SA coach wants to know why too few US-based swimmers are succeeding
With eye on the Tokyo Olympics, Graham Hill mulls why swimmers are failing to convert to elite level
Swimming SA is looking into why so few of the country’s swimmers based in the US are failing to convert to elite level‚ national coach Graham Hill said on Monday. Nine swimmers qualified for the World Championships during the national trials in Durban last week. The good news is that four of them were women‚ and every single one is trained locally. Not one of the females in the US made the cut-off to get to the international showpiece in Gwangju‚ South Korea. Of the five male qualifiers‚ three are in the US. “We are looking at how many swimmers we’ve got in the US‚ and when they left us what condition they were in‚” said Hill. “When they come back they’re not stepping up to the next level and that doesn’t add up for me.” Olympic medallists Penny Heyns and Marianne Kriel were among the last batch of US-based women to qualify for the Olympics. The SA women who qualified for Beijing 2008 and London 2012 were all trained locally (no women qualified in 2004 and 2016). Roland Schoeman‚ Ry...
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