TOKYO – Katie Ledecky won gold, and cried.
Erica Sullivan won silver, and laughed.
In the inaugural Olympic 1,500-meter freestyle, Ledecky won her first gold in Tokyo in her third try, holding off Sullivan, her American teammate, who put on a ferocious surge over the second half of the race.
Sullivan finished and saw Ledecky joyfully smacking the water. "Honestly, I didn't realize I got second until I saw her," Sullivan said. "I thought, oh, she must have done something really good. Then I looked up and said, 'Oh, I did something really good!' "
Sullivan laughed, just as she had when asked if she focused on Ledecky's feet during the race.
"I saw her wake," Sullivan said. "I've never actually seen Katie's feet in a race unless I'm severely out too fast. I saw her little splash, which is more than enough for me."
Ledecky finished in 15 minutes, 41.41 seconds, with Sullivan 4 seconds behind.
Ledecky has spent an uncommon amount of time during this Olympics in the proximity of others' feet. The world's dominant woman swimmer entering Tokyo, she finished second in the 400 freestyle to Australian phenom Ariarne Titmus, then finished fifth in the 200 freestyle as Titmus won again.