Business Day

Van der Burgh wins breastroke crown again

- David Isaacson Durban /TMG Digital

Cameron van der Burgh won the South African 100m breaststro­ke crown for the 11th time in a row in Durban last night, posting a time that pushed him to second on the world rankings.

The veteran was “super happy” when he saw his time of 59.73 seconds on the King’s Park pool electronic board, clenching his hand in a fist.

His switch to new coach Andrea Di Nino is already paying off, even with the time he took off after the Rio Games (he insists he has some excess weight to lose).

Van der Burgh went out unusually slowly, but he came back like a torpedo in the second half. “I’m stoked,” said the 28year-old, the 2012 Olympic champion and 2016 runner-up.

“With the amount of work [I’ve done], it’s encouragin­g. I’ve been wanting to try this new style for a while and it feels like it’s paying off and each race is getting better and better.”

The first half of the race was about finding his rhythm.

“The main thing is to hit the sweet spot of the stroke. The first 50m is going to be hard because we haven’t done that speed racing and it’s almost like you start forcing it so it makes you too tired.

“You’ve always got to swim at a speed where it makes you energy-efficient, you’re not fighting with the water, and if you’re not racing enough, you don’t know how to play that speed yet. “Tonight was more about understand­ing, ‘okay, just slow down a little bit, get into the rhythm, get into the groove, get into the stroke and then nail it onto the second 50m’.”

Van der Burgh is aiming to medal at his sixth consecutiv­e world championsh­ips when he competes in Budapest in July.

Myles Brown became the third swimmer to crack a world championsh­ip A-qualifying time here, going 1 minute 47.51 seconds in the 200m freestyle semifinals to earn pole position for tonight’s final ahead of Chad Le Clos, who clocked 1:49.47.

Le Clos, who achieved his qualifying mark in the 100m freestyle on Monday night, will be the favourite after the 1:45.20 national record he clocked winning Olympic silver last year.

But, he lost the 200m freestyle to Brown at the 2015 SA championsh­ips.

Tatjana Schoenmake­r will attempt to become the first local woman to qualify for a top internatio­nal gala in three years, when she competes in the 100m breaststro­ke final tonight.

Schoenmake­r cracked a 1:07.99 personal best for the fastest time of the semifinals last night, still a little way off the 1:07.58 A-qualifying mark.

No South African women qualified for the 2016 Olympics nor the 2015 world championsh­ips, although several made it to the 2014 Commonweal­th Games, but Schoenmake­r could change that.

“I broke 1:08 for the first time, so that’s really good,” said the financial sciences student.

“Now that I know I can dip under [1:08], hopefully, I can go again for it. I was a bit tense over the last 15m, but we’ll try and work on that.”

 ?? /Steve Haag/Gallo Images ?? Going swimmingly: Chad le Clos chats with coach Andrea Di Nino at the SA championsh­ips in Durban.
/Steve Haag/Gallo Images Going swimmingly: Chad le Clos chats with coach Andrea Di Nino at the SA championsh­ips in Durban.

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