INDIANAPOLIS — The U.S. Olympic swimming trials will make a splash on their grandest stage yet — a temporary pool inside the massive domed stadium that is home to the NFL's Indianapolis Colts.
The powerhouse American team will be determined over the nine-day, prime-time competition, which starts Saturday at Lucas Oil Stadium with the spotlight on Katie Ledecky and her quest for a fourth trip to the Summer Games.
As usual, there are plenty of compelling storylines at a meet that many swimmers find more nerve-wracking than the actual Olympics. And the massive venue only adds to the feeling that this is the Super Bowl of swimming.
''I'm excited. It's going to be different, for sure," said Jack Aikins, a University of Virginia swimmer who will be attempting to make the team in the backstroke.
Aikins will be competing with his face up at Lucas Oil Stadium, which should provide the best view in the place.
''Nobody else but the backstrokers really get to experience how massive it is,'' he said. ''Everyone else is staring down at the black line on the bottom of the pool except for us. We really get to witness everything while we race.''
In a sign of how much the trials have grown, this will be the first time the meet has been held in Indianapolis since 2000 — when a then-unknown swimmer named Michael Phelps qualified for his Olympic debut.
That year, the trials were held at the 4,700-seat Indiana University Natatorium. The set-up at Lucas Oil Stadium can accommodate as many as 32,000 fans, which would be the largest crowds ever to attend an indoor swim meet.