The Herald (South Africa)

Chad can beat the butterflie­s

Le Clos could take 100m race – Neethling

- David Isaacson

ADETERMINE­D Chad Le Clos can bounce back in the 100m butterfly in Rio today after being humbled by Michael Phelps in the 200m, former swimming star Ryk Neethling says.

Le Clos burst onto the world stage when he edged Phelps in the 200m butterfly at the London Olympics in 2012, but in the highly anticipate­d rematch here the South African was pushed into fourth place.

Phelps reclaimed the crown for the third time since 2004.

After the race, a hurting Le Clos, 24, rushed past the media without talking, and the question is whether he can lift himself up for the 100m butterfly, the event in which he is the two-time world champion.

“I think so,” Neethling replied. He was a member of SA’s Olympic champion 4x100m freestyle relay team in 2004.

“The boy has [it] – what he did [in the 200m freestyle] was incredible, really, really just unbelievab­le.

“There’s nothing wrong with him, I just think he hit a bit of wobble there. I think Phelps at 75 [metres] started to pull away, and Chad let him go a little too much.

“He looked flat tonight. There was nothing there when we all wanted him to go.”

Le Clos won a brave silver in the 200m freestyle on Monday night, using the unfamiliar tactic of going out hard instead of his come-from-behind strategy.

“Switching gears for him is not as easy as it used to be,” Neethling said.

“He’s got that speed, but he can’t come out of the turn and push it like he used to.”

He expects Le Clos to quit the 200m butterfly to focus on the freestyle events, particular­ly the blue riband 100m race.

“The only reason he didn’t do the 100m in Rio is that the semifinals were just before the 200m butterfly final.

“In my humble opinion, I think this is the last time we see Chad swim the 200 fly at a major event.

“He’s going to be a great 100 freestyler, he’s going to get bigger and stronger.

“It’s also just a much easier race to train for than the 200 butterfly. The butterfly’s an animal.”

Coach Graham Hill brushed off his protege’s failure.

“At the 150 mark, he was good – 1:23.3. That’s where we wanted to be and he just didn’t have it to come home.

“I think it was a big race and hats off to Michael, the true champion that he is.

“The true champion Chad is, we’ve still got the 100 fly to come so I’m sure he’ll be back and challengin­g again on Friday night.”

Le Clos copped much flak on social media for the call-room shadow boxing routine he directed at Phelps before their 200m butterfly semifinal, but the American swimmer praised his rival.

“He is a very good racer and he’s not afraid to put it all on the line,” Phelps said. “He did that in the 200 free last night.

“The kid’s got talent. I knew exactly where he was most of the race.

“What happened four years ago stuck with me.

“It was a frustratin­g race for me and it’s good for the sport to be able to have a competitor like that to race in multiple events, not just the 200 fly.

“This is a race I really wanted to win. I really wanted that one back.

“I don’t care about the time, I’m just happy I was able to win.”

Just more than an hour after the race Phelps, 31, picked up the 25th Olympic medal – 21st gold – of his career in the 4x200m freestyle relay.

“Doing a double like that is a lot harder now than it once was, that is for sure, even with an hour. It was a challengin­g one.”

I’m sure he’ll be back and challengin­g again on Friday night

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? CHAD LE CLOS
CHAD LE CLOS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa