Bay of Plenty Times

Swimmer ready to make a splash

- Stuart Whitaker

Pa¯ pa¯ moa’s Eva Morris will be making her Olympic debut later this week, competing against the world’s best artistic swimmers in the duet event.

“Excitement levels are very high over here,” the 26-year-old said from France.

“It has been a long time coming to get to this point.”

Morris started the sport at age 11 after being inspired by a school project, eventually training up to six hours a day, six days a week to chase her dreams.

She has represente­d New Zealand on the world stage for nine years now and has always wanted more, striving for Olympic qualificat­ion year after year, missing out on Rio and then Tokyo.

But, after competing at several internatio­nal competitio­ns from January to June to meet the New Zealand Olympic Committee selection criteria, she has made it to Paris.

This weekend, her clubmates at Tauranga Artistic Swimming will be waking up extra early to watch Morris live out her dream at the Paris 2024 Olympics.

They have put up a sign at the entrance to Baywave to wish her well and let everyone know.

Artistic swimming (formerly known as synchronis­ed swimming) is a combinatio­n of swimming, dance and gymnastics. Swimmers perform a synchronis­ed routine in the water accompanie­d by music.

“We are so ready to soak it up and do the best we can,” Morris said. “It is a super-stacked field of incredible athletes, so we aren’t looking for any crazy results but are hoping to put forward some good swims and see where that lands us.”

At the Olympic Games, artistic swimming consists of two events: a duet, and a team competitio­n.

The duet event consists of a technical routine and a free routine — being swum at 5.30am today and tomorrow.

The routines are scored by judges who take several criteria into account: level of difficulty, synchronis­ation, execution, and artistic impression.

Morris and her duet partner Nina Brown will be just the third artistic swimming duo to represent New Zealand at the Olympic Games, and the first since Beijing in 2008.

“It is such a huge honour to represent team New Zealand at the Olympic Games and not a job I take lightly,” Morris said.

“I am really thankful to be here. There are a few of us from Tauranga competing across different sports.”

Morris is one of several Tauranga Olympians in Paris who trained at the Adams Centre for High Performanc­e in Mount Maunganui.

As she has chased her Olympic dreams, she has also had training stints in Invercargi­ll and Auckland, and on Australia’s Gold Coast.

This year she had events in Qatar, Malta, Hungary and Canada, and did her pre-olympics training camp in Grenoble, France. “It’s addictive. “Whenever training is hard or you feel exhausted, it’s normal to feel like wanting to give up, but then you will go to a competitio­n and all of that gets erased and you’re just having a great time,” she said.

“I’ve just kept coming back year after year saying, ‘I’ll just do one more world champs and then I’ll retire’, but each time when you’re standing there with your best friends, it makes you want to stay another year.”

Wherever she is in the world, including Paris, home is never far from her thoughts.

Neither are her family and friends, her workmates at Burn Reformer Pilates in Pa¯ pa¯ moa and her clubmates at Tauranga Artistic Swimming.

“I am so thankful to my family for supporting me throughout my career. I’m really looking forward to looking into the stands and seeing my family and a few friends from New Zealand in the crowd, along with a young swimmer from our club that’s also coming to watch.”

Morris first joined that club at Baywave when she was 11.

She had been inspired by a school project a few years earlier for which she had to choose a New Zealand athlete to follow at the Beijing 2008 Olympics.

She chose the synchronis­ed swimming duo, sisters Nina and Lisa Daniels, and soon became obsessed with the sport.

 ?? ?? Pa¯pa¯moa’s Eva Morris (right) and her duet partner Nina Brown.
Pa¯pa¯moa’s Eva Morris (right) and her duet partner Nina Brown.
 ?? ?? Pa¯pa¯moa Olympian Eva Morris (left) and her duet partner Nina Brown.
Pa¯pa¯moa Olympian Eva Morris (left) and her duet partner Nina Brown.

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