The Herald - Herald Sport

McArthur out to make a splash with medal

Last Games was about enjoyment, but this time 24-year-old has bigger ambitions

- SUSAN EGELSTAFF

EVERYONE involved in elite sport knows how fine the margins are between success and failure. There are few discipline­s, however, in which the margin is quite so fine as diving.

Each dive lasts a second or two, so little time to ensure perfection.

Gemma McArthur admits that knowing even the tiniest lapse could see months or even years of training go down the drain, brings quite a lot of pressure.

“We’re in the air for two seconds but we’ve got time between each of the dives so that’s when you can start thinking about things. You’ve really got to keep your mind focused and on track between the dives,” says the 24-yearold, who is heading to her second Commonweal­th Games this month,

“There is a lot of risk in diving, especially 10m diving.

But if you put in the work, you have to just be confident. You’ve done each dive thousands of times and so you’ve got to remember all of the good ones. The chance of something really going wrong is pretty minimal and so it’s about self-belief.

“During the dive, you barely do any conscious thinking – you don’t have time. When you get on the board, you go into autopilot and so it’s the preparatio­n beforehand that’s the really important bit.”

McArthur is in the home straight of her preparatio­ns for Birmingham 2022, with her final competitiv­e appearance coming at the Bolzano Diving Meet in Italy, which begins today.

In Birmingham, McArthur will compete in the 10m platform, in which she finished 12th at the 2018 Games, and the 10m synchro alongside Angus Menmuir. This week’s outing will be ideal for fine tuning.

“It’ll be good to have this last chance to sharpen up in both the individual and the synchro,” says the Southampto­n-based diver. “The bulk of the work is done, now, it’s about practicing the dives in a competitiv­e environmen­t.

“If you get even a little bit nervous, it can affect your dives a lot so this final competitio­n will be about working on controllin­g the nerves, perfecting the competitio­n routine and making sure we know what I need to do to dive at my best.”

Team Scotland’s sevenstron­g squad heading to Birmingham includes 2018 medallists Grace Reid and James Heatly, but this time around, McArthur’s good form means she is also going with medal aspiration­s.

“It’s amazing having such a strong diving team heading to Birmingham. It shows that Scottish diving is in a really good place and if we can do well, it’ll do so much to raise awareness of the sport,” she says. “It’s amazing to be part of a team that can make a real impact at internatio­nal events.

“Seeing people like Grace and James win medals internatio­nally is so inspiratio­nal. Even though we train together a lot, seeing them go out there and do it in a competitio­n environmen­t is quite a different thing and it makes you realise what it takes.

“For me, it’s such different feelings comparing where

I was ahead of the last Commonweal­th Games to this now. Four years ago, I was obviously a lot younger whereas now, I’ve had so much more time to develop and build my levels of experience so hopefully that’ll show in my performanc­e at the Games.

“Last time, I went in with the attitude of just enjoy it and see how I could do. This time though, my expectatio­ns are quite different; I’m still going in aiming to enjoy it but I’m definitely pushing to make the finals and push to make those top spots.

“Making it on to the podium would be a dream come true but I try not to think about the end result too much. I try to think more about the process of each dive and how it’ll feel to do each dive really well and then I’ll see where that takes me.”

There is a lot of risk, but if you put in the work, you have to be confident

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