Edmonton Journal

Masse in search of more gold at trials

Canadian Ruck ‘keeping blinders on’ as she prepares for 2020 Summer Olympics

- SHANE JONES

Having already made a splash on the second day of the 2018 Canadian Swimming Trials, Kylie Masse will be looking to add a second gold on Saturday.

The 22-year-old is one of the shining stars of the new wave of successful Canadian women’s swimmers and proved it in her first event in Edmonton when she blazed to first in the 100-metre backstroke with a time of 59.05, easily earning a berth in next month’s Pan Pacific Championsh­ips in Tokyo, also home to the 2020 Summer Olympic Games.

The native of Windsor, Ont., will compete in the 200 backstroke on Day 4 of the Trials Saturday, looking for a second gold in Edmonton in an event where she also holds a Canadian record time.

“It was good to have the 100 over first, because that is kind of my baby, but I have been working hard to get better at the 200 as well,” she said. “I’m looking forward to seeing what I can do in that race.”

Masse is the current world record holder in the 100 backstroke with a time of 58.10, breaking an eight-year-old record at the World Championsh­ips in Budapest last year.

In April, she won two gold medals at the 2018 Gold Coast Commonweal­th Games in Australia in the 100 and 200 backstroke, setting a Games record in both events. She also finished the event with a silver in the 50 backstroke.

She is hoping to keep that surge heading into Japan, and felt her early showing at the Trials was a solid start.

Day 3 of competitio­n at the Trials on Friday also provided a number of strong showings.

Mackenzie Padington of Campbell River, B.C., edged out rival Kennedy Goss in the women’s 400 free, her second gold of the event to go along with a first-place finish in the 800 free.

“I knew it was going to be a battle, Kennedy is an amazing swimmer,” said the 19-year-old Padington. “It might not have been the time I wanted, but I know I have put in the work and will be faster at Pan-Pacs in a couple of weeks.”

The men’s 400 free was captured by Jeremy Bagshaw B.C.

Toronto’s Penny Oleksiak, who claimed four medals in the 2016 Rio Games, won her second event, recording a strong finish to beat Maggie MacNiel in the 100m butterfly with a time of 58.37, to go along with a gold in the 100 free Thursday.

The freshest new face of Canadian swimming tingles. Literally.

“I get super nervous before a race, especially as the level of competitio­n goes up. … Sometimes my face tingles,” said Taylor Ruck. “It’s crazy.”

It’s also more than a little endearing and another reason to like the shy, humble phenom who burst into the Canadian consciousn­ess in April on the Gold Coast of Australia, where she won a recordtyin­g eight Commonweal­th Games medals; one gold, five silver, two bronze.

She keeps them in a duffel bag, by the way, and there are hundreds now.

“It’s pretty heavy,” she said with a smile.

But they do not weigh her down. Three months after the games, there are few discernibl­e difference­s between the relatively anonymous, totally bubbly teenager who went Down Under and the world-class swimmer who came out on top.

“Taylor is still Taylor,” said teammate Kayla Sanchez. “She’s super fun to be around, so hard working, striving to be the best. It’s nice to be a part of her journey. She is super humble, super nice. You won’t meet anyone nicer than Taylor.”

The success was also nice, Ruck said, but she’s staring straight ahead, two years down the road to the 2020 Summer Olympics, rather than basking in anything behind her.

“I think coming out of the Commonweal­th Games I’m just keeping my blinders on and just focusing on Tokyo right now. It was really cool to see that success in the pool. Seeing that made me really excited for Tokyo.”

Yes, her vision is indeed 2020 and everything she does between now and then on a daily, sometimes hourly basis must be aimed at putting her in position to succeed. That’s a job her coach Ben Titley does not take lightly.

Take the Canadian trials in Edmonton this week. On the opening day, Ruck won the 200-metre freestyle, which qualified her to swim individual events at the Pan Pacific Championsh­ips next month in Tokyo. And that was the end of her meet as Titley decided to shut her down and get her back into training mode.

Penny Oleksiak finished fourth in that race as her post- Olympic performanc­es continue to fall well short of her feats at Rio 2016, where she won four medals and became the Canadian face of those Games at the tender age of 16.

Though there is decidedly less intense focus on a Commonweal­th Games star, the post- Olympic road map is a good one for Ruck to have in hand.

“Taylor has seen a friend and a rival and a teammate of hers go through that process and seen maybe things she can learn from to handle that situation,” said Titley.

“Penny dropped in from 1,000 feet and had to deal with it. Taylor has time to adjust. She is one of the bigger dogs now, but she’s still not the best in the world. There’s not one event where she is ranked No. 1.”

There is time and willingnes­s and the competitiv­e spirit necessary to get there. And there are other things to fit into the schedule. The Kelowna, B.C.-born, Scottsdale, Ariz.-raised 18-year-old is off to Stanford University in September and will swim on the NCAA circuit. It’s a good program run by a good coach.

Though Swimming Canada always prefers its elite athletes set up shop at a high-performanc­e centre at home, some perspectiv­e is necessary.

“A Stanford education for her life is equally as important as her performanc­e on the Olympic level,” said Titley.

Ruck’s first year at Stanford will focus on general studies, but she is interested in the sciences, maybe biology, with an eye on a medical career. She is a good student.

“From a young age, my parents nailed it into my head that I need to keep my grades up and do as well as I can in sports.”

She dabbled in soccer and basketball.

“I did a few summer camps for basketball. I just never liked it. When the ball hit my finger it always hurt,” she said. “Swimming is very non-contact.”

At six feet, she inherited the frame for both sports. Her father Colin is six-foot-nine. He played defence in the Western Hockey League in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

“I know he was known for his aggression and punching some people. That’s what you go to hockey to see sometimes, a little bit of roughing up. I saw a few of those videos. I thought that was pretty funny to watch.”

Her mother Sophia was a swimmer with the Kelowna AquaJets, but did not pursue the sport to the level her daughter has achieved.

And there is more to come. There is every reason to believe Ruck will hit the Olympic podium in Tokyo more than once, but Titley eschews expectatio­ns.

“It’s not a phrase I would ever use with athletes. Expectatio­ns are for other people. Are we aiming for, could we hope for multiple podium swims by Taylor? I think we’d be silly to not have that as a goal of ours.”

She’s super fun to be around, so hard working, striving to be the best. It’s nice to be a part of her journey. She is super humble, super nice.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Canadian swimmer Taylor Ruck holds up her eight swimming medals from the Commonweal­th Games. She is off to Stanford University in September and will swim on the NCAA circuit.
RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian swimmer Taylor Ruck holds up her eight swimming medals from the Commonweal­th Games. She is off to Stanford University in September and will swim on the NCAA circuit.

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