Taranaki Daily News

Zac Reid opens up about his Olympics omission

- Will Johnston

Taranaki swimmer Zac Reid has opened up about missing out on the New Zealand Olympic team.

The squad for the Paris Olympics, starting this week, was announced in April with Reid a notable omission despite representi­ng his country at last year’s World Championsh­ips.

He needed to finish under 3m46.78s in the men’s 400m freestyle at the qualifying event but fell short with a time of 3m48s.

Reid chose to enter the 200m and 400m events after he was selected for New Zealand for the Tokyo Olympics in the 800m freestyle.

In a candid interview on The Most FM Sports Show on Saturday morning, Reid, 24, said missing out on the team was devastatin­g. “At the time, I was very emotional and overwhelme­d,” he said.

“I remember getting out of the pool and my old man was there, I embraced him and bawled my eyes out.

“But to know I gave it everything I could that day, there wasn’t much I could do.”

He picked himself up and supported his team-mates as there were three days left in qualificat­ions.

“I didn’t want to be that guy moping around and letting everyone down. My room mate qualified and I was happy for him.”

It had been a cruel period for Reid who had to skip the 2022 Commonweal­th Games after hip and labrum surgery, then suffered a bout of long Covid. He admits he’s still dealing with more niggles.

It was a long recovery from his first surgery and he had to bounce back from anxiety in the pool and remove any expectatio­ns of himself.

“It’s the fear of failure that stops you from giving it your all,” he said.

Reid works closely with a sports psychologi­st and said part of being an athlete was being OK with failing and learning how to deal with it.

He’s not writing off the 2028 Olympics, either. He said the next 10 months were important for him to reset and stay fit and healthy.

Now back at home in New Plymouth, after a 16-month stint in Wellington and Dunedin, Reid had a new focus.

He was recently appointed as Fitzroy Surf Lifesaving Club’s head coach and was preparing for the upcoming summer.

It’s a move he was relishing, calling home a “safety net.”

“I’m happy to be back here and to find myself outside of the pool, it’s cool that I have that here.”

Having fun outdoors and getting back to a club where he started swimming was a motivating factor in applying for the job.

He admits Fitzroy was not the strongest club in Taranaki but there’s a blank canvas to rebuild it.

“It’s not all about the performanc­e side of things, it’s about the social side, having fun down at the beach and learning to be safe in the water.”

Reid said the club was looking to enter the Mount Monster endurance race at Mount Maunganui in December.

“It will be a slog and grind at the start.” He also wanted to show young athletes there was a pathway from local pools to the Olympics.

“You can do it from here,” he insisted.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Zac Reid has opened up about missing a spot in the New Zealand Olympic team for Paris.
GETTY IMAGES Zac Reid has opened up about missing a spot in the New Zealand Olympic team for Paris.

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