The Rugby Paper

7s captain in U-turn on Olympics

- By ROB COLE

Wales 7s captain Luke Treharne has decided to aim for the Tokyo Games despite disappoint­ment four years ago

LUKE Treharne is refusing to give up on his dream of finally becoming an Olympian despite the postponeme­nt of this year’s Tokyo Games.

It means the Wales Sevens captain will have to hang on for another 12 months to try to finally make the Team GB squad.

He went to Rio four years ago as the 13th man and returned vowing never to try again. His was a rather surreal experience compared to that of the 12 players who earned a silver medal in Brazil. Along with Ruaridh McConnochi­e and then Charlie Hayter, he acted as back up to the British squad yet never got the chance to play.

“When I got back from Brazil four years ago I said to myself ‘never again’. I’d been part of an Olympic Games, but been treated like a second class citizen,” said Treharne.

“It was just a strange experience from start to finish for myself, Ruaridh and then Charlie. You’d have thought it would have been amazing, but we weren’t allowed accreditat­ion because we weren’t part of the 12-man squad.

“We were there just in case of injury and, as it happened, Ruaridh got called up when Alex Davies got injured. That meant Charlie came out to join me.

“We weren’t allowed in the Olympic village, we couldn’t travel on official transport, and we were holed up in a flat in Rio with the two reserves for the women’s team.

“We had to cook our own food, do our own washing, and make our way in taxis every day to training. When we got there, we had to show our passports to gain entry to the complex in a process that took about 20 minutes every time.

“The taxis were a nightmare. It took us up to two hours every day to get to training and then a similar journey back.

“When the Games were on we weren’t allowed to

mingle with the team and had to sit in the stand. On the third and final day of action, the rules stated that once the first game had been played we could no longer be called on.

“Once we got past that stage we were free to enjoy a few beers. It was a long day especially as we got the chance to cheer on the team into the final.”

The final ignominy for Treharne came when the reserves were sent home the day after the final yet the squad were allowed to remain in Rio for a further five days. To add insult to injury when Treharne returned to the Lensbury Club in London to retrieve his car and drive home to Llanelli, he found it was surrounded by scaffoldin­g.

Unlucky to lose out to England’s chief playmaker and skipper Tom Mitchell, who also captained Team GB, Treharne at least had a few moments to savour before he headed to Rio as he led the GB Royals team to back-to-back victories in the Rugby Europe Sevens series. That success included a triumph over the GB Lions, the Mitchell-led squad, in the final.

For two months after Rio, Treharne insisted he would not put himself through it again. Four years on, he has changed his mind.

With 40 World Series tournament­s behind him with Wales and a medical career on hold while he follows his dreams, he is prepared to hang around for another year to try to earn the right to call himself an Olympian.

“What also hurt last time was that I went up to Trafalgar Square for a British Olympic Associatio­n gathering and they made a big song and dance about this being the moment you became an Olympian. They handed out certificat­es to everyone, but stopped at No.12 in the Sevens squad,” recalls Treharne.

“I may have spent all that time in Rio, trained with the squad every day and been ready for a call-up, but I never became an Olympian. And we weren’t included when they handed out the medals.

“That’s what has kept me going, really – the desire to finally become an Olympian. I’m only 27 so I think I can go for another year and then reassess what I’m going to go with the rest of my life.

“It was undoubtedl­y the right decision to postpone this year’s Games – they were just about to announce the training squad. Who knows what is going to happen to the final four rounds of this season’s

World Series?”

Currently back at the family home in Llanelli, Treharne is doing sprint training twice a week up Penyfai Hill and working out in his garage gym. He is also going to be volunteeri­ng to help out in the crisis.

His parents are both doctors, with his father, Chris, set to come out of retirement to offer his expertise. While he has completed his own university medical degree, Treharne has yet to do his two years at medical school.

 ?? PICTURE: Getty Images ??
PICTURE: Getty Images
 ??  ?? Ambition: Luke Treharne playing for Wales Sevens
Ambition: Luke Treharne playing for Wales Sevens

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