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What I Would Rather be Watching in London This Year
London has all the major international sporting athletes and attention descending on it in under 200 days, for two weeks of intense sporting competition equal to nothing in depth and breadth. The 2012 London Olympic Games begin in just 126 days, running for two weeks from the 27th of July-12th of August at and in the vicinity of historic English sites. Our prospects look better than they did just 12 months ago with some of our swimmers putting in very strong performances at the Australian Swimming Championships which came to an end last night in Adelaide. Other athletes in different sports, including Sally Pearson in athletics also add to medal promise of our Australian Olympic team.
But it is our Paralympic athletes in the pool that I will be watching when the Paralympics commence in London in only 159 days at the same venues as their Olympic counterparts. Our swimmers with a disability have shown over the past week of competition that they have what it takes to not only win more gold medals, but to also break more world records in the process.
Over the whole Australian Swimming Championships, Paralympic hopefuls broke an astonishing 25 world records in striving to make the team for the London 2012 Paralympic Games. How many did our Olympic athletes achieve? Zip, donuts. That’s not to say that our Olympic medal prospects are bad, they are not. The men’s team has strengthened much over the 4 years since the last Olympics from China, with stars like James Magnussen agonisingly close to achieving world-beating times and our men’s and women’s relay teams looking as strong as ever.
It will however be our Elite Athletes with a Disability that lead the way in London in the “real Olympics” with 25 world records surely converting into a gold medal in at least a bare majority of these events come the Paralympics later this year.
Our swimmers to compete in the Games are far from household names and they should have at least been mentioned in a breath of news coverage of the disastrous comeback campaigns of the likes of Ian Thorpe et al. Names to watch include Matthew Cowdrey, Prue Watt, Ellie Cole, Michael Anderson, Kayla Clarke, Jacqueline Freney and Blake Cochrane to name just some of our gold, let alone broader medal hopes.
These swimmers will now head back to the pool after perhaps a short break to refresh and refocus their minds on the big task of stepping up another level in London in just months. They will go in knowing that if they keep their focus and training is maintained and they stay injury-free that their chances are very strong of replicating the amazing efforts over the last week and a bit that have gone disgracefully unreported as is unfortunately the case on a too regular basis. I know I would rather watch our Paralympic swimmers, but I love the sport, so I will be watching both, hoping that our Olympic swimmers really do show up to compete and smash the world. The difference is, with our Paralympians, I don’t need to hope.
Swimmers with a Disability Results for Thursday 22nd of March
WOMEN’S 50m BREASTSTROKE
1 Prue Watt S13 36.27
2 Madeleine Scott S9 39.96
3 Tanya Huebner S6 47.62
4 Dianne Saunders S6 47.94
5Amanda Fowler S14 38.91
6 Monique Beckwith S15 39.07
7 Emily Schmidt S14 41.33
8 Maddi Elliott S8 47.88
MEN’S 50m BREASTSTROKE
1 Blake Cochrane S8 37.29
2 Matthew Levy S7 37.63
3 Richard Eliason S14 32.03
4 Jay Dohnt S7 41.59
5 Ahmed Kelly S4 53.41
6 Jeremy McClure S12 36.34
7 Jesse Aungles S8 42.39
8 Michael Auprince S9 37.28
Swimmers with a Disability Results for Sunday 18th of March
WOMEN’S 100m BREASTROKE
1 Prue Watt SB13 1:21.37
2 Tanya Huebner SB6 1:42.79
3 Amanda Fowler SB14 1:23.79
4 Kayla Clarke SB14 1:24.54
5 Teigan Van Roosmalen SB13 1:24.54
6 Katherine Downie SB9 1:26.36
7 Madeleine Scott SB9 1:27.24
8 Dianne Saunders SB7 1:47.17
MEN’S 100m BREASTSTROKE
1 Blake Cochrane SB7 1:19.06
2 Matthew Levy SB7 1:23.86
3 Matthew Cowdrey SB8 1:10.07
4 Ahmed Kelly SB3 1:56.05
5 Grant Patterson SB2 2:20.11
6 Richard Eliason SB14 1:10.07
7 Rick Pendleton SB9 1:10.89
8 Jay Dohnt SB6 1:30.68
The winning effort by Blake Cochrane was also a world record in his classification.
Swimmers with a Disability Results for Friday 16th of March
The second day of events at the Australian Swimming Championships, doubling as the Olympic and Paralympic selection trials has just concluded in Adelaide.
Both the men and women competed in 50 metres freestyle.
WOMENS 50m FREESTYLE
1 Kayla Clarke S14 28.66
2 Taylor Corry S14 28.87
3 Annabelle Williams S9 29.63
4 Jacqueline Freney S7 32.31
5 Kara Leo S14 29.58
6 Esther Overton S3 1:13.58
7 Katherine Downie S10 29.03
8 Prue Watt S13 28.39
The gold medal effort of Kayla Clarke was also rewarded with a world record.
MENS 50m FREESTYLE
1 Mitchell Kilduff S14 24.84
2 Daniel Fox S14 25.12
3 Matthew Cowdrey S9 25.28
4 Andrew Pasterfield S10 24.28
5 Matthew Levy S7 28.75
6 Blake Cochrane S8 27.78
7 Matthew Haanappel S6 31.35
8 Michael Auprince S9 26.99
The winning effort of Mitchell Kilduff earned him a world record as did the bronze medal performance of Daniel Fox. Matthew Cowdrey’s exploits earned in this event also earned him a world record! Congratulations to Mitchell, Daniel and Matt!