The Scotsman

Glasgow hero is feeling good after his post-2014 struggles

● Murdoch admits to feeling ‘very low’ after struggling to maintain his form

- Duncan Smith 0 Ross Murdoch in the pool at Stirling University as he previews the upcoming European Championsh­ips. 0 Murdoch became one of the iconic images of the 2014 Commonweal­th Games in Glasgow after his shock gold.

Ross Murdoch freely admits that he still has down days but, as a return to the scene of his finest moment looms large, he’s back to being the kind of swimmer that can compete at the highest level.

Four years on from his stunning victor y over ‘Face of the Games’ Michael Jamieson in the 200m breaststro­ke at Glasgow 2014, the now 24-year-old is preparing for a return to that Tollcross pool for next month’s European Championsh­ip.

Murdoch has been open about his struggles to deal with a hugely disappoint­ing Olympic Games in Rio two years after his Glasgow heroics, as Adam Peaty emerged as a colossus of British and world breaststro­king.

While not clinic ally depressed, Murdoch describes his mental state as “very low” after Rio as he gained weight before slowly rediscover­ing his love for swimming and competitio­n.

“I definitely feel a lot better than I did then,” he said after a training session a this University of Stirling base as he promotes the Glasgow 2018 multi-sports extravagan­za, which will see swimming’s European Championsh­ips combine with diving, cycling, gymnastics, rowing and triathlon and a team golf event at Gleneagles.

“There’s still days when

I feel like I really don’ t want to be here. I was feeling it just theo ther day actually. But eve - ry sports person goes through that and everyone has times in their career when you struggle with motivation.

“So there’s still a battle at different points and with different sessions but some of it might just be down to it being a Monday morning and I’m thinking: ‘Here we go again’.”

Murdoch is grateful for the support he received to get him back to the kind of swimmer he knows he can be as he won a silver medal behind the dominant Peaty in his defence of the 200 mat Gold Coast earlier this year.

“I definitely think it’s important if you feel that way that you seek help, whether it’ s from a sports psychologi­st or if it’s just your friends or family – anyone who’s going to support you through whatever you need to get through,” he said.

“You just need to seek sup - port and what the support looks like will be different for everybody. I was lucky in that I had support from the University of Stirling and the Institute of Sport that I had access to fantastic coaches, psycholo - gists and doctors. But the best support I got was from my friends and family.”

Murdoch’s wide-eyed joy and shock when he beat Olympic silver-medallist Jamieson to gold at Glasgow 2014 became one of the defining images of those Games but, as much as it is a return to a happy hunting ground, it is also a place where his demons of 2016 started to emerge.

The British Championsh­ips and trials were held at Tollcross in the April of that Olympic year and Murdoch failed to make the GB team for his favoured 200m distance. He travelled to Brazil for the sh or ter100mbut­f ailed to make the final.

“It is nice going back but I’ve got both good and bad memories of that pool,” said Murdoch. “If you look back to the Rio season, where I didn’t make the 200 breast stroke. The issue wasn’t just Rio, it went right back to 2014 when I had glandular fever and I started missing teams.

“Then it was Rio that put the tin lid on it, the base had already been set and the trials that year were one of the reason I was not in a good way.

“But then two years before, I had such a good experience.”

Murdoch is predicting some hot, high-quality competitio­n when the Euros get under way on 3 August. The Commonweal­th Games may bring the always formidable challenge of the Australian­s but the Europeans come with a much stronger spread of depth.

“Some people say that the Glasgow pool isn’t fast, that’s it’s only two metres deep and you need it to be three but I 100 per cent believe that a world record can be set in that pool and that it’s one of the fastest pools in the world,” said Murdoch.

“Especially when it’s dressed up like it was in 2014 – there’s about 5,000 people it’s louder than any venue I’ve ever been in. It’s very intimate and the crowd are on top of you.

“In a lot of places, you’re not conscious of that but Glasgow is the loudest place I’ve ever swum. That and Budapest last year, they were the loudest venues, even louder than Rio.”

A repeat of 2014 will take some doing but Murdoch is allowing himself to dream.

“To win gold would be unbelievab­le, it would be amazing,” he said. “It would be a defence as well and it would be crazy to stand on top of the podium again, in Glasgow. My family and friends will be there.

“I definitely think about standing on the top of the podium – it helps when you’re in training and you picture it being your last 50.

“You’ ve got to let yourself dream because if you don’t do that, there’s no fun in it.”

“I definitely think it’s important if you feel that way that you seek help, whether it’s a sports psychologi­st or just friends or family. ”

ROSS MURDOCH

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