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Tatjana could make sports history in 2024

A special year lies ahead for top swimmers worldwide and the best from South Africa are also lining up to possibly make history again.

If ever there was a time for swimmers to make sports history, it is 2024

For the first time ever, it is possible to win a world championship and Olympic medal in the same year.

The World Championship is in February in Doha, while the Paris Olympic Games start in July. In the history of competitive swimming, the two events have never occurred in the same year. Ironically, it is a leap year.

The TuksSwimming star, Tatjana Smith (Schoenmaker) is the South African swimmer capable of achieving this unique feat. She has “BMT” (big match temperament). Or, to put it another way, when the going gets tough, Smith gets going. Her results are proof. Since 2018, she has medalled at every major event she has competed in.

Her medal heroics include winning gold during the Tokyo Olympic Games, the 2022 World Championships, the 2018 and 2022 Commonwealth Games and the 2019 World University Games. She has also set a world record during the Tokyo Games. Last year, she became the first South African female swimmer to win a world-long course swimming title.

It is incredible how Smith can step up. In December last year, a mere few weeks after getting married, she won the 200m breaststroke during the World Aquatics Championships trials in Durban in a time of 2:20.30. It is her fastest time since breaking the world record to claim Olympic gold in Tokyo in 2021. Her time was the third fastest last year. Only Russia’s Eugenia Chikunova was faster. The Russian set a world record, swimming 2:17.55 and clocked a time of 2:19.71.

Afterwards, Smith admitted to having surprised herself.

“Sometimes, you feel good, and the results aren’t the same. I am just glad that the results and how I felt matched,” she remarked.

Smith’s coach, Rocco Meiring, is a forever realist and not one to get ahead of himself. In an earlier interview, he emphasised that no swimming races had ever been won by speculating what could happen. So, it is not fair to speculate as to what Smith might achieve at the World Champs or the Games. According to him, all her breakthroughs moments have been achieved by hard work. Hours and hours of swimming.

Meiring firmly believes any swimmer is only as good as their last race. That is why Smith’s golden heroics at the 2021 Olympics and the 2023 World Champs count for nothing.

“It has been a while since the rivalry in the women’s 100 and 200 metres breaststroke had been this intense. Only two swimmers who swam in the 2021 Games 200m-breaststroke final were in action during last year’s World Champs final in Japan. They were Tatjana and Lilly King (USA),” he said.

Other swimmers from the TuksSwimming club who will be competing next month during the World Championships in Doha are Emma Chelius, Dune Coetzee, Kaylene Corbett, Erin Gallagher, Stephanie Houtman, Hannah Pearse, Tayla Jonker, Pieter Coetzé, Clayton Jimmie and Matthew Randle.

 

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