The Sunday Post (Dundee)

TV no distractio­n asTom aims to make a Splash!

- By John Barrett sport@sundaypost.com

OLYMPIC poster boyTom Daley denies that hisTV work over the past two years has been a distractio­n to his diving.

In fact, the London 2012 bronze medallist insists that shows like Splash andTom Daley Goes Global have helped, not hindered, and he aims to prove that by reproducin­g his Commonweal­th Games form of four years ago.

“It’s been a massive help to be involved in those programmes,” he says.

“If I hadn’t had something other than diving to focus on, I’d be sitting at home doing nothing – and that fries your brain.

“All through my early years in the sport, I also had schoolwork to juggle and that was great because one thing took my mind off the other.

“I used to use diving discipline­s – like goalsettin­g and time management – at school, and I definitely thrived on having something to focus on outside the diving environmen­t.

“But training always comes first, and I have to dive well if I’m going to be Commonweal­th Champion.”

Daley won individual and synchro gold in Dehli, and he will be the star attraction of the Glasgow 2014 event, which actually takes place at the Royal Commonweal­th Pool in Edinburgh.

“I was really happy with my two golds in Dehli,” he says.“I’ll be going for the individual again, but I’ve not yet made a decision on the synchro.

“I dived in Edinburgh last year in theWorld Series, and it was amazing. I can’t wait.

“I think Glasgow will be an great host for the Games, and know they will put on a great show. I want to go into the competitio­n and try to retain my title.

“I’ve loved the Commonweal­th Games ever since my dad recorded the diving in Manchester back in 2002. I’d spend hours watching the tapes over and over.

“I was eight then, and I did my first-ever senior internatio­nal when I was 12. I’m 20 now, and I feel like an old man in the sport.

“You can never get complacent. I have to focus only on myself and treat every dive as if it was my last.

“My degrees of difficulty have massively increased in all my dives over the last few years, and I’m feeling really good at the moment.

“For instance, I’ve been working hard on my twister, which has always been a scary dive for me.

“I’ve been working with my psychologi­st, Kate Hays, on different techniques.

“The only way to overcome fear is to confront it and keep doing the dive, and I’m a lot more comfortabl­e with it than I was.”

 ??  ?? Tom Daley with the Queen’s Baton.
Tom Daley with the Queen’s Baton.

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