Winnipegger Kelsey Wog swims her way to 2nd Olympics appearance - Action News
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Manitoba

Winnipegger Kelsey Wog swims her way to 2nd Olympics appearance

Winnipegger Kelsey Wog admits the sun is setting on her swimming career, but there's plenty of daylight left as she gears up for her second Olympics later this summer.

Road to Pariscontinues at U of M, where she'll be training through the summer

A woman swims.
Kelsey Wog competes in the 200-metre breaststroke at the Canadian Olympic swim trials in Toronto on May 17, 2024. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

Winnipegger Kelsey Wog admits the sun is setting on her swimming career, but there's plenty of daylight left as she gears up for her second Olympics later this summer.

The 25-year-old booked her ticket to the 2024 Paris Olympic Games by finishing second in the women's 200-metre breaststroke final at Canada's recent Olympic and Paralympic swim trials in Toronto. She finished with a time of 2:23.80, just 1/100th of a second back of event winner Sydney Pickrem.

"I don't think I ever dreamed that I'd be able to call myself a two-time Olympian, let alone a one-time Olympian," said Wog. "I'm just really grateful that I was able to hold on for two Olympic cycles and I'm just really looking forward to representing Team Canada."

Her recent success, aside from the swim trials, includes asilver medal in the 200-metre breaststroke event at the 2023 Pan Am Games in Santiago, Chile.

GOLD AND SILVER MEDALS: Sydney Pickrem and Kelsey Wog of Canada claim more Pan Am Games medals in the pool

11 months ago
Duration 6:20

Wog said she's looking forward to a totally different atmosphere in Pariscompared to the 2020 TokyoOlympics, which were heavily impacted by COVID-19 restrictions.

"I'm really excited to kind of experience the whole Olympic experience again, this time in a little bit of a different way with people in the stands and being able to go watch other athletes and kind of be a little bit more in the experience than it was last time," she said.

Wog's coachVlastik Cernyalso said he hopes she'll be able to have a bit more fun this time around.

"I don't think she enjoyed the moment last time around and so that is our goal and through that I'm really looking forward to her being able to perform the way she can," he said.

"Of course there's going to be stress everybody's going to have pressure because the Olympics come only once every four years. You train a long long time for it and you want to be at your best."

And that includes the cerebral part of being an athlete, not just the performance,saidCerny, who's no stranger to the Olympics himself, havingparticipatedonce as an athlete and now entering his fourthas a coach.

"It's every day, and every day is not fantastic but you want to just quickly let go of a practice that maybe didn't go as well as you wanted and it's always about the next one. What was the lesson and what's the next one," he said.

He said Wog has worked hard since the Tokyo Games, where she didn't make past thepreliminary round in the 100-metrebreaststroke and wasdisqualified in semi-finals ofthe 200-metrebreaststrokefor using a dolphin kick.

"It was challenging, [the] last three years after the pandemic Olympics," he said. "But she loves the sportand she persevered and got the job done when it mattered."

'Like a fish in the water'

Cerny sees the upcoming games as a culmination of hard work and growth for Wog, who he and other coaches haveworked with for many years.

"She's like a fish in the water and first time I saw her push off the wall when she was nine years old, I recognized the success," he said. "But she has learned to train hard, she can train with the best in the world and she's raced with the best in the world. It's something that she's worked towards."

Wog's road to Pariscontinues at the University of Manitoba, where she'll be training through the summer. And she hopes that training will lead to some Olympic hardware.

"I know I'm wrapping up my career and an Olympic year is such an amazing year to end on.I just wanted to make sure that I ended my career on a high," she said.

"And I really do believe that I'm working towards that."