain.
I also reject the idea that all Olympic gold medals are created equal. Is a trapshooting gold medal or a rhythmic gymnastics gold medal as impressive as winning the Decathalon? Didn't think so. The medals that Lewis won aren't just medals, they are some of the most glamorous medals an athlete can win at the games. I don't care if Phelps wins 8 at these games. He's not, in my opinion, in the same class as the incredible Carl Lewis and that's taking nothing away from Phelps. He's great. If he's still winning gold medals when he's 35 years old, then maybe we can talk. But for now, Lewis is still the greatest Olympic champion, ever, in my book.
Be sure to weigh in with your opinion and cast your vote.

Recent Letters to the Editor
In Response to Cup of Coffee: March 18, 2010,
brianS wrote: Yea, Marquette did me no favors.
davidwatts wrote: I was very disappointed that the Mankato CBS station went to the Marquette game instead of sticking to the UNI game and my bracket is done blown up!
meat wrote: Cc to Andrew: I'm suddenly going to be in Dublin for a short weekend this summer (late June), any suggestions would be good as to where to stay / eat drink / be Irish.
spookymilk wrote: Boy oh boy, would most of those references be lost on my...let's call them …
twayn wrote: Danke! Bummer that there's no radio for Friday's game with the Mets. Slowey vs. Johan.
Klawitter wrote: Working in Century City. Living for the moment in Westwood, at least until I sell my place in DC this spring and move everything.
New Britain Bo wrote: How's this for script idea: At a planning session for an … a committee of twelve Indians (4 dot, 4 feather, 4 West) hires a crack director to run their event. He shows up at…
DK wrote: I missed this earlier today since I was apparently too busy … in the Nightmare thread, but I'd be down with this too. In fact, I'd probably be willing to contribute to coverage.
Milt on Tilt wrote: I'm picking up my puppy tomorrow. I couldn't be more excited.
spookymilk wrote: Oh, and Rhu: one of my challenges in this week's Survivor game was to do a six-word evaluation of Lew Zealand. These were the … flinger never flounders for puns. Better than Belladonna with fish…
In Response to Nightmares at WGOMville,
hungry joe wrote: i wasn't planning on going out, but two heavies from my company were in town, and they took me out for a crazy night (got home at 2, and i've been hating life most of…
spookymilk wrote: I instantly love the person who took that photo, hungry man. I'm sitting here drinking Bass; yesterday I went the nostalgia route with my St. Pat's choice, opting for a drink that reminded me of college…
hungry joe wrote:
Milt on Tilt wrote: hehe. Beer.
spookymilk wrote: To be fair, drama is kind of the world I live in. I'm prone to exaggeration. Plus, I'm drunk because this script is making me tense and I needed to take the edge…
Milt on Tilt wrote: Yeah, man. I wouldn't "disregard" it either, because it was truly a horrifying move. Oh come now. That's just being completely over dramatic.
Milt on Tilt wrote: O-Cab lead the majors in Outs as a batter in 2009. Call me … Jimmy Rollins actually did. But Cabrera was second, and first in the AL. Even so. I could use that same…
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spookymilk wrote: Yeah, man. I wouldn't "disregard" it either, because it was truly a horrifying move. 0-Cab cleared the bases for the team's best hitter over and over. I know it's nice to remember…
DK wrote: O-Cab was a baseball band-aid over a severed limb. Acting like doing that was a "victory" is what seems foolish to me.
In Response to Luna - 23 Minutes In Brussels (Tell Me Do You Miss Me),
E-6 wrote: Love me some Luna.
In Response to Cup of Coffee: March 17, 2010,
brianS wrote: I dunno. But we're not really talking about a legal argument so much as an ethical one, I think.
Moss wrote: The old "you can't have your coke and snort it too" … can't get a conviction on a … test...and is possession of any amount of coke a felony??
hungry joe wrote: tell me about it...
brianS wrote: It is hard to consume if you do not possess.