Swimming-Australia's Titmus might hang up the goggles after Paris


  • Swimming
  • Wednesday, 14 Jun 2023

FILE PHOTO: Commonwealth Games - Swimming - Women's 400m Freestyle - Medal Ceremony - Sandwell Aquatics Centre, Birmingham, Britain - August 3, 2022 Gold Medallist Australia's Ariarne Titmus celebrates on the podium during the medal ceremony REUTERS/Stoyan Nenov/File Photo

MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Ariarne Titmus may bow out of her swimming career at next year's Paris Olympics if unable to find motivation to continue, the Australian champion said.

Titmus, the Olympic 200 and 400 metres freestyle champion, said she had spoken to her coach Dean Boxall about her future and did not want to think beyond the next 12 months.

"I don’t know what I’m going to do after Paris," Titmus told reporters.

"I plan to continue, but you never know.

"It’s certainly not a love thing or a body thing. I think if I went to Paris and won again, certainly (there might be) a motivational factor.

"It becomes harder to keep training at the same level when you have essentially achieved everything you wanted to achieve."

Titmus, whose rivalry with American great Katie Ledecky lit up the Tokyo Games, qualified for Australia's team for next month's world championships in Fukuoka, Japan, by winning the 400 freestyle at trials in Melbourne on Tuesday.

Her time of three minutes 58.47 seconds was an improvement on her modest 4:00.49 set at national championships in April but it was still well adrift of the world record set by teenage Canadian sensation Summer McIntosh.

McIntosh, 16, smashed Titmus's previous world record with a swim of 3:56.08 at the Canadian trials in March.

Titmus, Ledecky and McIntosh are set to battle for the 400 freestyle title at Fukuoka.

The three swimmers all have strong claims.

Titmus won the event at the 2019 world championships in Gwangju but skipped last year's in Budapest which Ledecky won ahead of runnerup McIntosh.

Titmus said the three swimmers were "quite even" going in to Fukuoka but McIntosh was relatively short of big-event experience.

"I feel like Summer hasn't really had that experience yet, racing on the international stage with the big pressure, so it'll be interesting to see how she goes," said Titmus.

"But props to her if she goes in as the favourite."

(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Michael Perry)

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