#KingKyle Says “Some Of My Skills Aren’t World Class Yet”

2019 AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS

On night 2 of the 2019 Australian National Championships, 2016 Olympic champion Kyle Chalmers produced a monster 47.48 new personal best in the men’s 100m freestyle. That destroyed the competition, beating the fastest man ever in textile, Cameron McEvoy, by over a second and a half.

Chalmers’ time even beat what it took the now-20-year-old to win Rio gold, which was 47.58, the South Australian’s previous personal best.

Speaking of his historic race at his home pool of the SA Aquatic & Leisure Centre, Chalmers said, “I wasn’t expecting that at all, I felt lethargic and heavy in the water this morning which is pretty normal with no taper and trying to back up from last night (where he won the 100m butterfly) so I did everything I could to get myself swimming fast.

“I got a massage and gave myself plenty of time to stretch and recover and did a 2.5km warm up — which is a very extended warm up for me, we’re trying to train through this meet.

“So to go that fast I really wanted to do a 47, I’ve never been 47 in my home pool so we’ve ticked that box and it’s exciting.

“Some of my skills are probably not world class yet and I know if I can drop those 0.1 of a second then everything adds up. That time is a great time, obviously my fastest I’ve ever done and it’s competitive in the world,” he said.

“I have a skill acquisition (coach) who works with me on a daily basis so we’ll review tonight, work out where the areas are that I need to improve on.

“I know my turn this morning was 0.04 of a second slower than what Cam (McEvoy) went when he went 47.0 so I know that my skills are coming, but it’s just about practising every time we do a turn in training.

“We do hundreds of them a day and you can practice bad skills pretty easily so it’s your muscle memory coming into a race you don’t want to be thinking about it too much you just want it to happen naturally.”

Quotes courtesy of AAP.

As originally reported:

MEN’S 100M FREE – FINAL

2016 Olympic champion Kyle Chalmers threw down a monster personal best of 47.48 to take the gold tonight in the men’s 100m free with ease. After hitting a solid 48.60 in this morning’s prelims, fans knew something was on the agenda for tonight in Chalmers’ home pool and the 20-year-old Marion swimmer didn’t disappoint.

Opening in 23.08 and closing in 24.40 (!), Chalmers put up a time that beat his gold medal-wining mark from Rio by .10. #KingKyle remains the top swimmer in the world in this event by a long shot, leading the elite with the only sub-48 second time of the season. You can read more about Chalmers’ phenomenal swim here.

Australia’s national record holder and the fastest man ever in a textile suit (47.04 from 2016), Cameron McEvoy, was faster than this morning’s 49.21, but still managed just 49.07 tonight for silver. We’ll see what he can produce at the World Championships Trials in June.

Clyde Lewis of St. Peters Western nabbed 3rd place in 49.29.

 

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MR FLY
5 years ago

Gonna be a great showdown between Chalmers and Dressel if both turn up at Worlds on point.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  MR FLY
5 years ago

the 100 fly will be epic too i think …..or the 200 free

swimma
Reply to  ERVINFORTHEWIN
5 years ago

the 200 free at worlds is going to see an unprecedented number of 1:44s/45s…might i suspect a 1:46.0 won’t make semis?

Troy
Reply to  MR FLY
5 years ago

It’s looking like much more than a 2 man race.

DEAN IS GOD
Reply to  MR FLY
5 years ago

Chamers, Dressel, Grinev, Morozov, so many people that can go 47.5

Markster
Reply to  DEAN IS GOD
5 years ago

I think everyone you mentioned except morozov has already been faster than 47.5

Jeff
5 years ago

Grinev only went 47.65 tonight

bear drinks beer
Reply to  Jeff
5 years ago

ONLY

John26
Reply to  Jeff
5 years ago

He seemed like he got spooked by Morozov going out fast, I don’t think he can swim like that at worlds. This is shaping up to be the fastest final since 2009, but we’ve said this before

John
Reply to  John26
5 years ago

That to me is still is the best example explaining the laws of human physiology. I mean his last 10 meters after such a start. Maybe add Efimova’s 200 breast in Russia this week.

Old Man Chalmers
Reply to  Jeff
5 years ago

Grinev ONLY did a time that would have medaled in every international final bar the 2009 world championship.

John26
5 years ago

It’s good to hear that he’s focusing on the right things, and not fudging it just so he’d be done with the sport in 2 years. It sounds like he’s enjoying himself

Togger
5 years ago

Every pro swimmer at the Olympics: “Yeah, the time’s great but our big focus is 2024, so we only stopped lifting a few days back and we’ve been putting in some heavy mileage ready for Paris”.

Good to see Kyle recognising skills rather than just macho-ing about big yardage, if the rest of the world’s going to catch up to the US, skills are key.

Swammer
5 years ago

Just flexing on everyone by saying he isn’t tapered.

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Retta Race

Former Masters swimmer and coach Loretta (Retta) thrives on a non-stop but productive schedule. Nowadays, that includes having just earned her MBA while working full-time in IT while owning French 75 Boutique while also providing swimming insight for BBC.

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