Business Day

Olympics daunting after Doha, says top SA coach

- David Isaacson

Scary! That’s how top swimming coach Rocco Meiring views the looming Paris Olympics after watching performanc­es at the world championsh­ips in Doha.

Meiring is already worried about water temperatur­es during load-shedding in winter, which could sink medal hopefuls, including his Tokyo star, Tatjana Schoenmake­r.

But even if his Tuks pool were to enjoy an uninterrup­ted power supply for the next five months, watching new talent rise in the absence of the establishe­d stars who gave the unseasonal championsh­ips a miss was a cause for concern.

“You could mistakenly say that the best of the world were not all at this competitio­n,” Meiring said on his return this week.

“What people forget is that there are so many others ready to take their place. So looking towards the Olympics, it’s scary to see at what level our opposition are performing in February, which is a month that we are not supposed to be competing.

“If you ask me whether I’m confident and I’m happy and whatever, looking forward to the Olympics, hell no, I’m not,” he said, emphasisin­g that the last batch of preparatio­n between now and the Games needed to be done properly.

One of his swimmers, Erin Gallagher, who made two finals in Doha echoed his view.

“It’s very scary,” she said, but pointed out they were in uncharted waters with a championsh­ips never before having been held five months before a Games. “I feel like no matter how you race now, it’s no indication of how you’re going to perform in July. And there’s no blueprint to this. It’s never really been done before.”

DEPTH

The unusual scheduling is the result of the Covid pandemic.

Pieter Coetzé, who won the country’s only medal in Doha, a 200m backstroke bronze, said the depth in world swimming was noticeable by the absence of the stars.

“Some finals, it took a faster time to make the final than in previous years, even though maybe the winning times were a bit slower [than previous years]. I haven’t really thought too much, too far ahead to the Olympics yet, because the main thing now is just the daily activities. So I think I’ll take it day by day.”

Lara van Niekerk, the double breaststro­ke champion at the 2022 Commonweal­th Games, who struggled last year because of illnesses, said the gala had given her an intimate understand­ing of how much work needed to be done.

“It was a big wake-up call to show me there’s still a lot of work to be done. I can’t just sit back and it’s not all going to happen overnight. So it was good to be able to compete at that level to see where the competitio­n is and how everyone is looking.”

Her coach, Eugene da Ponte, focused on the advantages of competing at the champs.

“This was just about going there, getting some experience, getting some racing in, being put under pressure situations and having to perform because those are all things we’re going to experience once we get to Paris. And it’s good practice for us as it’s the one thing we are starved of here in SA — being put in highpressu­re situations.

“People don’t understand the types of pressures you feel when you get to these kinds of galas,” Da Ponte said

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