Daily Mirror

PEATY’S GOING FOR A PADDLE

- BY ALEX SPINK

ADAM PEATY hopes training in a canoe with his broken foot will allow him to take the plunge at the Commonweal­th Games.

Britain’s greatest swimmer is in a race against time to be fit for the Birmingham multi-event showpiece after fracturing a bone while training in Tenerife.

The three-time Olympic gold medallist will miss this month’s World Championsh­ips in Budapest as he has yet to swim out of the boot encasing his right foot.

And with only seven weeks until Birmingham, where Peaty (above) is two-time defending champion at 100m breaststro­ke, every possible training option is being utilised.

“It’s going to be tight,” admitted 27-year-old Peaty’s coach, Mel Marshall.

“It’s going to be an interestin­g journey. He’s still in his boot at the moment and we’re in week four of a six-week injury.

“We took a decision to protect the training modalities in every area so we’ve had him in a canoe, we’ve had him on a bike doing adapted training without putting any force through the foot – and he’s been swimming in his boot the last two weeks.

“British Canoeing have been really amazing with helping him and teaching him how to get that different aerobic stimulus.

“What we’ve been able to do over the last five weeks from a programme point of view is nothing short of a miracle.

“It is still a tight turnaround for the Commonweal­th Games, but we are trying everything and we will make the call as late as possible.”

Marshall believes the setback, which came just as the hardest part of the training block was done, will stand Peaty (on crutches, above) in good stead going forwards.

“It’s been a different challenge for him to have to deal with but, if anything, it’s come at the right time,” she added.

“There’s still two years to the Paris Olympics. This adversity has made us all be better and that’s a really good space in which to be.”

Marshall was speaking as UK Coaching launched #Born2Coach – an initiative that aims to boost the coaching workforce by inspiring people to become coaches and empowering current coaches to enhance their abilities.

To find out more about how you can get into coaching, visit www.ukcoaching.org/ born2coach

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