JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================dK" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ?ӄX Fc "p9jSk yAه$u mw^&q AcMPf]<2rWegLʚ-u;=T38T]R[8%AB+u+ r@0f gA]OF[9pf;b3aX]]Aq4q ˆPA95ݠ.bh 2{-j)dӓ唹 d3>5zlyloͼqܘbt*@#+dz6nzM1d%@Op+-9c%wygn3zNMFې6Jf5ڮ%T Ïojq"Pk)Q'S8SOAT߮aKr9ڴGJ"Pp89iSws\~+Kӵ,mHڭzW b-έ2#8>XŸY:?YU;}c\Y } #VM2O{, crՔ__k,,CGr;Ys[][#fg'?Z⶷QQ8$`:V>TlO׷jt;+ nr!v cq^A(%zWvP]e6g$;g5uCg."|oJź}ɥMw`_YuYopW[V)F:FCZ)8?hsHg#z~Q/q!]GdD8hafkŞ'xegеk[FM>GA ǞxzA Jw*rqP)Rkfՙ"b6rp[xdVͽ̐HثA k/B gj޼`u+v(-ct v>W,+۸'?5jΧfDb<qåQ(Xv_(g#޲oq%΅`p#]2FZ|{4:p"xMT?QSJ\)X)*|NH?ƻ?8R}o;?^iî7qs !MBst󫨫F\B^u3PuŽ`@yR8㑌~U4d[ԜxAm<,(799zpңB S'0s\2A$GCї=?UybP)Sx@g>s*:!HH:#ӞQ!bx~:sn|ttF_vNMvbkm$lOLA4{Dm47 2q4^⳧1V\DmUsL{5 7 \ț7ۻuzF 8{ZƉs-F0#+J߸mxGZI#YU?:dg_ʡxQqlc$cz_ۻ[i[@4emG~xSԒYBƣn\#8O,a0GoZٶ e[ƹk9 u ,n}jkk.X]@NNaR<褎D 8l?t~UWi!\)F\k\5*"3OsTisnHB=*8G%6C|F~w,y#˞ɐWbZjL$̣hu=:mQ"l< fKnTcaZM>e?6,9UQw)2+<cWL)JW{ TbkI 2)vkOfG "E_0 n5dzST8-zDFex&tQ \u]I=MTRE=F2Pxع.‚ǒrE=EAħֶ@+bqKڊ+xH(, says Stanford women s swimming coach Richard Quick.  She s poised to become the cornerstone of the 2004 Olympic team. Likewise, Mark Schubert, who is Southern Cal University s head swimming coach and also is regarded as among the most famous coaches in history, has this to say about Coughlin:  Right now, she s the most dominating swimmer in the US, male or female. <br>It s all smooth sailing these days for Coughlin, but no one would have guessed it just four years ago.<br><br>Rough Waters<br><br>Coughlin was introduced to swimming just weeks after her birth, was taking swimming lessons when she was only 10 months old, and was entering competitions at age 5. She grew up to become that rare entity, a true teenage phenomenon. When she was just 15, for example, Coughlin became the first athlete in history to qualify in all 14 events at the Summer Nationals, finishing among the world s best 100 swimmers in 12 of them. Then, the following March, she proved she was human.<br>Coughlin found herself in continual pain from an injury doctors diagnosed as a torn labrum muscle in her shoulder. She was told that surgery was indicated to repair the damage, and that she might have to give up competing.  There were a lot of thoughts that I d be done really soon. But two weeks before the operation she got a second opinion from an orthopedist for the San Francisco 49