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Cate Campbell Opens Up On Decision To Come Back, Put Full Focus On Paris 2024

After taking an extended break from swimming after the Tokyo Olympics, Cate Campbell is back with her full focus geared toward qualifying for a fifth Australian Olympic team next summer in Paris.

Campbell, who returned to official competition last month and was in action this week at the Australian Championships in Queensland, spoke on the trepidation she was feeling towards the sport coming into the week, set to go up against the country’s best for the first time in nearly two years.

“I’m feeling the most uncomfortable I have about swimming in a very long time. I’m not really sure what to expect,” Campbell told The Courier-Mail.

“It’s the first opportunity to see the competition I’ll be up against.”

Regarding potentially walking away from the sport for good, the 30-year-old said she never reached the point where she felt like she was done with swimming.

“I asked lots of other retired athletes and while they all had different reasons for leaving they all said ‘when you know…you know’. I didn’t have that sense of knowing.

“When I came back from Tokyo, I was exhausted in every sense of the word. But I wasn’t out of love with swimming and the Olympic element that comes with it.”

At the Australian Championships this week, which are still ongoing, Campbell placed third in the women’s 50 free (24.88) and tied for fifth in the 100 free (53.78). Shayna Jack, 24, won the 50 free in a time of 24.45, while 19-year-old Mollie O’Callaghan (52.63) and Jack (52.64) went 1-2 in the 100 free.

Campbell will be back in action at the Australian World Championship Trials in June, but won’t compete in Fukuoka regardless of her results.

“Paris is the end goal,” she said, according to Fox Sports in Australia.

“I’m doing everything in my power to be fit and ready to perform at my absolute best because it will be the last time I get in a swimming pool.

“I have this deep sense of knowing that working towards Paris is going to be the last time that I put together an Olympic preparation, that I will compete (for) my country if I qualify.

“The focus has very much shifted to ensuring that I’m at my absolute best for that.”

 

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Campbell will compete on the Mare Nostrum Tour in Europe next month in the lead-up to World Trials, and says Swimming Australia has been supportive of her decision to opt out of the 2023 World Championships.

Campbell will have her work cut out for her in order to qualify for the Paris Olympics, with O’Callaghan and Jack joined by the likes of Emma McKeonMeg Harris and Madison Wilson in Australia’s stacked crop of sprint freestylers.

However, Campbell is still the Australian Record holder in the 50 free (23.78), and ranks third all-time in the 100 free behind Sweden’s Sarah Sjostrom and McKeon.

“It almost makes me a bit emotional thinking of where I started in this sport 15 years ago and you had to every year, stand up and prove your worth and you were only valued for what you did in the pool.

“I’m so grateful to Swimming Australia for how supportive they’ve been of me taking the time off, for their continued support of me coming back.

“They’ve allowed me to figure out what I think is best for myself and have recognized the contribution that I’ve made over many, many years.

“If I was doing this 15 years ago, I would have had to have left the sport.

“You wouldn’t see athletes be able to take time off and come back – and so I feel that incredible privilege of getting to come back and getting to be around the sport for one last time.”

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Reid
1 year ago

Really hope she makes the relay at least in Paris. Then between her and Dara Torres they’ll have covered 41 years of Olympic swimming, with their first and final individual medals respectively coming in the same event (Beijing 50 free)

Kelsey
1 year ago

I think this is a great idea Worlds isn’t important in the scheme of things. All in on hoping you make Paris 2024 Cate Campbell you are an inspiration.

draft chaser
1 year ago

one of my fav races ever – 4×100 womens medley at tokyo. her clutch swim – damn…. c1 is an all timer

Marklewis
1 year ago

She has a plan to try to qualify for Paris 2024. And she’s back racing. So she’s got a decent shot to reach her goal.

Her best chance is on the relays. She’ll have to swim close to her PBs to qualify for the 50 or 100 freestyle.

kevin
1 year ago

Given the depth we have its not gonna hurt Australia Cate not swimming worlds . At her age you gotta say its a smart move i still don’t think she will get a ind spot Paris but certainly a relay spot is on the cards . She could be used in several relays heat swims she’s not gonna let you down

Sub13
Reply to  kevin
1 year ago

Agreed. The 100 free relay should be pretty safe anyway. Unless she was top 2 she wouldn’t factor into the medley or mixed free anyway.

Glad she’s doing what’s best for her.

Personal Best
1 year ago

Good to hear, and gotta remember that she’s only been back for 4 months… and already posting mid 53s. Tremendous athlete.

Vinay
Reply to  Personal Best
1 year ago

Pressure got to her

Robbos
Reply to  Vinay
1 year ago

She knows best.

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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