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Thorpe has his sights set on 2013 World Championships

When Ian Thorpe decided to return to the pool in February of 2011 his intial goal was to qualify for the London Olympics in the 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 freestyle relays. That goal was far from being achieved. At the Australian Olympic Trials in March Thrope finished 12th in the 200 freestyle (1:49.91) and 21st in the 100 freestyle (50.35).

After missing a berth on the Australian Olympic team Thorpe told the press that he had not regretted his return to the pool and that his failure to make the Olympics was not the end of his comeback, “I intend to [continue]. I’ve enjoyed what I’ve been doing,” Thorpe told The Telegraph.

“I’ve enjoyed training again, I’ve enjoyed pushing myself in the pool and I’ll keep on swimming until I feel I cannot get any more out of myself.”

“I think it’s better to attempt something and fail than it is to not even attempt it, so I’m glad that I’ve been prepared to put myself on the line there.”

Eight months later he still feels the same way.

In an article written by BBC’s Nick Hope Thorpe was quoted as saying, “I still have a life in the pool.”

“I simply didn’t have enough time [before London] to prepare the way I wanted to and I had to compromise.”

“Now I can do exactly the training that I need to do with time on my side and I can get a preparation that will enable me to swim really well.”

Since the Australian Olympic Trials Thorpe has been busy; he worked at the Olympics as a pundit for BBC Television and since November has been promoting his book ‘This Is Me’.

In December he told the Australian he was ready to return to the pool without distraction, “I’ve had a few things that have kind of interrupted training but I’m happy preparing, and being able to get back in after the Olympics, feeling motivated by the Olympics as well.”

In his most recent interview with the BBC it is very obvious that he is not only enjoying training again, but that he has reconnected with the love he had for the sport as a child, “Having success again would be what that younger athlete I once was would tell me to do.”

… Thorpe initially retired in 2006 with great reluctance; at the time it appeared the Ian Thorpe brand was becoming much bigger than Ian Thorpe the athlete and simply wasn’t leaving enough time for him to commit to his training.

Even though at the time he stressed that he was too young to retire he felt he needed more balance in his life, “Swimming has been a security blanket but I haven’t balanced out my life. I realised I had to prioritise other things and let swimming take a backseat,” Thorpe told the BBC in 2006.

“I’m looking at the next phase and that means I’m realigning what the most important thing is for me to do.

“Swimming is not at the top of the list, which has not happened before.”

 

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Tlc
11 years ago

Thorpe retired right when phelps was getting close and knew he couldn’t beat him!!!!L

SWIMFAN2
Reply to  Tlc
11 years ago

It had nothing to do with that. He didn’t care anymore and was tired of it all.

Tlc
11 years ago

Thorpe retired right when phelps was getting close and knew he couldn’t beat him!!!!

11 years ago

i guess he can start swimming since phelps has retired

Rafael
Reply to  tracyfreeland
11 years ago

Like Phelps were the problem for him right?? on 200 free Phelps maybe be a bit of a problem, but I would not think of Phelps as a Gold Contender on 2012, now after Agnel (who is the real problem for a Thorpe now) . Even less.. and on 400 free, which is the event he should return to… the problem is Yang..

justanopinion
Reply to  tracyfreeland
11 years ago

The problem is not Phelps, Agnel or Yang.
The answer to the problem is D: Age.
If he tries to come back in anything other than the 100 Free he is swimming young men’s races (relatively speaking of course) with the spring in their steps to recover better from the high intensity workouts that are long in Thorpy’s rear view mirror.
I wish him the best and am a fan and would love to see him back in the mix again (which also might be the carrot MP needs to ‘unretire’ if Thorpe did come all the way back for 1 titanic 200 in Rio)…..but it doesn’t seem very plausible at this point.
Maybe the 200. Maybe.

Keith
11 years ago

Well it’s a good way to stay fit if nothing else!

11 years ago

Remember that famous last anchor against Klete Keller at the 2004 Athens Olympics 4 by 200 free relay ? That ‘s a master piece of a relay battle he gave there … Watched that race so many times .

11 years ago

His stroke was fantastic , no doubt in my eyes about it ! Very composed , he made it look even so easy with his smooth freestyle technique . He spend many days in The BBC studios commentating the races with joy and contentment . I felt ” this guy is stilll very cool and passionate about the sport , even though he didn’t make the Aussie Olympic team ” . Millions of spectators saw that on the BBC . I have those recordings … Lovely to watch again .
Happy he is going for it …….

capngoggles
11 years ago

Enduring memory 1: AIS pool, timekeeping lane 4, watching your 8 year old child stand behind Thorpe in that lane as she waits for the next race, then getting your shoes utterly soaked as Ian came into the wall. I then watched in awe as he spent 3+ hours at the end of the meet patiently talking to each young person lined up and signing autographs for the whole time.

Enduring memory 2: Alex would dive into a public lane at the AIS and spend ages ultra slow swimming on his own with that wonderful high arm action.

As to Thorpe or Popov, both are beautiful freestylers and although quite different people, both Ian and Alex are the… Read more »

Joel Lin
Reply to  capngoggles
11 years ago

It makes swimming the great sport that it is hearing stories like this where the athletes are so self-less and afford their time and enthusiasm to kids.

11 years ago

Hopefully he’ll work it out of his system and make something of himself, like Michael Phelps has.

Oh wait…

…nevermind…

Huh?
Reply to  Bill Volckening
11 years ago

never anything good to say… 🙁

Dasher
Reply to  Bill Volckening
11 years ago

Always negative, negative, negative. Not even Phelps can satisfy the great Volckening.

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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