Michael Phelps BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Michael Phelps has been unusually vocal and visible in the past few days, and he’s making headlines far beyond the pool. The most significant development comes from Phelps’ public condemnation of USA Swimming’s leadership after their disappointing showing at the 2025 World Championships. Posting on Instagram just days ago, Phelps pointedly described current leadership as weak and claimed the organization is growing more dysfunctional each year. He reminisced about Team USA’s dominance in Rio, lamented the recent downturn—especially noting the drop from winning 57 percent of possible medals in 2016 to just 44 percent in Paris last summer—and called for urgent reforms, stating “money is a factor, but poor operational controls and weak leadership are a cornerstone of the sport’s problems.” He even admitted personal unease imagining his four young sons joining a sport now plagued by lackluster support, which adds a poignant, personal edge to his critique. USA Swimming responded swiftly, expressing respect for Phelps but disappointment in the timing and public nature of his comments. The organization emphasized illness among athletes in Singapore and defended the strategic leadership of its newly appointed national team managing director Greg Meehan, while also inviting Phelps and other alumni to engage officially.
Business-wise, Phelps remains active. He continues to offer leadership and technique lessons through The Skills, an LA-based digital education platform which just closed a $5 million seed round to expand its curriculum with athlete-designed courses. Phelps is one of its star instructors, teaching everything from mental resilience under pressure to sports fundamentals according to dot.LA.
On the celebrity circuit, speculation has been swirling about Phelps possibly being featured on People Magazine’s Sexiest Man Alive list for 2025, which is being revealed on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon this week. There’s no confirmation yet, but his name is in serious contention according to The Squawk.
Social media lit up when Baltimore Ravens players Marlon Humphrey, Ronnie Stanley, Kyle Hamilton and Charlie Kolar publicly asked Phelps to come to training camp and teach them how to swim. According to AOL, Phelps responded enthusiastically, promising “I got y’all!!! Let’s do it!!” This playful moment quickly went viral, reinforcing Phelps’ enduring ties to his hometown and his mission to reduce drownings through swim education.
Phelps also marked Men’s Mental Health Month with a strongly worded Instagram post urging men to be open about emotions, trauma, and recovery. Sportskeeda highlights how Phelps, who’s been open about his own journey from suicidal ideation to therapy, is now using his platform to promote breaking mental health stigmas. He continues to teach mindfulness and coping techniques at home, including creative breathing exercises for his four energetic sons—Boomer, Beckett, Maverick, and Nico, as described in recent interviews.
On the business speaking circuit, Phelps made an appearance at the Equipment Leasing and Finance Association Annual Conference, where during a fireside chat referenced his trademark discipline and mental toughness. Leasing News notes he told attendees, “The one thing that’s common to all successful people: they make a habit of doing things that unsuccessful people don’t like to do—or won’t do.”
There have been no verified reports of new athletic ventures or endorsements, but Phelps’ recent surge in public activity—spanning controversy, business, celebrity speculation, and advocacy—keeps him firmly in the national conversation as not just a swimming legend but a social influencer and industry critic.
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