Rotorua Daily Post

A year distilled into four minutes

- Bridget Tunnicliff­e of RNZ

We have to be prepared to race, you’ve only got four minutes out of a

whole year of planning to get it

right. Lewis Clareburt

New Zealand Swimming coach Gary Hollywood says all the science shows that six years is the magic number for a coach and athlete partnershi­p.

Hollywood started coaching Commonweal­th Games medal prospect Lewis Clareburt in 2016.

“So this is our sixth year and probably is going to be one of our best,” Hollywood said.

The seasoned coach has seen a huge amount of growth in Clareburt, one of New Zealand’s brightest in the pool.

“At 16 he was still a boy and then we went through those late teenage, early 20s years where he was maturing as a young man.

“And I was having to pace how much control I started to relinquish and how much it became more of a partnershi­p, rather than me directing everything we did.”

Hollywood said now they’ve come out the other side of that, it is a very symbiotic relationsh­ip.

“We’ve got the Paris Olympics and beyond. Paris won’t be the last stop so we’ve still got some exciting times to look forward to.”

The pair are in Birmingham getting ready for the Games, which get underway this Friday.

It has been a bit of a homecoming for Hollywood, who worked for the City of Birmingham for four years from 2005.

“I was the assistant coach and swimming developmen­t officer for Birmingham. I looked after 26 clubs, 16 pools.

“And I was coaching age group squads, some of the athletes went on to the Beijing Olympics.

“I’ve kept my networks alive with all the parents, the swimmers, my former bosses. So my social media has gone mad and I’ve organised a big catch up. I’m really excited to be here.”

Clareburt will be competing in the 400 and 200m individual medley events, plus the 200m butterfly.

“The butterfly is an event that we’ve been keeping an eye on and just keeping in our back pocket.

“I like having the 400 first because that’s our main event. So we’ve got a chance to play with the 200 fly in the middle and then he’s got the 200 medley, which is another good event for us.”

Clareburt managed an impressive fourth at the World Championsh­ips in Budapest last month in the 400m individual medley.

Hollywood said he was over the moon with that result, given Clareburt wasn’t in peak health.

Clareburt got Covid a month out from the World Champs. Then, a week before he raced in Budapest, he caught a stomach bug while they were at a camp in Slovakia.

“It felt like for about six weeks we weren’t really able to train properly so for him to go 4.10 at Worlds — just a second off his best time, was a fantastic result.

“It came from his mental fortitude. It was a mental swim, not a physical swim. He was cherishing being there and he really pulled it out.”

Clareburt said he had considered packing it in and waiting for the Commonweal­th Games.

“But we decided that an opportunit­y to race is an opportunit­y to get better and to learn more about myself. So we decided to race and I think I surprised myself actually, how well I was able to perform,” Clareburt said.

Clareburt had a very promising Olympics debut when he placed 7th and 8th respective­ly in the 400 and 200m individual medley events in Tokyo last year.

Competitiv­e swimming is a sport of tiny margins and Hollywood said it was what they lived by.

“In 2019 when Lewis won the bronze medal at Worlds, we were seven seconds slower than Seto [gold medallist Daiya Seto] — just on turns, so we’ve been doing a lot of work on our skills.

“We know we can save seven seconds there at some point. Seven seconds off a 4m 9s is 4m 2s and the world record is 4m 3s so we know, if we get the skills mastered, then we’re in good shape.”

Clareburt said they had to be meticulous in their planning.

“We have to be prepared to race, you’ve only got four minutes out of a whole year of planning to get it right.

“And it is hard to get it right at that one point. It’s not like rugby or team sports where you’ve got a whole season to finalise how you’re going to perform, we’ve only got four minutes to get it right once,” Clareburt said.

Hollywood is the last person Clareburt speaks to before he enters what is known as the “call room”, the area swimmers wait in before they are called up for their race.

“At the World Champs Lewis said when he was in the call room, he didn’t take any notice of his competitor­s.

They’re not on his radar — it’s just what he can do, he’s racing himself.”

Does Hollywood get nervous for Clareburt as he chaperones him down to the call room?

“No, absolutely not, I get excited. So we plan meticulous­ly and then we just get unleashed.

“Here in Birmingham it’s just pure energy, pure joy, and pure excitement to just be where we’ve been looking forward to be in the last few years.”

Clareburt said he got butterflie­s before he competed but was comfortabl­e with that.

“I think if you don’t get nervous, you’re doing something wrong. I’m the king of shaking so I shake. I think as an athlete you have to be content with that and know that it happens to the best of

us.”

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Wellington swimmer Lewis Clareburt knows he is within touching distance of the world’s best ahead of the Commonweal­th Games.
Photo / NZME Wellington swimmer Lewis Clareburt knows he is within touching distance of the world’s best ahead of the Commonweal­th Games.
 ?? ?? Lewis Clareburt is eager to hit the pool in Birmingham.
Lewis Clareburt is eager to hit the pool in Birmingham.

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