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‘It's a big moment for me': NI's Ellie McCartney becomes swimming's latest golden girl
‘It's a big moment for me': NI's Ellie McCartney becomes swimming's latest golden girl

Belfast Telegraph

time27-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Belfast Telegraph

‘It's a big moment for me': NI's Ellie McCartney becomes swimming's latest golden girl

The 20-year-old from Enniskillen claimed the 200m individual medley crown at the event in Slovakia, but says she isn't getting carried away with thoughts of the Olympics just yet. The swimmer, who is studying Sports Science at the University of Limerick, splits her training between the base of Swim Ireland in Limerick and Bangor's Aurora Centre, said she was delighted and surprised to have picked up the biggest title of her career to date. 'Honestly, I wasn't really expecting it,' she said, having focused much of her training on the 200m breaststroke this season. Ellie, a former pupil at Enniskillen Royal, had qualified fastest for the final but was up against competitors who had a faster personal best time, and was in third place halfway through the four-leg event which sees swimmers combine backstroke, butterfly, breaststroke and freestyle legs. 'In the end, I think it was the breaststroke training that really helped,' she said. 'Overall the other girls have been quite a bit faster than me, but the breaststroke leg went well.' Ellie powered through the field to take the lead and held on to take the title in a time of 2 minutes 12.5 seconds. She had 1.22 seconds to spare over second-placed Bertille Cousson from France with Slovakia's Tamara Potocka in third. 'I didn't really have any pressure in the race,' she said. 'I had already achieved qualifying times for the World Championships which will be held in Singapore at the end of July, so it was nice to be able to go out there and just race. 'I managed to get my hand to the wall first and that was really exciting and unexpected. It's a big moment for me.' The European U-23 championships were last held in Dublin in 2023, with Irish Olympians Daniel Wiffen and Mona McSharry among the gold medallists while Ellen Walshe was the champion in the 200m Individual medley. News Catch Up - Friday 27th June Ellie enjoyed previous success at the 2023 Commonwealth Youth Games in Trinidad and Tobago in the 100 and 200-metre breaststroke, and 200-metre individual medley when she won two golds and a bronze making her double Commonwealth Youth Games champion. 'Singapore will be a new experience for me,' she said looking ahead to next month's World Aquatic Championships. 'Being part of the Swim Ireland team going over there is something I'm really looking forward to. 'The next Olympics are still three years away so there's plenty of time to think about that later. Now it's all about the training, improving my times to make sure I qualify for these major long course (50m pool) events. Right now, anything that comes after that, like gold medals at European level to start with, is a real bonus.' Ellie has another two events in Slovakia, with the 100m breaststroke and her favoured event, the 200m breaststroke, still to come over the weekend. 'Training well and getting the experience of competing at the World Championships is my next goal,' she said. 'Next year there's the Commonwealth Games to aim for so there's still a lot of hard work ahead.'

Sophie O'Sullivan sprints to victory at NCAA Championships
Sophie O'Sullivan sprints to victory at NCAA Championships

Irish Examiner

time15-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Irish Examiner

Sophie O'Sullivan sprints to victory at NCAA Championships

With a devastating last lap of 58.43 seconds, Sophie O'Sullivan has etched her name on the exclusive list of Irish athletes to have won an NCAA title – the 23-year-old clocking 4:07.94 to win the women's 1500m at the NCAA Division 1 Outdoor Championships in Eugene, Oregon on Saturday night. O'Sullivan, a final-year student at the University of Washington, is just the fifth Irish woman to have won gold at the event, following in the footsteps of her mother Sonia along with Rhasidat Adeleke, Valerie McGovern and Mary Cullen. O'Sullivan was born and raised in Australia but, as a dual citizen, she chose to represent Ireland in her mid-teens, winning 800m silver in her international debut at the European U-18 Championships in 2018. In 2023, she outsprinted her Irish teammate Sarah Healy to win the European U-23 1500m title and went on to become an Olympian in Paris last year. However, despite her achievements elsewhere, O'Sullivan had repeatedly come up short in her search for an NCAA title, finishing 12th in the 1500m final at the last two editions. She said she was 'pretty f**king happy' to hit the line in front in her final race as a collegiate athlete and had been 'running a bit scared' over the last lap, unaware of how much daylight she had put between her and her rivals. She came home well clear of Margot Appleton of the University of Virginia (4:08.99). O'Sullivan revealed she had endured some cyber bullying after one of her earlier disappointments at the event, but having struggled with injuries at times in recent years, she came into these championships fit and fully firing. 'I felt this year I was a different person, a different athlete,' she said. 'And based on the races I've had recently, I had no reason to think I should run bad.' The early pace in the final was slow, the field passing 400m in 68 seconds and 800m in just 2:21. O'Sullivan slotted into second on the opening lap but took control with two laps to run. 'I was just trying to hold my position on the inside lane and not let everyone box me out and trying to find a way out,' she told She shifted through the gears, stretching the field, on the penultimate lap, and then went for broke with half a lap to run, powering clear of the field on the final bend. She said it was 'special' to finish her NCAA career with a win. Her mother Sonia had won five NCAA titles during her years at Villanova University in the early 1990s. Asked about her plans and where she plans to base herself, Sophie said she was 'not too sure' but would look at the options on the table in the weeks ahead for a professional contract. 'My visa's up so I've got to leave America soon, I'm going to fly to London and go from there. We'll see.' Over the summer she will be based primarily in Teddington, linking up with members of the Melbourne Track Club, a professional group which is run by her father, Nic Bideau. She is already qualified for the Tokyo World Championships in September, having run 4:00.23 at the Olympics in Paris last year. Elsewhere at the NCAA Championships, Cork sprinter Lucy-May Sleeman was part of the Florida State team that finished seventh in the women's 4x100m, clocking 43.30. The women's 800m was won by Róisín Willis in 1:58.13, the daughter of Irish Olympian Breda Dennehy-Willis. A student at Stanford University, Willis is also eligible to represent Ireland though in her teenage years she chose to represent the US, where she was born and raised, winning the world U20 title in 2022. Meanwhile, Rhasidat Adeleke will be back in action this evening at the Stockholm Diamond League. The 22-year-old Dubliner finished fourth in Oslo on Thursday night in her first 400m race since last September, clocking 50.42, and she will hope to improve on that against a similar line-up in Stockholm. The race goes to the line at 6pm Irish time, with live coverage on Virgin Media Two and BBC Two from 5pm. On Saturday, rising star Nick Griggs made an excellent return to racing at the British Milers Club event in Belfast after a long layoff, winning the mile in 3:55.97 in rainy conditions.

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