Peirsol ready for trials
Steve Virgen
When Hayley Peirsol was 6, she had second thoughts about becoming
serious with swimming.
She was in the water when she was in diapers, and ever since,
swimming was meant for fun. Competition was the last reason Peirsol
would swim.
But then came age 6, when Peirsol went to the Irvine Novaquatics
to prepare for her racing days. Her first encounter with competitive
swimming was one she would rather forget, but remains as an
indication of just how far she has come.
While going through her first rounds of training, a coach shouted
instructions into a microphone. The loud, stern noise frightened
Peirsol.
“It scared me and I didn’t want to go back,” said Peirsol, a
former Newport Harbor High standout who has been training at UC
Irvine for the U.S. Olympic swim trials that begin Wednesday in Long
Beach. “I waited for about a year, and finally I said I would go
back. Then, I just stayed.”
Peirsol stuck with it and eventually became suited for distance
freestyle swimming. Throughout most of her childhood she was known as
the younger sister of backstroke phenom Aaron Peirsol. But lately,
she has shown flashes of brilliance, which is evidence that she is
capable of swimming in the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Greece.
Hayley Peirsol, 18, enjoyed a grand summer in 2003 but endured a
topsy-turvy freshman year at Auburn University. She showed she was on
the right track toward the Olympics by winning a silver medal in the
1,500-meter freestyle at the FINA World Championships last summer.
She was 11th in the 800 free.
But at Auburn Hayley Peirsol struggled, in regard to her
standards, during her freshman year. She did not reach the finals in
any of her events at the NCAA championships. She can’t explain why.
“That was really disappointing,” she said. “I try not to dwell on
that. I just say, ‘What are you going to do about it now?’ I just put
it behind me.”
Peirsol seemed to put the past behind her last month while
competing in the Janet Evans Invitational at the Charter All Digital
Aquatic Centre, the same venue that will host the U.S. Olympic swim
trials. Peirsol grabbed second place in the 800 free and third in the
400 free, the two events she will compete in next week.
She was edged by Kalyn Keller in the 800 free. Keller came in at
4:12.86, while Peirsol touched the wall at 4:12.88. Peirsol said she
regained her confidence and now she wants to make the U.S. Olympic
team. Team USA will take the top two in each event.
Peirsol’s older brother has had experience with the Olympics. He
took home the sliver medal in the 200 backstroke at the 2000 Games in
Australia. Now he’s expected to go back to the Olympics, as he is the
world-record holder in the event.
While most would expect Peirsol to seek advice from her older
brother, that is not generally the case within Peirsol’s family.
“As a family we really don’t talk about swimming that much,” she
said. “We just don’t bring it up. But I still learn from him. He’s
just a real laid-back guy and he doesn’t get all hyped up before a
big meet. That’s the thing with us. We just look at a big meet, like
the trials, as just another meet. If you look at it as any bigger
than that, you’re going to psyche yourself out.”
Even if Peirsol talked about swimming with her older brother,
there would not be that much of a discussion. Hayley Peirsol has
matured.
“I don’t really need to tell her much,” said Aaron Peirsol, who is
training in Texas. “She is pretty headstrong. She can hold her own.”
Hayley Peirsol has been holding her own during rigorous training
with Brent Lorenzen, who coached her from 1999 to January of 2003,
before reuniting with her recently.
She has had double workouts, Monday through Friday and one
training session on Saturday. She did not reveal the distance she
swims, but the work has been difficult, to say the least.
“It’s challenging,” said Lorenzen, a former Novaquatics coach who
is now an assistant at UCI. “There is a good balance of different
types of work. It’s all about getting in the right volume with the
right intensity.
“Hayley has been blessed with a great natural endurance,” he
continued. “She has a great capacity to do the work day in and day
out. The other thing that she has is strength. She has the great
ability to get up and race and not be intimidated. I think mentally,
she is very strong and oblivious to outside pressure. She has a great
shot [to make the U.S. Olympic team].”
When Peirsol returned home from school in early May, she contacted
Lorenzen and requested he coach her for the Olympic swim trials. She
said she feels comfortable with him. She also did not want to be
alone when she did the training, so she asked her friend and former
Newport Harbor teammate Nicole Mackey to join her at the pool at UCI.
Mackey, who will be a sophomore at Hawaii in the fall, is also in
the U.S. Olympic swim trials, competing in the 200 and 400 individual
medley.
The two have been motivating each other during workouts. Peirsol
said she is ready for the trials. The fear of competition she had
when she was a child has left her. She will be in the 400 free July
8. She has a greater chance to make the Olympic team in the 800 free
and will compete in that event, July 12.
“I definitely want to go to the Olympics,” she said. “My training
has been going well. I just look at it as whatever happens, happens.
You can’t expect too much. I just try to stay relaxed.”
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