A silver milestone for Evergreen Secondary's Sheldon
Despite losing by a hair's breadth in Boys' C Div 400m free, he does Evergreen proud
An ill-timed breath of air was the difference between finishing first and second in National Schools Boys' C Division 400m freestyle final yesterday.
But, for runner-up Sheldon Tan, there was no trace of disappointment as he savoured yet another milestone.
The Evergreen Secondary School student had finished fourth in the same event last year and received a medal, which was the Woodlands school's first for swimming at the National School Games.
Sheldon doubled that tally for Evergreen at the OCBC Aquatic Centre when he touched the wall in 4min 17.33sec, just 0.12sec behind Anglo-Chinese School (Independent) swimmer Zacc Lee (4:17.21).
Marc Lim of Raffles Institution was third in 4:30.23.
Sheldon, 14, said: "I was just trying to hang on and bring up my stroke rate.
"Towards the last five metres, I was not supposed to breathe. But I felt breathless and too tired, so I breathed and I think that cost me the race.
"My target for myself was 4:14. But I didn't manage to hit that, so I'll work harder."
Despite acknowledging there were areas of improvement, he was glad to have lowered his time from last year.
"I felt joy (after the race) because last year the gap between me and Zacc was about 1sec but this year I managed to close it up," said Sheldon.
Last year, he posted 4:30.56 while Zacc was third in 4:29.51.
Swimming is not an official co-curricular activity (CCA) at Evergreen, though the sport is recognised as an external CCA.
Sheldon, whose official CCA is cross-country, is one of two swimmers representing the school at this year's meet.
"I just felt very happy because it had never been done before and I was the talking point of my whole class," said the teenager, adding that he felt like a "mini-celebrity" after last year's achievement.
"I think even the Secondary 2 cohort last year knew about (my achievement)."
FROM BORING TO SCORING
The 1.73m Sheldon initially found swimming "boring" when he first learnt to swim at age five.
He grew to love it only when he was in Primary 5, after spending more time in the pool.
"I just like the feeling of being in the water," said the former Endeavour Primary School pupil, who also took up swimming as an external CCA there.
He attributed his improvement to the amount of training he has been doing.
He trains eight times a week with swimming academy X Lab, which he joined in Primary 6.
He added: "Coming into the meet last year, I didn't really have that serious mentality - all I thought about was playing the whole year.
"I noticed that the more I trained, the faster I became and the more I improved, so I took it more seriously."
In the Boys' A Division 400m free, RI's Glen Lim set a meet record of 3:55.78, bettering Jerome Kwang's 2015 time of 4:11.62.
Glen's time is off his national record of 3:52.64, which he set last month.
The 17-year-old now holds the 400m free meet record in all three divisions.
He said: "I'm quite happy considering this week has been a tough week of training (with the national team).
"I'm still trying to adapt to the new training plans, so it feels pretty good."
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