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Agnel Focused On The Now, But Could He Be At NBAC Past Rio?

It was in May that Olympic champion Yannick Agnel informed the swimming world that he would be leaving his training base in Nice, France for the opportunity to train at the North Baltimore Aquatic Club with Coach Bob Bowman. Now almost six months later Agnel told AFP Press Agency that he loves his new home and that he is not going to rule out the possibility of staying past the Olympics in Rio, “What’s for sure is that I’m here for at least three years, at least until Rio,” said Agnel.

“I don’t want to say that, after three years, it’ll be over and I’m going. One never knows what might happen.”

“What I do know is that I really love to swim and I really want to train more. I love what I do. I love this environment. So no, I certainly don’t rule out doing more than three years here.”

At a press conference in May where Agnel discussed his decision to come to America he told the press, “I want to find with Bob Bowman what was lacking in Nice: warmth, sharing, sincerity,” Agnel said, roughly, in French. “That Fabrice (Pellerin) has always wanted to avoid. He always wanted to put distance between himself and his swimmers. It is a choice that I respect and that works, I’m a double Olympic champion and I owe him.”

It appears that Agnel has found what he was looking for both in his coach and his new American environment, “Everybody hugs each other, cheers each other on, encourages each other to the end… The motto here is, we train seriously, but we don’t take ourselves seriously.”

For anyone who has been to Meadowbrook (the home of the North Baltimore Aquatic Club) they know it is a special and inspiring environment. Whether it be the massive pictures of their successful Olympians, the athletes in the water or the coaches on deck, it is a place where athletes can’t help to be motivated to be at their best.

When walking on to the deck in 2008 with the legendary swimming writer Cecil Colwin he stopped me in my tracks and said, “Listen, that sound is the sound of something very different and something very special.”

Agnel’s performances in Barcelona were good enough for him to return home with gold in the 200 freestyle (1:44.20) and the 4 x 100 freestyle relay (lead-off – 48.76). Both performances were well off his lifetime bests of 47.84 in the 100 and 1:43.14 in the 200, but both Bowman and Agnel looked as the meet as a learning experience to discover how his training needs to be constructed moving forward.

“What’s changing is that we have a plan and we can put it into action,” said Agnel.

“As Bob said this summer, we’ll play it by ear on the way to Barcelona, and then learn the sheet music. Now we have three years to Rio (and) a road map” to get there.”

It has not only been Agnel who has been happy with his change of environment, Bowman has been very impressed by the 21 year old Frenchman, “He’s really quite similar to Michael in several ways — his mental approach, his dedication to training, those sorts of things,” Bowman told AFP.

“But he’s also quite different and I think he can stand on his own. He doesn’t need a comparison to someone else … He’s the first Yannick.”

The coach-swimmer relationship is a special one and the strength of that relationship quite often determines the ultimate success of the athlete. Agnel went looking for the type of relationship that he desired, something he appears to have found. In fact that relationship and the environment in Baltimore may be enough to keep him in America past 2016.

….

Videos of Agnel in Baltimore can be found at L’Equipe’s website

 

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bobo gigi
11 years ago

Thank you for this very interesting article.
Other little TV report here.
http://video.eurosport.fr/natation/yannick-agnel-a-baltimore_vid298100/video.shtml

Could he be at NBAC past Rio?
I would rather ask another question.
Will he continue swimming past Rio?
Too early to answer.

Mr Bowman said Yannick Agnel was quite similar to Michael Phelps but also quite different.
Yes, Yannick is dedicated to training, has big natural physical abilities and is a killer in the water. Like Michael, he hates to lose more than he loves to win. The big basic difference I see is that Yannick, unlike Michael, is only a freestyler. He’s really bad on backstroke, on butterfly and on breaststroke. That’s why… Read more »

aswimfan
Reply to  bobo gigi
11 years ago

Actually, comparison with Thorpe is also not quite fitting. You said that Yannick is really bad on backstroke, on butterfly and on breaststroke. You said Agnel is only a freestyler,however, Thorpe was not only a freestyler.
Thorpe was pretty good in back (commonwealth games silver medalist in 100 nack) and world championships silver medalist in 200 IM. As age grouper, Thorpe was really great in backstroke and IM. Actually, his coach himself said that Thorpe’s focusing only on 400 free in 1997 Australian trials was due to absence of Perkins and Kowalski and this catalysed his eventual focus on freestyle.

Just out of curiosity, what’s Yannick’s PB in 800?

Anyway, I can’t wait to see what Bowman will… Read more »

bobo gigi
Reply to  aswimfan
11 years ago

I just said he looked much more like Ian Thorpe than Michael Phelps.
I know you are the greatest Thorpe specialist on swimswam so I’m not going to start a discussion now about him. 🙂
Since I started to be seriously interested in swimming in 2000, except one time when he finished 2nd behind MP in the 200 IM in Barcelona in 2003, I have only known Ian Thorpe on freestyle. And he was great from the 100 to the 800. That’s why I made the comparison.

About the 800, I don’t know his PB in long course. I don’t remember seeing him in the past 3 years in the 800 free in long course. But he… Read more »

SwimFanFinland
Reply to  bobo gigi
11 years ago

Hopefully a crazy freestyle triple from 100m to 400m but with an emphasis on the longer end.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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