The Cairns Post

IS THIS OUR BEST SWIM TEAM EVER?

SIGHTS SET ON A PATH PAVED WITH GOLD

- TODD BALYM

COULD this be Australia’s greatest ever Olympic swim team?

That’s not a bold pre-Olympic prediction but rather an aspiration­al goal within the Dolphins team, with experience­d coach Michael Bohl confident Australia has the talent to repeat the eight gold medals won at the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games.

When Australia returned from their disastrous 2012 London Olympic campaign with just one gold subsequent investigat­ions exposed a stilnox saga and “toxic” culture that prompted widespread change in the sport. As part of the sweeping changes new president John Bertrand hired Dutch coach Jacco Verhaeren with a stated aim to make Australia the No.1 swimming nation by the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

That day has come and while the pandemic delayed the event by 12 months, and Bertrand and Verhaeren both moved on from their roles in the past year, the Australian team led by Rohan Taylor could give the US it’s toughest fight for the No.1 crown in 33 years.

Team USA has won the pool battle at every Olympics since 1992, with East Germany’s drug-tainted efforts in 1988 the last time the Americans were toppled from the top of the podium.

The Americans have won 16 golds at the past two Olympics but the rise of Australia, Russia, Hungary, Japan and Great Britain could chip away at their recent dominance.

Bohl coached Australia’s last dual Olympic individual gold medallist, Stephanie Rice (left), in 2008.

He believes this team could create its own history, with the eight-gold haul of Melbourne 65 years ago still the benchmark followed by seven golds at Athens in 2004 as our greatest “away” performanc­e.

“I think it’s a very, very rich task,” Bohl said of becoming No.1.

“If you look at the last three or four Olympics, to be the No.1 nation you’ve got to win 15 or 16 gold medals and that is going to be a very difficult task at this stage.

“I think some of the other goals are a little bit more relevant to us, I think the Melbourne Olympics was one of our most successful Olympic Games and … I think they’re probably more realistic targets than trying to be No.1 in the world.

“… It is certainly not something that’s in the forefront of our mind … I think it’s a very difficult task in such a short period of time to come up and slip past the US as the No.1.”

An analysis by The Courier-Mail reveals Australia will enter the Games with 14 gold medal opportunit­ies from 35 events compared with the US’s 21 chances.

There are at least six individual events – men’s 100m freestyle, women’s 100m and 200m backstroke, women’s 200m and 400m freestyle and women’s 200m individual medley – where Australia and the US will be fighting each other for gold.

Australia is a medal contender in every relay but in reality the Americans are favourite to win four relay golds, with Australia’s women tipped to pick up two and the men an outside chance to claim the 4x200m freestyle relay from Great Britain.

This is not the first time an Australian outfit has headed to an Olympic

Games with strong hope, but this time there is a real spread of talent with the likes of Ariarne Titmus, Kaylee McKeown, Emma McKeon, Cate Campbell, Kyle Chalmers, Elijah Winnington and Zac Stubblety-Cook all serious chances at gold.

“I think what sets this team apart a little bit is there seems to be swimmers across the board doing well,” Bohl said.

“In the past we’ve had one or two outstandin­g athletes who have gone in number one, two or three in the world but there seems to be quite a few within this team. I think it’s really a lot of confidence from the trials we had … but looking at the form, the current form, the team is looking really, really good coming in.”

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