The Herald on Sunday

Scot out to make a name for himself

- BY STEWART FISHER

THE Great Britain team for this week’s World Short Course Swimming Championsh­ips in Hangzhou, China, is certainly small.

With just three athletes from these islands taking the plunge to compete, compared to 39 from Russia, 37 from Japan, 35 from the USA and 32 from both Italy and hosts China, let’s just say we shouldn’t expect to return with too much in the way of relay medals.

But for one member of this select band, Mark Szaranek, a double medallist for Scotland at the Gold Coast Commonweal­th Games, that only tells part of the story.

“The British team here is pretty small,” said Szaranek, who was one of the Sunday Herald’s six athletes to follow in the run-up to the Games. “But it is small and mighty, I would say. Ben Proud and Georgia Davies are two of the top swimmers in the world and we are all looking to come here, swim our main events with real focus and come away with a few medals.”

For Szaranek, who trains out at the illustriou­s University of Florida Gators swim club alongside swimming super stars like USA’s Caleb Dressel, that means the 400IM, in which he won silver for Scotland in Australia – now incorporat­ing 16 lengths rather than just eight – and the 200IM and the 200m freestyle.

While many other key members of Scotland’s swimming fraternity are busy competing in his old haunt at the Royal Commonweal­th Pool at the Scottish Short Course Swimming Championsh­ips, Szaranek is deadly serious about making a splash at world level.

“Why is it so important for me to be out here?” said Szaranek. “Well, after all, it is a World Championsh­ips. It might be in a shorter pool but it is still a World Championsh­ips, still a big deal.

“British swimming might have placed their focus elsewhere, more on the long course, and that is their decision to do so but even if it is short course I still want to come here and represent the country as best I can and hopefully come away with some medals.”

With swimming in short course pools, even if they are measured in yards rather than metres across the pond, commonplac­e in the US collegiate system, Szaranek feels he is playing to his strengths in this form of the sport.

“I like to think I am pretty good at the turns and underwater­s so it plays to my strengths,” says Szaranek. “At the last short course world championsh­ips I came away with a fifth and a sixth so I will be looking to improve on that as I feel I have moved on my swimming a significan­t amount since then. I am definitely a better athlete than I was in 2016. So I will be looking to move it on and hopefully come away with some better finishes.

“I see a chance here to make a name for myself on the world stage. I had a pretty successful Commonweal­th Games but it is not quite the same level as a world championsh­ips. I am trying to take that next step, in terms of competing for the top three spots. It is not all about medals but they are what British Swimming look for, that is where we are aiming. We don’t aim just to be competitiv­e, we aim to be at the top. First you need to get into the final, then it is a case of racing for the medals.”

With Proud and Davies both arriving on Friday, Szaranek spent the past few days alone, acclimatis­ing to life in Hangzhou, a city of 10 million people. Having spent some time in Japan last summer, he would dearly love to be back in Asia for the Olympics in Tokyo in 2020.

“China is 13 hours ahead of eastcoast US so I came out a couple of days early just to get acclimatis­ed. I’ve been out here for a few days on my own but the organising has been prettygood here, I’ve had no problems. This is the first time I’ve ever been in China and it’s interestin­g. It is pretty different … but it seems all right so far. The hotel here is really nice, the peoplehave been nice and the food has been good as well, because I was a little worried about that beforehand.”

He will have more home comforts next December at the European Short Course Championsh­ips to be held at Scotstoun, Glasgow.

“I am a big fan of short course swimming so anything at home I would be looking to compete in, and a European short course in Glasgow would be a great meet,” said Szaranek. “We put on a show for the long course Europeans and this will be the same.”

The British team here is pretty small, but it is small and mighty I would say

 ??  ?? Mark Szaranek, a double Commonweal­th medallist, is hoping to step up to winning medals at world level
Mark Szaranek, a double Commonweal­th medallist, is hoping to step up to winning medals at world level

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