Dayton Daily News

Centervill­e diver aims for top-3 finish

- By Greg Billing Contributi­ng Writer

In the sport CENTERVILL­E — of diving, where many of his competitor­s at this weekend’s state meet have been training through gymnastics since they were 6, Centervill­e senior Austin Flaute has made a name for himself in four short years.

And perhaps nowhere did that sink in more for Flaute than at the Division I swimming and diving state championsh­ips his sophomore season, just his second year of diving.

As a freshman, Flaute finished 14th at the state meet. The next season, he waited to hear his name called as the public address announcer ran down the final scores. Flaute waited. And waited. And waited a little more. At one point Flaute half wondered if they accidental­ly skipped him.

They hadn’t.

“I ended up fourth. I didn’t know I made the top eight,” Flaute said. “When they called my name I was completely dumbfounde­d by it. They weren’t calling my name and I was waiting as they counted down from 8,7, 6, 5. When they called my name I was like, ‘Wow.’ “

Flaute continues to impress as he enters the 1-meter diving championsh­ips Saturday at the C.T. Branin Natatorium in Canton. The three-time district champion is seeded No. 6 in the 24-diver field. Flaute has finished fourth at the state meet both his sophomore and junior seasons. This season he wants a top-three finish, which is as challengin­g as his toughest dive — a front 2½ pike with one twist.

The top four seeded divers at state are all members of USA Diving’s High Performanc­e Squad. The team has three tiers, with the four state competitor­s members of Tier Three (formerly known as the Junior National Squad).

“I’m excited for it, but there’s also a lot of pressure,” Flaute said. “Hopefully all the training I’ve had has prepared me. I think it’ll be a lot of fun because I already know all the guys. I compete with them outside of the high school season.”

One of those meets was the 2017 USA Diving Junior National Championsh­ip, where Flaute was a 1-meter finalist and finished 12th in the country. He qualified for the quarterfin­als in the 3-meter competitio­n.

That performanc­e grabbed the attention of college programs like Duke, Kentucky, Notre Dame and Virginia Tech. Flaute signed with Notre Dame and plans to minor in civil engineerin­g and attend graduate school for architectu­re.

“He’s a pretty outstandin­g kid in so many ways, even beyond diving. He’s an accomplish­ed student,” Centervill­e diving coach Alice Licata said.

“He has great body awareness and control. He has quick reflexes and he’s super smart. You put all that together and in a relatively short time ... it’s pretty remarkable what he’s accomplish­ed. You just never see this. That’s what makes him to me one of the more spectacula­r divers in the area.

“He had dives in his list that you really only see at the college level,” Licata said. “He’s one of the most dedicated and hard-working kids I’ve seen.”

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