Josh Prenot and Carlos Balderas could have been just happy to be there.
Qualifying for their first Olympic teams ever, Prenot, a swimmer, and Balderas, a boxer, have already solidified themselves as Santa Maria Valley greats and world-class athletes, regardless of how they fared in the Rio 2016 Olympics this month.
But these two young men are just too talented and ambitious to settle for that story. Prenot and Balderas put on remarkable performances in Rio, on the worldās biggest stage, with the entirety of Santa Maria cheering them on.
In the 200-meter breaststroke competition, Prenot showed off his finishing prowess, catapulting himself in the final 100 meters to a silver medal. He missed the gold by a razor thin margin, touching the wall .07 seconds after gold medalist Dmitriy Balandin of Kazakhstan.
Lightweight boxer Carlos Balderas advanced to the Olympic quarterfinals after decisively defeating his two first round opponents: Kazakhstanās Berik Abdrakhmanov and Japanās Daisuke Narimatsu. Balderas was ultimately brought down by three-time World Amateur Champion, former Olympic bronze-winner Lazaro Jorge Alvarez of Cuba on Aug. 12.
To recap their astonishing Olympic performances, and shed light on the people behind them, the Sun caught up with Prenotās and Balderasā longtime coaches and relatives.
Prenot finishes strong, takes home silver in breaststroke
Santa Maria Swim Club coach Mike Ashmore recalls the moment that a young Josh Prenot set his sights on the Olympics.

Only 11 years old at the time, Prenot arranged a meeting with his parents, Bill and Tammy, and Ashmore to make an announcement.
āIām gonna dump baseball,ā Prenot told them. āAnd I want to make an Olympic swim team.ā
His words landed with a thud. None of them expected that.
āI sort of looked at him,ā Ashmore remembered. āAnd said, āI donāt think you understand what that really means.āā
But Prenot didnāt flinch: āIāll do anything I have to do to be there,ā he said.
Boy, he wasnāt kidding.
Twelve years after that announcement, on Aug. 10, a 23-year-old Prenot touched the side of the pool in Rio having accomplished more than just making an Olympic team: He was bringing home a silver medal.
And more than 6,000 miles away, at the Abel Maldonado Community Youth Center in Santa Maria, hundreds of community supporters jumped with joy. The television feed in the gym had gone dark, so spectators were huddled around their phones watching the race.
āThere were these, like, pods of people gathered everywhere,ā Ashmore said. āThankfully, enough people had their phones up.āĀ
It was an emotional moment for Ashmore, who was poolside for much of Prenotās childhood coaching him on the Santa Maria Swim Club. Ashmore knows as well as anyone how hard Prenot worked for that moment.
āHeās got all the values youād want in an athlete,ā Ashmore said. āAs far as character traits goāhonor, respect, work ethic, discipline, goal-setting, all of those thingsāhe has those in spades, and he finds a way to have a good time with the hard work. ⦠He finally got to that really, really big goal last week.ā
To the novice viewer, Prenotās winning any medal appeared uncertain after the first 50 to 100 meters of the race. It looked like Prenot was off to a slow start. But followers of the swimmer werenāt worried. Finishing is Prenotās not-so-secret weapon.
āHe swims a very patient race,ā Ashmore said. āEven at the Olympics, a lot of people let the pressure get to them and tend to let the adrenaline pull them into things that are unsustainable. ⦠Itās fairly well known that if youāre staring at Josh going into the last 50 meters, you have a big problem, because heās probably one of the fastest closers in the world.ā
Entering the final half of the race, right on cue, Prenot started to gain ground and surpass the other swimmers. The final lap came down to Balandin and Prenot, with Balandinās longer limbs touching the pool wall .07 seconds before Prenotās.
Remarkably shorter than many male Olympic swimmers, Prenot more than makes up for that with his impeccable breaststroke form.
āThere are a lot of coaches that just watch his stroke and technique,ā Ashmore said. āFrom a technical aspect, Iād put him up as one of the best breaststrokes in the world.ā
Prenot proved that in Rio. Already an NCAA champion at Cal and a university record-setter, Prenot now can add Olympic medalist to that resume.
āIām a proud and happy mom,ā his mother Tammy Prenot wrote to the Sun from Rio. āWe are grateful for the overwhelming support of our community, church family, friends, Cal Bears family, and of course family all over the world.ā
Balderas falls in quarters, but holds own against accomplished Cuban
Carlos Balderas gave it everything he had. The 19-year-old Santa Maria High graduate bounced around the Olympic boxing ring, relentlessly attacking his decorated quarterfinal opponent, 25-year-old Alvarez of Cuba.
Carlos would swing, swing, swing, and then defend. He was aggressive from the outset, and caused Alvarez to fall to the ground twice.
But Alvarez was utterly unflappable. A bronze medalist in the 2012 Olympics, Alvarez harnessed his experience and nimbleness to avert many of Carlosā strikes. He then delivered strong, timely blows to Carlos in return.
The matchup played out as many expected: youthful ambition versus veteran calm.Ā

Carlosā father, Zenon Balderas, called it the gold medal fight before the gold medal fight.
āI told everybody: The gold medal was between Alvarez and my son,ā Zenon said, although Alvarez would go on to lose in the semifinal.
When the final bell rang, Alvarez had won over the judges. He took the fight unanimously in points, 30-27.
Following the match, Zenon consoled his despondent son.
āHe was crying. He was very upset,ā he said. āHe said, āI feel like I disappointed everybody.ā
āI told him, āNo, hijo, you did great. We love you. Weāre proud of you. Everybody in Santa Maria is proud of you.āā
Carlos didnāt just inspire the community of Santa Maria, he helped revive Team USA. Carlos nearly made U.S. history with his victories. He was one victory shy of becoming the first American lightweight to make an Olympic medal round since the Atlanta games of 1996.
āIām happy for my son,ā Zenon said. āHeās barely 19-years-old and he was fighting two-time Olympians, people who had 1,200 fights, who are a lot older. He did really, really good.ā
Like many of us who watched the quarterfinal, Zenon questioned why the judges didnāt award Carlos points for knocking Alvarez to the ground.
ā[Alvarez] fell down two times,ā Zenon said. āThe first time, he tripped. But the second time, Carlos hit him on the temple and he went down. They never counted anything. Then, the last round, [Alvarez] was just running, running, running. There was no need for him to fight anymore, because he had won the first two rounds.ā
Considering the bigger picture of Carlosā accomplishments, itās difficult to dwell on the missed points and what-ifs.Ā
Carlos started boxing when he was in elementary school, at first merely as a solution to the trouble he was getting in at school.
āHe used to get suspended from school,ā Zenon said. āWe told him, āYou canāt keep fighting. You have to be a good citizen. You have to be a good person.ā I spoke to my dad and older brother, and we took him to a boxing gym here in Santa Maria. Ever since, he changed everything.ā
Carlos didnāt receive any boxing training growing up other than from his family.
āMy brother David and I have trained Carlos ever since he started boxing,ā Zenon said.
Carlos will return home from Rio to the open arms of the Santa Maria community. The Balderas family knows that this isnāt the last the world will hear from Carlos.
āCarlos has a very, very bright future,ā Zenon said. āIn two, three years, I donāt know what heās going to do to those guys.āĀ
Send your local sports news to contributor Peter Johnson at pjohnson@newtimesslo.com.
This article appears in Aug 18-25, 2016.

