2012 Olympic Trials At the
2012 United States Olympic Trials, the U.S. qualifying meet for the Olympics, DiRado swam the 200 meter IM, 400 meter IM, and 200 meter back. She finished 4th in both IM events, which did not qualify her for the Olympics since only the top two finishers of each event qualified. She finished second in the 400 meter IM in 4:35.37, compared to 4:31.99 swam by her teammate and winner
Elizabeth Beisel. DiRado also finished ninth in the
200 meter butterfly.
2015 World Championships DiRado swam two events at the
2015 World Championships, the two individual medleys. In her first event, the
200 meter IM, DiRado just finished outside of a medal, touching fourth with a time of 2:08.99. However, she won her first individual World Championship medal in the
400 meter IM, in which she finished second in 4:31.71 behind
Katinka Hosszú.
2016 Summer Olympics At the
2016 United States Olympic Trials, the U.S. qualifying meet for the Rio Olympics, DiRado qualified for the U.S. Olympic team for the first time by winning the 200-meter individual medley, 400-meter individual medley, and 200-meter backstroke. At the
2016 Olympic Games in
Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil, DiRado won four medals – two gold, one silver, and one bronze. On the first night of competition, DiRado touched second in the
400-meter individual medley in 4:31.15 behind
Katinka Hosszú, who broke the world record. She also won a bronze medal in the
200-meter individual medley in a personal best time of 2:08.79, behind Hosszú and
Siobhan-Marie O'Connor who won gold and silver respectively. Even though she did not swim the 200-meter freestyle at Trials, DiRado was placed in the finals relay lineup for the
4×200-meter freestyle relay by the coaches. Along with
Allison Schmitt,
Leah Smith, and
Katie Ledecky, DiRado won her first gold medal of the Olympics. In her final event, the
200-meter backstroke, DiRado again faced Hosszú, who was favored to win the event. Hosszú led for the entire race until DiRado surged in the last 25 meters and out touched Hosszú by 6 one-hundredths, 2:05.99 to 2:06.05, for the win.
2016–2021: Retirement and redirection DiRado retired from the competitive swimming side of the sport following her performances in August 2016 at her Olympic debut in the
2016 Summer Olympics. She was still retired from competitive swimming as of August 2021. ==Personal life==