TRAINING
I was swimming at my local swimming club to me which was in Hove. It was called Shiverers and as I started to get better I started to have problems with the coach and the rest of the team. There was quite a lot of jealousy. My coach I guess wasn’t really experienced for the level that I was starting to swim at and in addition I was having to travel from Brighton to Crystal Palace twice a week to train in a 50 metre pool.
I meet a coach there called Dave Champion and I started doing sessions with him about twice a week and just loved them. They were so different and innovative, challenging a lot of it was science based. He had done a lot of research on the science behind training sessions. And it was all about every thing we did for a reason. Every time I did something in the pool pushing myself really hard there was actually a reason for it and to me that made sense, rather than someone saying to me do it cause I say so. I like to know why and what the plan was and what we were aiming for and sort of I like to know the detail. Dave used to, he was still based in London and he would send me session down, he would ring me the night before. I would then go to Brighton college to a 25 metre pool, my mum would take me she would wait for a little while, while I did the warm up and I would swim on my own in the pool with the session that my coach had given me the night before. Swim on my own, she would pick me up, have breakfast I’d go to school and she’d go to work. And that’s what I did six or seven mornings a week just swimming on my own and then twice a week in the evenings I would go up to Crystal Palace and train with the squad up there. But I just loved the sessions and it was really difficult swimming on my own, but I was enjoying the sessions and I was doing well. Then we got to the point where Dave was looking for a new job he wanted to move from London and was looking for a swimming club and the job in Ipswich came up this was about 1988. Ipswich swimming club head coach came up, came for the interview, got the job and he came here. He’s been the head coach here ever since and done an amazing job, I moved here, sort of half moved here in 1988 - and was still flitting between school and being here. And then once I left school did my A levels, finished my school work and came here full time and this has been my second home ever since.
The training is very, very hard, I was doing ten sessions a week in the pool behind me in lane 8, that was my lane, the furthest lane that was my lane. Ten sessions a week of 2 hours in the pool so I was up at 5 o’clock six mornings a week and then weight training 3 times a week for an hour and a half. I used to finish every gym session with 900 sit ups straight, had a good 6 pack though and then we used to do press ups, swiss ball, gym ball or everything. It was hard work, its not just about turning up and swimming up and down for 2 hours, you have to push yourself to absolute extremes if you want to swim fast. Its going to hurt if you want to race to you have to practice going through that pain in a training session.
(broke back) It took me three years to get back to full training and I’d no idea whether I was going to be able to compete again whether I was even going to be able to swim properly again. So it was incredibly tough and there were lots of people who said to me that I should just give up. People involved in swimming because I was old 24, so I was considered old anyway and I’d already won Commonwealths, been world champion so people just thought just give up, go quietly you know you are never gonna get back to what you were. But I sort of sat down with my coach and I said I just need to know, I don’t feel like I’ve achieved everything that I can achieve. So I would rather try and fail spectacularly and have everyone say I told you so than actually just walk away and never know whether I could have made it back. So we decided that I was gonna come back and work towards it. So it was literally from doing 6 thousand metres in a session to I was down to doing 4 lengths then having to get out and I built up from that over the 3 years to get back to full training.
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