Swimming: Mack Horton had a bob each way with Sun podium protest, Jack reaction
Australian swimmers are prone to inflated self-importance. You’re a world-class individual medley athlete? How many people in the world are actually doing individual medleys?
Most of them are big fish in the little pond of global sport, and the absence of television coverage of the world championships for the first time since 1986 may have reminded them that no network in this country has been prepared to broadcast them — because too few people have been interested in watching them until Mack Horton’s initially awkward, and ultimately cringeworthy, stance of not standing at all with Sun Yang.
Horton’s no villain in any of this, but nor is he a saint.
His so-called protest against Sun was having a bob each way.
He tried to win, he lost, and so he stood in the corner and claimed the whole thing was unfair to begin with.
The image of the 400m silver medallist standing to the side at the presentation, with gold-medallist Sun and Italy’s bronze medallist Gabrielle Detti huddled on the podium, is not an especially powerful one. Detti has refused to join him. Horton, on his own, does not appear triumphant, standing up for the common good. His face is downbeat. His body language is slumped, as if he’s having a sulk.
Australian swimming’s ‘sandpapergate’
It’s been likened to the Black Power salute against racism in America from the 1968 Olympics but please, nothing could be more inaccurate.
Even before Shayna Jack’s positive drug test turned the whole thing into the biggest dog’s breakfast since sandpapergate brought Cricket Australia’s players and officials to their knees, Horton’s move looked to these eyes like sour grapes.
Because the golden rule in sport is that once you enter a field of play — a swimming pool, a football pitch, a golf course, a boxing ring, a tennis court, a cricket ground — there’s no excuses. You know the state of things before you begin. Whatever the result, you have to cop it sweet.
Injury? Too bad. Sun Yang? Horton knew what he was getting into.
An empty lane would have been a protest
He must have thought Sun was beatable, because he dived in and tried to beat him, losing by 33/100ths of a second. If he thought the result was rigged because Sun was, is and always will be a drug cheat — a black and white issue, apparently, much to Jack’s horror — he should have walked onto the pool deck before the race, placed his goggles on the blocks and walked away, refusing to take part. An empty lane — there’s a protest.
If Horton won the gold and Sun the silver, would he still have refused to be on the podium with him? Would he have relinquished top spot on the dais? Or was that only in defeat? Why did he take part in the supposedly tainted presentation ceremony at all? Why accept the supposedly tainted medal?
Horton also swam the 4x200m relay, against Sun. Australia won it. China missed a medal. Horton took his spot on the podium. Why not protest again? He’d still been forced to compete against Sun. He only protests if Sun gets a medal? Or if he wins?
Horton has gone awfully quiet, awfully quickly. Mid-meet, before Jack’s doping tests were revealed, and the outright lie about “personal reasons” forcing her home, Horton said he no longer wanted to talk about doping in the interests of protecting the Australian team.
From what? It was a bit late for that. He knew his stance would make the meet about him. What an extraordinary coincidence if he knew nothing about the real cause of Jack’s absence when he suddenly decided to zip it.
Horton and Jack — another bob each way
What next for him? A refusal to be part of any Australian team that has Jack in it? What of Jack’s coach? Darren Lehmann lost his job as Australia’s cricket mentor after the cheating scandal in South Africa.
What of Dean Boxall, the coach of Jack? Why should he be allowed to be involved in Australian swimming? He also coaches Ariarne Titmus, who stunned American Katie Ledecky to win the 400m. If Boxall was a Chinese coach, and his 400m swimmer caused one of the biggest upsets of the modern era, as Titmus did, and then it was revealed another of his swimmers had tested positive, we’d be baying for his Chinese blood and questioning Titmus’s credibility.
If Sun did what Jack has done, writing about falling into an emotional heap with her grandma, we’d be laughing him out of town. Swimming Australia has supported Horton’s uncompromising stance. But now Jack’s violation has been exposed, it says doping is a complicated issue that needs mature discussion. Another bob each way.
Jacco Verhaeren is the Australian team’s coach. What of him, too? If he’s presided over a drug cheating incident, regardless of his knowledge of it, why should he survive? Lehmann did not tell Cam Bancroft and Dave Warner to grab the sandpaper, and yet he fell on his sword.
What of SA chief executive Leigh Russell? It’s not possible to have presided over a greater stuff-up. As m’learned colleague Wayne Smith has written from Korea, this is an absolute disaster. I say it’s of Cricket Australia, Cape Town-proportions. While officials and Verhaeren have ducked for cover when the fallout was hitting the fan in Korea, it was left to Cate Campbell, who had to be interviewed as a medallist, to talk on behalf of the team. Not since sandpapergate has been there been a bigger calamity.
But let’s look on the bright side, eh? People are interested in swimming again. Television broadcasters will be falling over themselves for the rights to the next train wreck.