1 of 20 photos
2000 Olympic gold medalist Simon Whitfield of Canada charges into the swim and ended up with an 11th place finish.
2 of 20 photos
Great Britain's Tim Don, the 2006 ITU World Champion and 2010 Hy-Vee winner, had his mind set on joining the Brownlee brothers in London and earning a 4th Olympic slot. He finished 7th and was not yet guaranteed a London start
3 of 20 photos
A moment before the start in Mission Bay.
4 of 20 photos
The Charge of the Lightly Clad Brigade
5 of 20 photos
Moments before the dive.
6 of 20 photos
Tim Don, Brent McMahon and Bevan Docherty high step into the swim.
7 of 20 photos
Raphael of France, Brownlee of Great Britain, Chrabot of the USA and Vasiliev of Russia lead the pack after one lap of the swim.
8 of 20 photos
Kris Gemmell of New Zealand charges past the Mission Beach rollercoaster.
9 of 20 photos
The very large lead pack cruises along the waters of Mission Bay.
10 of 20 photos
Hunter Kemper stayed in a safe and smart pocket of the pack all day.
11 of 20 photos
Huge lead pack descends from the causeway bridge.
12 of 20 photos
Jonathan Brownlee shows stylish cornering ability while leading as South Africa's Richard Murray gives chase. Brownlee finished 1st, Murray 3rd behind runner-up Sven Riederer of Switzerland. .
13 of 20 photos
Manny Huerta charges to 5th place through two laps of the run.
14 of 20 photos
Jarrod Shoemaker leads Hunter Kemper in the early stages of the run. Shoemaker finished 24th and 4th American.
15 of 20 photos
Matt Chrabot ran 31:43 on his way to a disappointing 34th place.
16 of 20 photos
Tim Don (finished 7th) leads Manny Huerta (finished 9th) and Bevan Docherty (finished 8th) at the start of the bell lap.
17 of 20 photos
Hunter Kemper - mission accomplished.
18 of 20 photos
Winner Jonathan Brownlee congratulates Hunter Kemper for making his fourth Olympic team.
19 of 20 photos
Manny Huerta exultant after finishing 9th and earning the second and final U.S. men's 2012 Olympic spot.
20 of 20 photos
For a long moment, Manny Huerta found it hard to believe he had fought for and won his Olympic dream.