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Home / Whanganui Chronicle / Sport

Message from new man at top is quite simple

By David Leggat
Whanganui Chronicle·
24 May, 2013 06:00 PM3 mins to read

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Luis Villanueva preaches a simple message and it's one he hopes will resonate clearly with New Zealand's leading swimmers.

"Excellence," New Zealand Swimming's new high-performance boss said of his philosophy towards the sport.

"It is just about being the best you can be every day. Training hard, facing challenges as much as you can - and don't be worried about failing in the challenge. Be prepared to face the next one."

New Zealand's team of 14 swimmers are off to the world championships in Barcelona on June 8, the first major assignment since Villanueva replaced Jan Cameron as overseer of the high-performance programme.

The Spaniard from Vitoria in the north-east Basque region of the country, did a strong job as technical director for Spain's swimming programme, culminating with five medals at the London Olympics last year.

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SNZ hopes his expertise will rub off on the country's best swimmers who, with the notable exception of Lauren Boyle and to a degree Glenn Snyders, were a disappointment in London.

There is a similarity in swimming's middle-tier place in the sporting pecking order in Spain and New Zealand. But Villanueva sees one sharp distinction between the countries.

"I come from a country with 40 million people, but with a not very good sports culture. In New Zealand, you have a small country with a very good sports culture. Sport is more ingrained on people here than in Spain.

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"The organisation of sports is completely different."

Villanueva has been finding his feet since starting the job about four months ago. SNZ will have discovered they haven't hired a fist-slapping, voluble coach. His style is quieter but his message is clear. Take his expectations of the swimmers in Barcelona.

"Overall a good outcome would be to have every swimmer perform faster than they did in the [national] trials. This is the first thing; then to have them swim faster than the last race.

"So it is not good if you swim very fast in the heats but then perform lower in the semifinal, or do a good semi and not be able to do it in the final."

One swimmer at the Olympics who flopped badly talked of finding it hard to produce strong swims twice a day.

"This is something that should be addressed in training," Villanueva said. "You have to be prepared to face challenges in the morning and afternoon, today, tomorrow and the next day. This is what I want to instil in them and in the coaches. You have to put them in difficult situations every day.

"Most swimmers who go to the Olympics need to swim personal bests in the morning, then in the afternoon."

Some swimmers have said they won't improve on the bigger stages unless there are more opportunities to compete against the best.

But Villanueva believes that is only part of the equation.

"Mentally you have to cope with difficult situations. Everything is up here," he said, pointing to his head.

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Bluntly, he said if swimmers had not tested themselves, pushed themselves to the limit repeatedly "it's impossible that you go to the Olympics and succeed".

Villanueva's role is "trying to improve the results of New Zealand swimmers on the world stage". Barcelona will give him, and newly appointed head coach Briton David Lyles their first real benchmark to work with.

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