Olympic gold medal-winning swimmer Brooke Hanson announced her
retirement Tuesday, less than nine months before the start of the
Beijing Olympics.
The 29-year-old Australian said she had decided to quit after
struggling to rediscover her motivation for training since
suffering an electric shock in a spa pool earlier this year.
"I now know that my heart, my mind and my body have decided it
is time for the next chapter in my life," she told reporters.
Hanson won a silver medal in the 100 meters breaststroke at the
2004 Athens Olympics and was also awarded a gold for swimming a
heat for the Australian team that won the 4x100 medley relay.
She was named as the outstanding female swimmer at the
short-course world championships in Indianapolis in 2004 after
winning a record six titles.
She did not make the Australian team for this year's world
championships in Melbourne but was hoping to be selected for
Beijing.
Meanwhile, Australia's Olympic medal hopefuls have been promised
extra cash incentives in the lead-up to next year's Beijing Games
amid fears the country could slip behind Britain on the medals
table.
The Australian Olympic Committee (AOC) has agreed to increase
current funding levels for the country's leading hopes after
predictions indicated they might finish as low as seventh on the
medals table.
Australia finished fourth on the medals table at Sydney in 2000
and Athens in 2004 but latest predictions have them slipping behind
France, Germany and Britain.
AOC president John Coates said Australia was hoping to finish
among the top five nations in Beijing, so had agreed to pay
incentive bonuses to any competitors who had won medals at world
championships this year.
Athletes who won gold medals will receive A$20,000 (US$17,700),
silver medalists would get A$13,400 and bronze medalists A$6,700.
Their coaches will receive a quarter of that amount.
"The athletes need and thoroughly deserve our financial help. It
is critical we increase our funding," Coates said yesterday.
"We want our athletes to properly prepare for Beijing without
having to worry about paying their bills and in some cases putting
food on the table for their families."
Coates said more than 200 athletes were expected to benefit from
the scheme, which follows the announcement of a similar incentive
in Britain.
"Our arch-rival Great Britain has made dramatic advances at our
expense particularly in rowing and cycling," Coates said.
"They are also leading us in track and field and sailing. In
these four sports Great Britain beat us by 14 medals in 2007 and at
the recent World Boxing Championships they won gold and two
bronze."
"Now is the time to act, the athletes need our financial help.
We need to give our athletes every opportunity in the run up to the
Games."
(Shanghai Daily via Agencies November 21, 2007)