Daily Express

‘The sword is most deadly when it is sharp’

FEAR HELPS PEATY KEEP IN THE ZONE

- By Alex Spink

THREE months until Tokyo and Adam Peaty is busy trying not to live his Olympic dream.

All signs point to glory, to the Staffordsh­ire pool terrier becoming the first British swimmer to retain an individual gold medal.

A glance down the list of all-time great performanc­es in his event, the 100m breaststro­ke, and Peaty sees only himself. The 20 fastest times, all bear his name. The announceme­nt today of Team GB’s swimming team for Japan holds no jeopardy. His spot was confirmed long ago.

Not even lockdown and having to train in a five-metre flume pool in his garden slowed his progress. He went from back yard to a 12th world record in November.

Where then is the fear driving the first human to go under 57 seconds in an event in which no one else has got even close to 58?

“In my dreams,” comes the reply.

This is a man so dominant his coach Melanie Marshall has had to devise Project Immortal, a challenge without end to set a time that generation­s consider untouchabl­e.

Yet Peaty revealed: “I dream of getting beaten. I dreamed at trials of missing my race and not qualifying for the Olympics.

“Sometimes you wake up thinking, ‘Bloody hell, that was horrible’. But that’s normal for a high achiever and a high-performanc­e mindset. It keeps you on your edge.

“The sword is most deadly when it’s sharp. If you thought you weren’t going to get beaten you’d become complacent.” Peaty, 26, uses his nightmares to fuel his ambition, to say ‘I’m not going to let that happen’. “It’s about having the right mixture – part doubt, huge part confidence – so that my sword is sharp to get what I enough to come

need,” he explained. “It’s my obsession for self-improvemen­t.” He says he has always had it. First it was wanting to be the best in the county, then his region, Britain, Europe and finally the world.

The only way from there is down, yet Peaty, partner to Eiri and father to baby George, keeps looking up.

“Sometimes I have to ask Eiri to go and stay with her parents because I need this part of my life to be extremely focused,” he said.

“It’s a very linear, selfish way of thinking but I’m obsessed with performing and beating people to the mark. There’s no feeling like the cocktail of nerves, the mixture of emotion and drive and adrenaline when you’re going at full speed in an Olympic final.”

Peaty satisfied this need for speed on a track day at Oulton Park with sponsor CUPRA before turning his thoughts back to what he might achieve in Tokyo.“I’ve never swum this fast in April so it would be bonkers not to say we could reach under the world record,” he said.

Adam Peaty drives the CUPRA Formentor, the high-performanc­e coupe crossover SUV that embodies the CUPRA DNA: sophistica­tion, innovation and a dynamic driving experience. For more informatio­n visit www.cupraoffic­ial.co.uk

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 ??  ?? RIO JOY: Peaty with medals from the last Olympics
RIO JOY: Peaty with medals from the last Olympics
 ??  ?? Peaty in the pool and, below, at Oulton Park track day with sponsor CUPRA
Peaty in the pool and, below, at Oulton Park track day with sponsor CUPRA
 ??  ?? DRIVEN TO WIN
DRIVEN TO WIN

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