Australia see another gold rush at Los Angeles 2028 after strong world championships

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Australia's Kaylee McKeown during the 4x100 medley relay final at the World Championships in Singapore on Aug 3.

Australia's Kaylee McKeown during the 4x100 medley relay final at the World Championships in Singapore on Aug 3.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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After a strong showing at the recently concluded World Aquatics Championships in Singapore, Australia’s national coach Rohan Taylor is confident that a golden generation of swimmers can deliver another big performance at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

While the United States topped the Singapore standings with nine golds from 29 swimming medals overall, Australia were cheered by their tally of eight golds among 20 medals.

“From a performance point of view, when you look at the medal table, it was a great outcome for us,” Taylor told Reuters.

Led by a crop of generational talent in their women’s team, Australia have rivalled the Americans’ supremacy at the last two Olympics, scooping seven golds from the Paris 2024 Games pool after their best haul of nine titles at the Tokyo Games in 2021.

The US topped both swimming meets, with eight golds in Paris and 11 in Tokyo.

European nations are making inroads, particularly in men’s events, but Australia’s Olympic champions showed that they have lost none of their hunger since Paris.

Backstroke queen Kaylee McKeown swept the 100m and 200m golds in Singapore in a repeat of the 2023 Fukuoka world championships, while Mollie O’Callaghan grabbed a second women’s 200m freestyle title and was instrumental in Australia’s two freestyle relay golds.

Cameron McEvoy stormed to the men’s 50m freestyle gold, becoming Australia’s oldest world champion swimmer at 31.

Australia invests heavily in swimming, which has contributed about a third of its total Olympic medals and produced an honour roll of champions such as Ian Thorpe, Dawn Fraser and Emma McKeon.

Taylor and his staff are tasked with keeping the good times rolling through to 2032 when Australia hosts the Olympics in Brisbane.

The Australian team were missing big names in Singapore, including the resting four-time Olympic champion Ariarne Titmus and injured breaststroker Zac Stubblety-Cook, a former world champion.

However, there were statement performances from lesser lights.

The partially deaf Meg Harris claimed her first individual title in the women’s 50m freestyle, having shared all her previous gold medals at global events with relay teammates.

Teen talent Milla Jansen and Olivia Wunsch helped Australia win the women’s 4x100m freestyle relay in the absence of Shayna Jack and the retired McKeon.

Lani Pallister gave American great Katie Ledecky a scare in the 800m freestyle, while beating Canada’s irrepressible Summer McIntosh for the silver medal.

Pallister’s time of 8min 5.98sec shaved five seconds off her personal best and was the sixth-fastest on record, marking her as a big threat to Ledecky’s bid for a record-extending fifth Olympic gold in the event at LA 2028.

“Ledecky is the greatest distance female... we’ve ever seen,” added Taylor. “But at some point there’ll be an athlete taking over and I’m sure Lani is motivated to do that.”

For all the podium celebrations, Australia have work to do to ensure they can challenge the American supremacy in LA.

The US team’s results in Singapore were probably affected by an outbreak of gastroenteritis at their pre-meet camp in Thailand.

Australia made little impression in the men’s backstroke and breaststroke, and consequently had modest results in the medley relay events.

The women were well beaten in the 4x100m medley relay by the world record-setting US team, which cost silver medallists Australia their top spot in the medal table.

Taylor said that Australia needed to develop more depth in men’s backstroke and breaststroke across the board to strengthen their relay teams.

“If we keep building on that, we will always be around the mark,” he said. REUTERS

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