Manchester Evening News

Break will do Peaty good, insists Guy

- SWIMMING ED ELLIOT

MISSING the World Championsh­ips through injury could do Adam Peaty ‘the world of good’, according to long-term team-mate James Guy.

Peaty was forced to withdraw from the upcoming competitio­n in Budapest after fracturing his foot.

Bury’s Guy – who has won Olympic, world and European relay golds alongside Peaty – is part of a 22-strong British team set to compete in the Hungarian capital from June 18-25.

The 26-year-old believes Peaty may benefit mentally from his enforced break and gain additional motivation ahead of the Paris 2024 Olympics.

“It would have been our fourth Worlds together and I’ve always shared a room with him so it will be different with him not there,” said Guy. “It might do him the world of good not being there. Mentally, it will make him probably a lot hungrier and probably drive him a lot more for Paris.

“Someone of his accolades, it’s hard to keep that hunger there. You look at all of your greats – Michael Jordan, Michael Phelps – they’ve all had a break at some point and this is his mental break a little bit.

“Seeing probably (Arno) Kamminga and (Nicolo) Martinengh­i rattling the breaststro­ke without him being there, he’s going to think, ‘right, I want to be there, I really want to get back and fight with these boys and show them who I really am’.”

Three-time Olympic champion Peaty won both the 50m and 100m breaststro­ke titles at the last three World Championsh­ips, meaning new winners will be crowned for the first time since 2013.

The 27-year-old, who has eight world titles, sustained the injury last month while training in the gym. He is now focused on recovering in time for this summer’s Commonweal­th Games in Birmingham.

Guy – a two-time Olympic and four-time world champion – feels the British team can remain competitiv­e in the relay events in the absence of their star name.

“I think the relays at Budapest we’ll get a line for the final and we’ll put our best team in the final,” said Guy, who is also set to compete in the 100m and 200m butterfly discipline­s.

“We’re not going to be down in the dumps, (thinking) ‘Adam’s not here, oh no, boohoo, cry me a river’.

“We’re going to get on with it and see how fast we can do without him and see how we can challenge for medals without him there.”

 ?? ?? James Guy and, right, Sport Adam Peaty
James Guy and, right, Sport Adam Peaty

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