NANTERRE, France — American swimmers added plenty to the U.S. medal count Monday night, just not the ones they most wanted.
Katie Grimes and Emma Weyant stood side by side on the Paris podium. Ryan Murphy picked up the seventh medal of his illustrious career. And Luke Hobson earned his first in a stirring race.
But none of them were gold.
In a way, it felt like a changing of the guard, especially when Murphy could only manage a bronze and longtime breaststroke stalwart Lilly King was edged out of a medal by a mere hundredth of a second.
''We have a lot of people who have been doing this for a long time, the absolute legends of the sport,'' Murphy said. ''All the young people that are winning would say they look up to them.''
Grimes and Weyant could celebrate knowing nobody was going to catch 17-year-old Canadian Summer McIntosh in her dominant 400-meter individual medley victory.
''Just so happy to be back on the podium, it's been kind of a long three years for me,'' Weyant said. ''So just getting back up there with a teammate means the world.''
McIntosh touched in 4 minutes, 27.71 seconds to capture Olympic gold in commanding fashion. Grimes finished second in 4:33.40 for silver and Weyant earned bronze with a 4:33.93.