Cape Argus

I could not have asked for better, admits Le Clos

- OCKERT DE VILLIERS

IT may be too early to tell, but Chad le Clos’ performanc­es at last week’s South African Swimming Championsh­ips in Durban points to some sort of rebirth for one of the country’s greatest Olympians.

In the build-up to the Rio Games, one sensed that Le Clos, pictured, was in a difficult space which affected his performanc­es at the global showpiece where he returned home with the 200m freestyle and 100m butterfly silver medals.

Le Clos was understand­ably under pressure from all fronts, having to deal with cancer in the family and the loss of his 200m butterfly title at the world championsh­ips the year before.

Le Clos seems reinvigora­ted thanks to a change in postal code, coach, and, seemingly, mindset.

On the eve of his 25th birthday on Wednesday, Le Clos won three gold medals in Durban – 200m and 100m butterfly, the 200m freestyle, and he now boasts the fastest times in the world in the 100m and 200m butterfly with season’s bests of 51.29 seconds and 1:55.00 respective­ly.

He has thrown down the gauntlet for the Fina World Championsh­ips in Budapest, Hungary.

“It is the best rankings by far. If you look at last year I was top seven or top eight, and even in the 100m free I have never been in the top 20 leading into the world championsh­ips,” Le Clos said.

“The 200m fly was a solid race and the 100m fly was the standout swim of the week, I couldn’t have asked for better.”

Le Clos split from his long-time coach Graham Hill towards the end of 2016, before joining up with Italian coach Andrea di Nino.

“Chad wants to win again, that was the first thing he told me when we spoke. When you do not agree with the goal of the swimmer you must tell him but in his case it makes sense,” Di Nino said.

“Chad comes from great preparatio­ns in terms of physiology with Graham which you can see in the results which is perfect to judge the work of the coach and they did a great job together.”

“Now he is reaching an age which is quite tricky because he is not a young boy anymore and he is not yet an old swimmer, he is in the middle.

“He doesn’t have the genetic freshness he had at the age of 20, so now he is moving to an age where you have to be accurate with everything.”

It was an otherwise good national swimming championsh­ips, with three new faces posting world qualifying times including Tatjana Schoenmake­r who became the first female swimmer from SA since 2013 to qualify for the global showpiece.

Olympic gold medallist Cameron van der Burgh continued his rein, winning both the 50m and 100m breaststro­ke titles.

His 50m breaststro­ke time of 27.06 seconds and season’s best 59.73secs in the 100m breaststro­ke, is ranked the second and third fastest in the world so far this year.

Zane Waddell, 19, emerged as an exciting prospect, claiming silver and posting a qualifying time in the 50m freestyle, while also winning the 100m freestyle title with a B-qualifying time of 49.09, the eighth best time by a South African.

While it is still early days, there is no denying the massive potential of 14-yearold Rebecca Meder, who won a total of five gold medals in the 1 500m, 800m and 200m freestyle, the 400m and 200m Individual Medley, while clinching silver in the 400m freestyle.

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