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The one thing that could stand in the way of another McEvoy world title

The one thing that could stand in the way of another McEvoy world title

Australia's quest for world swimming supremacy this year is looking shakier by the day, with Olympic champion Cameron McEvoy admitting he may not compete in the upcoming world championships in Singapore.
Two years ago, Australia topped the medal tally at the world championships in Fukuoka, beating the USA for the first time in a major meeting since 2001.
The USA picked up one more gold medal than Australia at last year's Paris Olympics but the margin could be even greater in Singapore, with Australia already missing superstar Ariarne Titmus, who won't return to competitive swimming until next year.
McEvoy, who won gold in the 50m freestyle at the 2023 world championships, is expecting the birth of his first child with wife Maddie just before next month's world championships.
The 31-year-old will race at this week's Australians swimming trials in Adelaide but his availability for Singapore is under a cloud. McEvoy is expected to miss Australia's staging camp in Darwin ahead of the world championships, which begin on July 27 and run for eight days.
'He's due [to be born] between trials and worlds. Worlds at the moment is up in the air,' McEvoy said. 'I've got trials down as a target comp. After that, who knows?
'I'm not making any decision around what happens. I'll get through the birth and just see how we're going and make a decision. It'll just be monitoring it with the doctors and getting their advice and how Maddie is going as well.'
McEvoy has also revealed he is likely to have a lighter year in 2026 - potentially sitting out the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow and Pan Pacs in California - before building back up ahead of the LA 2028 Olympics.

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The Professor with golden touch plots more swim success
The Professor with golden touch plots more swim success

The Advertiser

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The Professor with golden touch plots more swim success

Fittingly for a maths and physics nerd nicknamed The Professor, Cam McEvoy uses a bell curve to describe his swimming success. The Olympic 50m freestyle champion's latest data point on his curve was entered at Australia's selection trials for the looming world titles. McEvoy clocked 21.30 seconds, the quickest time in the world this year, to win in Adelaide on Wednesday night. The 31-year-old's feat extends his unheralded two-year span of swims in the low to mid-21 second range. "The best way I can put it is, because my training is so hyper-specific, when it comes time to racing, if I were to put everything out on a bell curve, all I have to do is my average to probably get something like that," McEvoy said. "I don't have to go into a race and hope I'm on that 99th percentile of my best ever. "And that's a huge amount of confidence that just allows you to relax before the race and trust the process." McEvoy has a bachelor of science degree, majoring in physics and mathematics. He aspired to be an astronaut and has worked as a fellow at the Centre for Quantum Dynamics at Queensland's Griffith University. And he relishes the technical intricacies of swimming and his event. "Usually I can finish a rep in training and call it down to the microsecond, within 0.02," McEvoy said. "I know where I'm at each point of the race as well. "You look at the Olympic gymnasts, they do the most crazy stuff and they can do it down to the millimetre - and they can do it day in, day out. "It's a level of skill we're hoping to develop here in the water. "And then what comes with that, there's so many angles you can approach and attack the problem and find 0.03 (reduction) here, 0.08 there. "Then you have just got to hope that on the day, all of it aligns." All has aligned for McEvoy since he almost quit swimming after the Tokyo Olympics of 2021. After an extended hiatus, he returned to the pool and vowed to do things his way. Instead of traditional training, he embarked on funky pursuits including rock climbing and calisthenics. And all his time in the water focused on the minutiae of his event in a revolutionary approach that delivered gold in the French capital at McEvoy's fourth Olympics. "It definitely took a chip off my shoulder that I had for a while," he said of his Olympic triumph. "But the manner in which I did it gives me a lot of pride; thinking about where I was, especially in 2022, but the years before that as well. "To go from there, create something and then execute it - that process is more special than the bit of metal at the end. "Getting that out of the way, to then move on to getting married, having my first born on the way - that's even more special. "Digesting the marriage, digesting starting a family, that puts the whole swimming gig into comparison; it humbles the whole job here and makes me realise there's so much more to the world." Fittingly for a maths and physics nerd nicknamed The Professor, Cam McEvoy uses a bell curve to describe his swimming success. The Olympic 50m freestyle champion's latest data point on his curve was entered at Australia's selection trials for the looming world titles. McEvoy clocked 21.30 seconds, the quickest time in the world this year, to win in Adelaide on Wednesday night. The 31-year-old's feat extends his unheralded two-year span of swims in the low to mid-21 second range. "The best way I can put it is, because my training is so hyper-specific, when it comes time to racing, if I were to put everything out on a bell curve, all I have to do is my average to probably get something like that," McEvoy said. "I don't have to go into a race and hope I'm on that 99th percentile of my best ever. "And that's a huge amount of confidence that just allows you to relax before the race and trust the process." McEvoy has a bachelor of science degree, majoring in physics and mathematics. He aspired to be an astronaut and has worked as a fellow at the Centre for Quantum Dynamics at Queensland's Griffith University. And he relishes the technical intricacies of swimming and his event. "Usually I can finish a rep in training and call it down to the microsecond, within 0.02," McEvoy said. "I know where I'm at each point of the race as well. "You look at the Olympic gymnasts, they do the most crazy stuff and they can do it down to the millimetre - and they can do it day in, day out. "It's a level of skill we're hoping to develop here in the water. "And then what comes with that, there's so many angles you can approach and attack the problem and find 0.03 (reduction) here, 0.08 there. "Then you have just got to hope that on the day, all of it aligns." All has aligned for McEvoy since he almost quit swimming after the Tokyo Olympics of 2021. After an extended hiatus, he returned to the pool and vowed to do things his way. Instead of traditional training, he embarked on funky pursuits including rock climbing and calisthenics. And all his time in the water focused on the minutiae of his event in a revolutionary approach that delivered gold in the French capital at McEvoy's fourth Olympics. "It definitely took a chip off my shoulder that I had for a while," he said of his Olympic triumph. "But the manner in which I did it gives me a lot of pride; thinking about where I was, especially in 2022, but the years before that as well. "To go from there, create something and then execute it - that process is more special than the bit of metal at the end. "Getting that out of the way, to then move on to getting married, having my first born on the way - that's even more special. "Digesting the marriage, digesting starting a family, that puts the whole swimming gig into comparison; it humbles the whole job here and makes me realise there's so much more to the world." Fittingly for a maths and physics nerd nicknamed The Professor, Cam McEvoy uses a bell curve to describe his swimming success. The Olympic 50m freestyle champion's latest data point on his curve was entered at Australia's selection trials for the looming world titles. McEvoy clocked 21.30 seconds, the quickest time in the world this year, to win in Adelaide on Wednesday night. The 31-year-old's feat extends his unheralded two-year span of swims in the low to mid-21 second range. "The best way I can put it is, because my training is so hyper-specific, when it comes time to racing, if I were to put everything out on a bell curve, all I have to do is my average to probably get something like that," McEvoy said. "I don't have to go into a race and hope I'm on that 99th percentile of my best ever. "And that's a huge amount of confidence that just allows you to relax before the race and trust the process." McEvoy has a bachelor of science degree, majoring in physics and mathematics. He aspired to be an astronaut and has worked as a fellow at the Centre for Quantum Dynamics at Queensland's Griffith University. And he relishes the technical intricacies of swimming and his event. "Usually I can finish a rep in training and call it down to the microsecond, within 0.02," McEvoy said. "I know where I'm at each point of the race as well. "You look at the Olympic gymnasts, they do the most crazy stuff and they can do it down to the millimetre - and they can do it day in, day out. "It's a level of skill we're hoping to develop here in the water. "And then what comes with that, there's so many angles you can approach and attack the problem and find 0.03 (reduction) here, 0.08 there. "Then you have just got to hope that on the day, all of it aligns." All has aligned for McEvoy since he almost quit swimming after the Tokyo Olympics of 2021. After an extended hiatus, he returned to the pool and vowed to do things his way. Instead of traditional training, he embarked on funky pursuits including rock climbing and calisthenics. And all his time in the water focused on the minutiae of his event in a revolutionary approach that delivered gold in the French capital at McEvoy's fourth Olympics. "It definitely took a chip off my shoulder that I had for a while," he said of his Olympic triumph. "But the manner in which I did it gives me a lot of pride; thinking about where I was, especially in 2022, but the years before that as well. "To go from there, create something and then execute it - that process is more special than the bit of metal at the end. "Getting that out of the way, to then move on to getting married, having my first born on the way - that's even more special. "Digesting the marriage, digesting starting a family, that puts the whole swimming gig into comparison; it humbles the whole job here and makes me realise there's so much more to the world."

The Professor with golden touch plots more swim success
The Professor with golden touch plots more swim success

West Australian

timean hour ago

  • West Australian

The Professor with golden touch plots more swim success

Fittingly for a maths and physics nerd nicknamed The Professor, Cam McEvoy uses a bell curve to describe his swimming success. The Olympic 50m freestyle champion's latest data point on his curve was entered at Australia's selection trials for the looming world titles. McEvoy clocked 21.30 seconds, the quickest time in the world this year, to win in Adelaide on Wednesday night. The 31-year-old's feat extends his unheralded two-year span of swims in the low to mid-21 second range. "The best way I can put it is, because my training is so hyper-specific, when it comes time to racing, if I were to put everything out on a bell curve, all I have to do is my average to probably get something like that," McEvoy said. "I don't have to go into a race and hope I'm on that 99th percentile of my best ever. "And that's a huge amount of confidence that just allows you to relax before the race and trust the process." McEvoy has a bachelor of science degree, majoring in physics and mathematics. He aspired to be an astronaut and has worked as a fellow at the Centre for Quantum Dynamics at Queensland's Griffith University. And he relishes the technical intricacies of swimming and his event. "Usually I can finish a rep in training and call it down to the microsecond, within 0.02," McEvoy said. "I know where I'm at each point of the race as well. "You look at the Olympic gymnasts, they do the most crazy stuff and they can do it down to the millimetre - and they can do it day in, day out. "It's a level of skill we're hoping to develop here in the water. "And then what comes with that, there's so many angles you can approach and attack the problem and find 0.03 (reduction) here, 0.08 there. "Then you have just got to hope that on the day, all of it aligns." All has aligned for McEvoy since he almost quit swimming after the Tokyo Olympics of 2021. After an extended hiatus, he returned to the pool and vowed to do things his way. Instead of traditional training, he embarked on funky pursuits including rock climbing and calisthenics. And all his time in the water focused on the minutiae of his event in a revolutionary approach that delivered gold in the French capital at McEvoy's fourth Olympics. "It definitely took a chip off my shoulder that I had for a while," he said of his Olympic triumph. "But the manner in which I did it gives me a lot of pride; thinking about where I was, especially in 2022, but the years before that as well. "To go from there, create something and then execute it - that process is more special than the bit of metal at the end. "Getting that out of the way, to then move on to getting married, having my first born on the way - that's even more special. "Digesting the marriage, digesting starting a family, that puts the whole swimming gig into comparison; it humbles the whole job here and makes me realise there's so much more to the world."

The Professor with golden touch plots more swim success
The Professor with golden touch plots more swim success

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

The Professor with golden touch plots more swim success

Fittingly for a maths and physics nerd nicknamed The Professor, Cam McEvoy uses a bell curve to describe his swimming success. The Olympic 50m freestyle champion's latest data point on his curve was entered at Australia's selection trials for the looming world titles. McEvoy clocked 21.30 seconds, the quickest time in the world this year, to win in Adelaide on Wednesday night. The 31-year-old's feat extends his unheralded two-year span of swims in the low to mid-21 second range. "The best way I can put it is, because my training is so hyper-specific, when it comes time to racing, if I were to put everything out on a bell curve, all I have to do is my average to probably get something like that," McEvoy said. "I don't have to go into a race and hope I'm on that 99th percentile of my best ever. "And that's a huge amount of confidence that just allows you to relax before the race and trust the process." McEvoy has a bachelor of science degree, majoring in physics and mathematics. He aspired to be an astronaut and has worked as a fellow at the Centre for Quantum Dynamics at Queensland's Griffith University. And he relishes the technical intricacies of swimming and his event. "Usually I can finish a rep in training and call it down to the microsecond, within 0.02," McEvoy said. "I know where I'm at each point of the race as well. "You look at the Olympic gymnasts, they do the most crazy stuff and they can do it down to the millimetre - and they can do it day in, day out. "It's a level of skill we're hoping to develop here in the water. "And then what comes with that, there's so many angles you can approach and attack the problem and find 0.03 (reduction) here, 0.08 there. "Then you have just got to hope that on the day, all of it aligns." All has aligned for McEvoy since he almost quit swimming after the Tokyo Olympics of 2021. After an extended hiatus, he returned to the pool and vowed to do things his way. Instead of traditional training, he embarked on funky pursuits including rock climbing and calisthenics. And all his time in the water focused on the minutiae of his event in a revolutionary approach that delivered gold in the French capital at McEvoy's fourth Olympics. "It definitely took a chip off my shoulder that I had for a while," he said of his Olympic triumph. "But the manner in which I did it gives me a lot of pride; thinking about where I was, especially in 2022, but the years before that as well. "To go from there, create something and then execute it - that process is more special than the bit of metal at the end. "Getting that out of the way, to then move on to getting married, having my first born on the way - that's even more special. "Digesting the marriage, digesting starting a family, that puts the whole swimming gig into comparison; it humbles the whole job here and makes me realise there's so much more to the world."

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