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This Commentator Gives Olympian’s Husband Credit for Her Success & We’re Pissed

Katinka Hosszú, an Olympic swimmer from Hungary dubbed the “Iron Lady,” won the gold medal on Saturday after breaking the world record by nearly two seconds in the 400-meter individual medley. While it was Hosszú who won the medal and broke the record, an NBC commentator gave credit to her husband instead.

Dan Hicks, the NBC commentator, says that her husband and coach, Shane Tusup, was “the guy responsible for turning Katinka HosszĂş, his wife, into a whole different swimmer.” Uh, not sure if we were watching the same thing, Dan, but we’re pretty sure HosszĂş was the only one in the pool.

Hicks was widely criticized on social media for being sexist by giving credit to Hosszú’s husband for the win:

No @nbc commentator that man is not “responsible” for HosszĂą’s world record. She is. He’s her coach and partner. She broke that record.

— Kathryn Dennett (@kathryndennett) August 7, 2016

I’m sure Hosszu’s husband is lovely and has contributed a lot to her success. But Jesus – CAN WE GIVE THE WOMAN A LITTLE CREDIT? NO? OH.

— Lauren Rankin (@laurenarankin) August 7, 2016

seconds after hosszu beat the WR the camera panned to her coach and said “there’s the man that made it all happen” i’m DEAD

— ava  (@therealavacado) August 7, 2016

Hicks has explained the motivation behind his comments, saying that he wishes that he had said things differently, and that he was trying to allude to the dynamic of Hosszú and Tusup’s relationship.

“It is impossible to tell Katinka’s story accurately without giving appropriate credit to Shane, and that’s what I was trying to do,” Hicks told the Hollywood Reporter.

In addition to the credit Tusup received for his wife’s record-breaking win, Tusup garnered criticism for his aggressive behavior during Hosszú’s record-breaking swim. While Hosszú was in the water, Tusup was seen pounding his chest and yelling loudly from the side of the pool:

Gold-medalist Jessica Hardy once trained with HosszĂş but had to stop after Tusup told HosszĂş not to be friends with her anymore.

“I’ve seen a lot of inappropriate and not-okay behavior in Shane … I’ve seen coaches exhibit that kind of behavior in training, but this is another level. It’s scary,” Hardy told The New York Times this past April.

According to Cosmopolitan, HosszĂş has often credited her husband for helping increase her confidence as a swimmer. HosszĂş will be competing in four more events at the Rio Olympics.

Rachel Popa is a college Junior majoring in Journalism and English with a concentration in Creative Writing. She is a self-descibed "Hobbit" living in the big city of Chicago. Her passions include (but are not limited to) books, writing, "Game of Thrones," caffinated beverages and corgis. Feel free to follow her on Twitter at @_poparazzi, or drop her a line at rachelpopa@hercampus.com.