Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

'Joseph swam the perfect race’: National assistant coach

How did Joseph Schooling win Singapore’s first-ever Olympic gold medal in any sport? According to national swimming assistant coach Gary Tan, a former butterfly specialist himself who competed at two Olympics, the 21-year-old effectively won it from start to finish.

Tan breaks down for TODAY how Schooling executed the perfect technical race plan to beat out the likes of Michael Phelps, Chad le Clos and Laszlo Cseh….

Joseph Schooling sings the national anthem after he was crowned the 100m butterfly champ at the Rio Olympics. Photo: Getty Images

“Joseph actually swam a very good race plan, and he swam to a sustained momentum and speed. That was how he won the race.

“At the start,  he dived in well and had a fantastic underwater. He had a good whipping motion with a powerful down-and-up sweep motion before breaking the surface. This enabled him to lead the pack going into the first 15 metres.”

Joseph Schooling dives into the pool at the start of the 100m butterfly final at Rio 2016. Photo: Reuters

“When Joseph emerged from underwater, he delivered his first two strokes very well. That set the momentum for him to get into a good rhythm to start attacking the remaining 35 metres.

Joseph Schooling swimming in the 100m butterfly final at Rio 2016. Photo: Reuters

“He then hit the turn fast and tight. He was very tight underwater. You could see his legs and core muscles tightening.

“Joseph kept himself very solid with a very straight and compact like a spear before surfacing again."

Schooling (third from left) led the race from start to finish. Photo: Getty Images

“Joseph continued to initiate his strokes in a systematic and rhythmic way. In other words, the flow of the strokes remains consistent."

Joseph Schooling leading the field. Photo: New York Times

“In the last 25 metres, everyone was practically fading and the only person who tried to catch up with Joseph was Michael Phelps. But that was also when Joseph started to pick up his speed. This is an important moment.

“In other words, Joseph managed to sustain his speed all the way before increasing it. And that was how he won it from start to the end.”

Joseph Schooling touching home first in the 100m butterfly final, breaking the Olympic record with a time of 50.39 seconds and becoming the first Singaporean in history to win a gold medal at the Olympics. Photo: Reuters

jQuery(document).ready(function($) { var gWidth = $( window ).width(); if (gWidth<550) { $('#ifr1').load(function() { var delay=2000; //2 seconds setTimeout(function(){ $("#ifr1").height( 320 ); }, delay); }); } });

Read more of the latest in

Advertisement

Advertisement

Stay in the know. Anytime. Anywhere.

Subscribe to get daily news updates, insights and must reads delivered straight to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TODAY newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.