Bronte Campbell and Kyle Chalmers perfect motivators for the Australian way

By David Lord / Expert

Bronte Campbell and Kyle Chalmers last night churned up the Commonwealth Games pool on the Gold Coast to anchor two spine-tingling medley relay golds for the hosts.

But it was worth far more than just the colour, as important as that was at the time.

The inspirational and the motivational levels they generated will be there for eternity.

That’s the Australian way, with both Campbell and Chalmers showing such immense fighting qualities that they coined a new version on the old saying of ‘cometh the hour, cometh the anchors’.

Campbell, who beat her older sister Cate in both the 100 freestyle and for a place in the relay, had to come from behind to down the quality Canadian Taylor Ruck by a touch to set a new Comm Games record.

The 19-year-old Chalmers, just a year after heart surgery, showed how big his updated ticker was to do the same to Englishman Ben Pound, for another Games record.

Watching them both had the hair on the back of my neck standing on end, and it made me think of the times the baggy greens needed that standard of inspiration, and motivation, to overcome tough opposition.

So too the Wallabies, and the Davis Cup team. To have both those finals on tape for regular viewing would lift the morale of any sport.

If it didn’t, the culprits had no right to be there in the first place.

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Sure, Campbell and Chalmers were members of a team who all played their part in the success, but the biggest pressure and the most responsibility were left in their capable hands.

And they not only passed the test with honours, but clinched a record haul of Comm Games gold medals in the pool for the hosts – 28 from 50 events, for a 56 per cent return.

That England was second, with just nine golds, rammed home the point.

The knockers will say the Aussies had nothing to beat with the Americans and European countries not on duty. But you can only beat what’s in front of you, and they did it comprehensively.

A special salute to Australian wheelchair legend Kurt Fearnley.

Last night, the 37-year-old, winner of three Paralympic golds, was pipped at the post on the track in the 1500 metres by 0.17 of a second.

Canadian Alexandre Dupont took off 500 from home and, bit-by-bit, the courageous Fearnley narrowed the gap, only to fall short by a fingernail.

Kurt is a true champion and a top bloke – he’ll bow out on Sunday in the marathon.

That event has to be the ultimate in courage.

The Crowd Says:

2018-04-11T23:56:07+00:00

Torchbearer

Guest


Fourth rate- there were a few World Records...even one lifts it above fourth rate to second rate.

2018-04-11T12:15:21+00:00

Harry

Guest


Great effort by Brandon Starc to win the high jump. Really wish Channel 7's first question him wasn't about his sibling.

2018-04-11T11:03:30+00:00

Harry

Guest


Yes I thought terrific efforts from both anchors. It was great to watch and epitomises sport at its finest. Very please for Bronte Campbell who showed a lot of character through both coming second and first.

2018-04-11T05:22:57+00:00

Kris

Guest


2014 numbers don't include Para medals and don't account for the extra 7 events. In 2014 we got 19 golds from 43 events. 44% In 2018 we got 28 golds from 62 events. 45%

AUTHOR

2018-04-11T03:38:11+00:00

David Lord

Expert


Congratulations Wayne on being promoted to the great Australian Knockers Union. Comparing Australian swimming at its lowest ebb at the 2012 London Olympics to now is like comparing apples and oranges. A more justifiable comparison would be since Dutchman Jacco Verhaeren took over as Australian head coach in 2013, by comparing apples with apples via Comm Games results. In 2014 at Glasgow, the Dolphins topped the medal tally with 19 gold, 21 silver, and 17 bronze for a total of 57 medals. Next best was England with 10-10-8-28, way behind. Last night at the Gold Coast, the Dolphins finished the swimming schedule with 28 gold, 21 silver, and 24 bronze for 73 medals. Next best was again England with 9-10-5-24, even further behind. So give Verhaeren, and his team, the credit they deserve by combining to dramatically lift their performance bar. Next stop Tokyo.

2018-04-11T02:55:24+00:00

Kris

Guest


Our cricket team win at home as well.

2018-04-11T02:39:00+00:00

Matt H

Roar Guru


Maybe the way they have turned things around could be a blue print for the cricket team.

2018-04-11T00:37:00+00:00

Marcus

Guest


"that's the Australian way", "there for eternity". Oh puhleeze! The Commonwealth Games are at best a fourth rate swimming comp. Olympics, Worlds, Pan Pacs and possibly even the Swimming World Cup present far bigger challenges for our swimmers. Let's judge them on the performances there. These Games will mark a watershed. The Goldie is going to do it's cabana on the cost of these games. They will become ever smaller as they shrink into irrelevance.

2018-04-11T00:16:02+00:00

Wayne

Roar Guru


We will just forget the 2012 London Olympics...

2018-04-10T23:09:10+00:00

BrainsTrust

Guest


Cate Campbell did 51 secs flat in the freestyle relay, when they had a big lead and under no pressure. While Bronte did a very good time in that relay to pull it out of the fire it was half a sec slower and her time in the freestyle relay was over 52. The mens you could say the English did better relative to their individual performances in this meet and pulled it out for the relay, the Australians Larkin and Chalmers did well the other two were below par compared to their individual performances.

2018-04-10T23:03:15+00:00

Torchbearer

Guest


The swim team per-se are fantastic role models for hard work, discipline, respect for competitors, nation and sport. Such a contrast to our mens cricket team.

2018-04-10T21:59:29+00:00

bazza

Guest


I watched it live it was edge of your seat stuff it was so close i wasn't sure til they said who had touched first who had won.

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