by Dan Robinson
23.08.2009
If you’re not already familiar with the name Keri-Anne Payne, you soon will be. With interest levels already starting to build in anticipation of the London 2012 Olympics, the 21-year-old swimming world champion is among an elite group of British athletes on whose shoulders the gold-tinged hopes of a nation are being placed.
But even when judged against other swimming champions, Payne is extraordinary. For she is the best in the world not in the pool, but in the open water where swimmers must deal with grappling opponents, all manner of obstacles floating on the surface and everything that lurks beneath.
Payne was born in South Africa to English parents. Her swimming medals are not the result of an overnight success story – Payne started swimming at the age of four.
“It was a case of being in the water and having fun,” she explains, but swimming soon became a regular activity thanks to a desire to follow her siblings. “My older brother and sister were both swimming and got into lessons,” she says. “And for me, it was a case of sitting around and waiting for them or I could get in and have a go myself.”
This ‘have a go’ attitude is characteristic of Payne’s active nature and desire to embrace new sporting challenges: as a child she won medals in gymnastics and netball and she has tried numerous different swimming events.
Payne became a leading junior swimmer, but her efforts at this stage were focused mainly in the pool. “I did quite a lot of open water swims when I was a kid,” she says, “but pool swimming was where I saw myself and I used to swim all the championships until we left South Africa.”
Payne and her family moved to England when she was 13, by which time her life revolved around swimming. “Before we even went to look for a school my parents had already found a swimming club for me to join,” she recalls. That club was Stockport Metro and Payne quickly achieved international success: at the age of 14 she broke the world junior record for the 400m freestyle and two years later she was the European Short Course champion in the same event in her first senior international meet.
However, Payne’s determination to achieve greater success led her to change events. At first she switched to the 400m individual medley, but swimming 100m each of butterfly, backstroke, breastroke and freestyle was not enough of a challenge for her, so she decided to swim 25 times as far in the open water. Why?
“My coach decided we should just have a go and see how it went. I ended up being quite good at it. So it was a case of see how the next race goes, then see how the next race goes, and then the next one was the Olympics, so see how that one goes.”
‘That one’ went well. Payne won a silver medal in the open water 10km at the Beijing Olympics last year and went one better in last month’s World Championships to finish on top of the medal rostrum.
Not that the switch to open water racing went, well, swimmingly to begin with.
“I do enjoy open water races a lot more now than when I first started,” Payne says. “At first it was a bit scary.”
Scary is an understatement. Open water racing is notorious for the physical contact between competitors and leg pulling and other underhand tactics are not unheard of.
Then there is the matter of other distractions and dangers in the deeps. Payne was inconvenienced by having weeds stuck in her costume and face in the Olympics and in the 2007 World Championships was stung in the mouth by a jellyfish when leading the race. But she says this only makes the sport more exciting.
“I don’t want to scare people but you can swim into just about anything you can think of, particularly when you swim in the sea. I have come across all sorts of things from jellyfish to manta rays. There are a lot of things you have to deal with, but that just makes it more of a challenge,” she enthuses.
The biggest challenge on the horizon for Payne is the London Olympics and, despite it being three years away, she is starting to feel interest levels building.
“Never before have we had so many people watch a swimming World Championships as the one just gone and it’s fantastic to see that so many people are keen to watch us swim and, after we come home, see us with our medals. At the moment the public are concentrating on the Ashes and next year it will be the football World Cup. But as the Olympics gets a bit closer there will be more and more interest.”
Hopefully this public interest will not be confined to watching the professionals, but also see people follow Payne’s lead and ‘have a go’ at open water swimming. With this in mind, Payne has the following advice for WideWorldMag readers on swimming in the great outdoors.
Locations
“There are a lot of nice places to swim in Britain. There is a book called ‘Wild Swim’ by Kate Rew (founder of the Outdoor Swimming Society) and it is absolutely fantastic to look at the pictures in the book and to see the places that she has been, and the writing in it is amazing. I am just so keen to visit the places it lists and have a swim because there are a lot of places you wouldn’t have thought are in Britain. There is one place that looks like Barbados with its white beach, but it is actually in Scotland on the western isles.
The Outdoor Swimming Society website is also a good first place to go if you are interested in starting out or if you are going to visit somewhere in Britain and want to see if there is somewhere recommended for a swim.
It is good to mix locations up as it keeps it interesting and means you are not just swimming in your own little pool, in your own little lane, always at the same temperature. It is nice to have some variation.”
Gear
“If it is cold then you need a wetsuit and it is worth investing in a good pair of goggles. Your eyes will get sore if you don’t and this will spoil the experience. If it is cold a swimming cap can also help. And, obviously, a really nice big warm towel at the end of the swim.”
Safety Precautions
“There are safety precautions and they will vary with where you swim. You have to make sure there is not boat traffic and signs saying you can’t swim. Check the location out first and if you are not sure if a place is safe to swim in, speak to a Tourist Information official.
Make sure you have someone along with you. On the very, very slight chance that something goes wrong it is always better to have somebody there who can get help. And, also, it is much better to swim with someone else to share the experience and have fun with.”
Swimming Technique
“You don’t need to change your technique at all. If you’re swimming in a race you just need to make sure that you are spotting where you are going, which is simply a case of lifting your head up every now and again to make sure you are swimming in a straight line. In races there are bright buoys to guide you, so keep a look out for them.”
NB. There have been several incidences of some of the world’s best swimmers throwing away hopes of a winner’s medal by veering off course in open water races. So if you do struggle to swim in a straight line without the blue line on the bottom of a swimming pool to guide you, don’t worry; you are simply showing the same characteristics as a would-be champion.
Dealing with Physical Contact
“There is only really contact in the elite races and sometimes if people are panicking a little bit they tend to lash out, but it is really important if you are in that situation to try to calm the other person down. Make sure that you are out of the busy areas and then you won’t be involved in any of the argy-bargy. Try to stay out in front or to the side, then you can do your own thing and not worry about anyone else.”
Of course, the vast majority of outdoor swimmers are not competitors and are content doing their own thing in lakes, rivers and seas up and down the country. For them, open water is not something to travel around or over, but something to enter, and the sense of freedom and adventure this provides can be addictive. As Payne says, “Once you get a taste of it, it is hard to drop”.
For further information on open water swimming visit http://www.outdoorswimmingsociety.com. It contains lots of practical information for all levels of swimmers including recommendations on wild swim locations.
‘Wild Swim’ by Kate Rew is now available in paperback for £12.99 and can be found on Amazon and in good bookshops.
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