Tom Daley"s mum Debbie hits back at David Sparkes after Splash! criticism – EXCLUSIVE

EXCLUSIVE: Tom's Olympic medal probably kept you in your job. He turned down his friends and holidays to keep diving after the Games. Isn't it time you left my son alone

PUBLISHED:

22:00 GMT, 9 January 2013

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UPDATED:

11:12 GMT, 10 January 2013

British Swimming chief executive David Sparkes this week criticised Olympic bronze medallist Tom Daley's decision to appear on ITV's Saturday night diving show Splash!, saying the 18-year-old should have waited until the end of his competitive career.

Last February, Sparkes hit out at Daley's non-diving commitments, agreeing with British Diving's performance director that Daley was in danger of failing to fulfil his talent.

Here, Daley's mother Debbie responds…

Belly-flop: Tom Daley has been criticised by the chief of British Swimming for his part in TV show Splash!

Belly-flop: Tom Daley has been criticised by the chief of British Swimming for his part in TV show Splash!

Slated: David Sparkes

Slated: Tom Daley's TV show has been widely criticised

Slated: British Swimming chief David Sparkes (left) said he was concerned Daley was not paying enough attention to his diving career by appearing on television

Dear Mr Sparkes,

We last spoke at Loughborough in June
2011 after you asked for Tom to do a favour for you and open a sports
park at Loughborough. I don't believe that you spoke much to Tom
directly in 2012, other than to briefly congratulate him on his medal. Since the media is your preferred method of communication, I thought that I should do the same.

As Tom's mum, I take a lot of pride
in the way he handles himself. I am sure that he will make mistakes
along the way, but to date he is doing a lot right. I find it incredible
that you want to criticise him so publicly, when he does so much for
your organisation and for sport in the UK – and worse, you do it by
giving your opinion without any thought. You did not speak to Tom – or
his agent – first. Is this a good way for a CEO to operate

Statement: Debbie Daley has written an open letter to the man who has accused her son of putting fame ahead of diving

Statement: Debbie Daley has written an open letter to the man who has accused her son of putting fame ahead of diving

As far as I'm aware, Tom was one of
the few major success stories for British Swimming this summer… and
possibly one of the athletes that helped you retain your job. Others say
that your performance was the worst of any CEO in British sport. Surely
you should be thanking Tom and showing your support and gratitude

His target was to achieve a medal and
he delivered, becoming the first British individual diver in 52 years
to get an Olympic medal. Not only this, but immediately after the
Games, when most athletes were enjoying themselves, Tom went back to
intense training for five weeks to prepare for the Junior World
Championships. Since you didn't speak with Tom during this period, let
me shed some light on how he coped.

Mentor: Daley sat beside the pool applauding his students as they dived in

Mentor: Daley sat beside the pool applauding his students as they dived in

Making a Splash! Vernon Kay and Gabby Logan co-host the television programme

Making a Splash! Vernon Kay and Gabby Logan co-host the television programme

All smiles: Daley (right) has been accused of 'putting the cart before the horse' in his media appearances

All smiles: Daley (right) was accused of 'putting the cart before the horse' in his media appearances

For an individual who is normally so
motivated, going back to intense training after the climax of the Games
was a real struggle: I'm sure he won't mind me saying he lacked drive
and motivation. Andy Banks, his coach, expressed concern that this was
being reflected in his training.

Everyone else was taking long
holidays, partying, celebrating exams, while Tom had to get straight
back to diving. You must remember what you did the summer you were 18
years old We even discussed with Andy the option of him backing out of
the competition. I was concerned Tom would crumble as the impact of the
previous 24 months finally came on top of him.

Success: Daley claimed bronze at the London Games

Success: Daley claimed bronze at the London Games

Perhaps you need to be reminded that
not only was Tom taking on the pressures of the biggest sporting event
in his life, not to mention a home Games, but during this period he also
lost his biggest supporter, his dad.

My bond with my son has always been
strong but Rob was Tom's rock, friend and role model; he would be
spitting mad if he had read your media attacks on him over the past 12
months and would have given you a franker view than mine.

However, Tom didn't want to back out.
While the competition had no real incentive for him, Tom had made the
commitment to his performance director Alexei Evangulov and to British
Diving and – despite me trying to convince him otherwise – he got his
head down and ploughed on. He said he'd take a break after, so what was
five more weeks of training

Any mum will know that for an
18-year-old to make this decision requires a lot of self-discipline. Tom
was being offered opportunities left, right and centre to appear at
exciting award ceremonies, red-carpet events, five-star holidays, not to
mention the fact he hadn't 'hung out' with his friends for the past
four months.

So off to Australia he went alone
(none of his direct coaching team went, which highlights the importance
of this competition) and he came away with not just one, but two gold
medals – one in an event he doesn't normally compete in. I was so proud
of him. A great way to end the year. Now it was about time for my son
to have some fun and let his hair down. He had done his job. He had
also played a key role in funding your organisation. So can you not see
why I'm so angry with your lack of support

Your comments in February 2012 were a
big enough blow: Tom was five months away from the biggest competition
in his life where he should have as much support as possible and you
spoke out to him via the media after Alexei had let emotion take over at
a press conference and after Tom's team had met your team to discuss
the real issues.

Pressure: Daley was under intense scrutiny during and in the build up to last summer's Games

Pressure: Daley was under intense scrutiny during and in the build up to last summer's Games

As it turned out, one of the issues
then was that there was a lack of funding for a masseur for Tom, which
Alexei wanted… so Tom – not British Swimming – funded this. From memory it cost Tom 3,000. We said nothing at the time.

The other issue was a trip to Sydney
Zoo organised by British Swimming where he was swamped by fans. Alexei
hated this. However, British Swimming – not Tom – organised the visit.
So to now see your remarks three-and-a-half years before the next
Olympics makes me so angry.

A leader should motivate his team,
not make them think: 'Why do I bother'

Tom has always worked his hardest
when it comes to his training. Diving has always taken priority. We
have all worked closely with Tom's coaching team (Andy and Alexei) plus
Tom's agents to create a plan that ensures he has the best path for
success.

Do you communicate with anyone,
David Perhaps you should try to talk to Tom Of course the headlines
make you look important and help protect you should Tom not deliver any
medals. Wouldn't it be better to work with one of your most important
athletes rather than against him

Had you been kept up to date you
would know that we all agreed to keep Tom's commercial days to a minimum
and ensured no training was missed in the two years prior to the Games
unless approved by everybody.

The irony is that while all Tom's
sponsors respected this and used no days in the months leading up to the
Games, the only request that was not originally approved came from
British Swimming. Funny how things change when it suits British
Swimming!

It's also baffling that you openly
criticise Tom when you yourself have called in special favours for Tom
to make appearances (such as that eight-hour trip to Loughborough in
2011 when I last saw you).

Tom trained in December, also
attending an intensive training camp the week before Christmas, and
continues to train this month. Splash! is now one weekend day of his
time. His coach and mentor is also part of the show. If you were
worried, why did you not speak to Andy If you had actually watched
Splash! you would have seen him as a judge.

The Chinese comparisons really annoy
me – and I know that they annoy Tom. He was not born in Beijing. He was
born in Plymouth. I saw a documentary a few years ago which showed the
Chinese boot-camp style of training in sport. This is not Tom. He would
not function if his life was just diving.

He is very bright, works incredibly
hard and over the last 10 years has given up so much to focus on his
2012 Olympic goal. I know that he will do the same for 2016. However,
Tom is never going to lead a lifestyle similar to a Chinese diver.

I am sure that he will always be the
best he can be in his sport. Splash! is an appropriate show for Tom.
Yes, it can improve following the first show. However, a lot of
grandparents, mums, teenagers and kids loved it.

As you did not watch the show, I can
tell you that it is a diving show and it promotes a key sport that is
under your leadership.

Cautious: Sugababe Jade Ewen prepares to take her first dive on the Saturday night TV show

Proud: Omid Djalili also appears on the show

Cringe-making: Sugababe Jade Ewen (left) and Omid Djalili take the plunge on the show

Oh dear: The likes of Helen Lederer are taught to dive by Daley in the ITV show

Oh dear: The likes of Helen Lederer are taught to dive by Daley in the ITV show

Oh dear: The likes of Helen Lederer are taught to dive by Daley in the ITV show

You told Tom's agent on Monday that it would do
nothing to help the sport in the UK. How ironic to see that your marketing
department has today promoted watching Splash! on Twitter to British
Swimming's followers. So you are worried about Tom's performances
Well, I am worried about yours.

A leader should motivate his team,
not make them think: 'Why do I bother' Did you speak out to protect
your UK Sport funding and be seen to do the right thing for them Well,
if UK Sport want to demotivate the key person in a sport, carry on
David. Good work.

While you may want Tom to do more
training, I would like you to do leadership, media and motivation
courses. Tom may benefit from some UK Sport funding but he has to fund
his own life from sponsorship and media work. When the Splash!
opportunity came to us, it was a completely appropriate one for him and
we also believed that it would help our sport long term – there is not a
lot of diving or swimming for that matter on television, David. That is
meant to be your job.

Tom, though, is just giving some
advice and encouragement – and having some fun. I am glad that he is
doing Splash! even though I don't like to read negative reviews of the
show. Those opinions, though, I can handle. Yours I would like you to
manage given your role within the sport and the impact that it is having
on my son.

Yours sincerely,

Debbie Daley

Tom Daley and Jack Laugher win at World Junior Diving Championships

Daley wins Down Under as Brit ace teams up with Laugher at junior championships

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UPDATED:

09:43 GMT, 9 October 2012

Tom Daley made a victorious return to action by winning the three-metre springboard synchro alongside Jack Laugher at the World Junior Diving Championships in Adelaide.

In his first appearance since winning an emotional bronze medal at the London Olympics, Daley secured his first junior world title and continued a stellar year that has also seen him crowned European and World Series platform champion.

Victory was Laugher's second title in as
many days after he won the individual 3m springboard on the opening day
of competition on Monday.

Dynamic duo: Laugher and Daley blitzed the rest of the field in Adelaide

Dynamic duo: Laugher and Daley blitzed the rest of the field in Adelaide

The 17-year-old Ripon diver, who has been tipped as a future world champion by American diving legend Greg Louganis, has now won four junior world crowns. Daley and Laugher blitzed their rivals with a score of 338.85.

Russian duo Ilia Kuzmin and Maxim Popkov were their closest challengers 30.83 behind. It was a rare appearance on the springboard for Daley, but marked a possible future direction for the Plymouth diver after he and Laugher only began training together for the synchro after the Olympics.

Daley will look to claim his second gold medal later this week when he competes in the 10m platform, the event at which he was crowned senior world champion as a 15-year-old in 2009.

Jack Laugher wins diving youth world title

Laugher bounces back from Olympic disappointment to win third world diving title

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UPDATED:

09:21 GMT, 8 October 2012

On form: Jack Laugher

On form: Jack Laugher

British rising star Jack Laugher claimed the third world youth title of his career with a comfortable victory in the three-metre springboard at the World Junior Diving Championships.

Laugher, 17, attracted one score of 10 as he easily outpointed his rivals to ensure Great Britain got off to a golden start on the opening day in Adelaide.

The Ripon diver won the junior 3m and 1m crowns in Tucson two years ago and, after being touted as a future world champion by American legend Greg Louganis, has since established himself inside the world's top 10.

Laugher endured a forgettable Olympics, however, when he crashed out in the first round and failed to compete his final dive.

But in his first competition since London he proved his class, winning a 10 for his second three-and-a-half reverse somersaults, on way to a score of 635.45.

China's Peng Jianfeng was Laugher's closest challenger some 56.80. Laugher's team-mate Daniel Goodfellow was 12th with a score of 482.30.
Plymouth's Shanice Lobb (293.40) was 10th in the girl's 1m 'B' category springboard final.

Laugher will go for more gold on Tuesday when he partners Tom Daley in the 3m synchro.

Daley will make his first competitive appearance since he won an Olympic bronze medal in a memorable final of the 10m platform in London.

Keeping focus: How the keepers got on during the second weekend of Premier League action

Keeping focus: More errors from the men between the sticks in the second week of the season

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UPDATED:

23:31 GMT, 26 August 2012

After an opening week of gaffes, Matt Barlow investigated how goalkeepers cope with the mental toll of football’s loneliest job in Saturday’s Sportsmail.

And the mistakes kept coming throughout this second weekend of Barclays Premier League action.

Liverpool keeper Pepe Reina and centre back Martin Skrtel both lapsed to hand Manchester City two goals at Anfield On Sunday.

There were a string of other errors from other goalkeepers, as listed below.

Liverpool v Manchester City

Pepe Reina, Liverpool's Spanish goalkeeper had no chance with Carlos Tevez's equaliser but was uncertain when trying to come for the cross that led to Yaya Toure’s goal earlier. Joe Hart is established now as England’s best, but the City keeper will reflect unhappily on the positioning of his defensive wall for Liverpool’s second goal. Luis Suarez was able to curl the ball around, not over, the wall.

Getting it wrong: Pepe Reina misses a punch clear which leads to Yaya Toure equalising

Getting it wrong: Pepe Reina misses a punch clear which leads to Yaya Toure equalising

Stoke v Arsenal

It would be difficult to fault either Stoke’s Asmir Begovic or Vito Mannone, who was called up at short notice for his first Barclays Premier League start in almost three years when Wojciech Szczesny failed a fitness test on a rib injury. Both defences were so dominant that neither had a shot worthy of the name to save.

Norwich v QPR

The players claim Rob Green has not let his opening-day howler and Paddy Kenny’s insults effect him. His display suggested otherwise. A great diving save from Snodgrass, one for the cameras, but too many mistakes. John Ruddy’s penalty save — tipping Cisse’s strike on to the post — was top class. Could do nothing about the rebound and looked back to the form that earned him a Euro 2012 call-up.

Missing the ball: Robert Green fails to catch the ball for QPR against Norwich

Missing the ball: Robert Green fails to catch the ball for QPR against Norwich

Aston Villa v Everton

Not a good day. It is difficult to remember Shay Given dropping as big a clanger as that which gifted Marouane Fellaini Everton’s second goal. And while Karim El Ahmadi’s 30-yard shot moved viciously in the air, Tim Howard can consider himself partly at fault.

Manchester United v Fulham

Physical
frailty continues to undermine all the good work done by David de Gea’s
razor-sharp reflexes. He got nowhere near Matthew Briggs’ cross and
came off second best in a collision with Mladen Petric that caused a
startled Nemanja Vidic to deflect the ball into his own net. Fulham’s
Mark Schwarzer was as solid as ever.

Nowhere near: David De Gea misses the cross that leads to Fulham's second goal

Nowhere near: David De Gea misses the cross that leads to Fulham's second goal

Swansea v West Ham

Jussi
Jaaskelainen made a howler for Swansea’s first. Angel Rangel’s
cross-shot from the byeline shouldn’t have been a problem — it didn’t
even appear to be on target — but the Finn managed to deflect it into
goal with his right elbow (some called it an own goal). Michel Vorm made
a fine reaction save to Matt Jarvis’s volley, but was nervy under high
crosses.

Tottenham v West Bromwhich Albion

Small wonder West Bromwich goalkeeper Ben Foster, who played well, ran half the pitch to celebrate James Morrison’s equaliser. White Hart Lane was the ground where Foster conceded a long-range goal to opposite number Paul Robinson in March 2007. At the other end, Brad Friedel continues to play like a 21-year-old rather than a keeper nine years shy of 50.

Chelsea v Newcastle

Petr Cech was close to faultless as he captained Chelsea just three days after the uncharacteristic fumble which gifted Reading a goal at Stamford Bridge. Cech made good saves from Demba Ba and Papiss Cisse, while Tim Krul played well, too, and could have done little to stop Eden Hazard’s penalty or the goal from Fernando Torres.

London 2012 Olympics: He Zi wins record third synchro diving title

Diving in to the history books: Chinese synchro star Zi picks up golden hat-trick

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UPDATED:

16:22 GMT, 29 July 2012

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LIVE RESULTS |
EVENT SCHEDULE |
MEDALS TABLE

China’s Wu Minxia secured her place in Olympic history with a hat-trick of springboard synchro titles alongside He Zi at Sunday’s opening diving event at the Aquatics Centre.

Wu cemented her place as one of the greatest female divers of all time as she also drew level with former synchro partner Guo Jingjing, who she teamed up with to win the past two Olympic crowns, with a record six medals at the Games.

The 26-year-old is set to surpass that mark next week, when she and He go head-to-head in the individual springboard.

Solid gold: He Zi and Wu Minxia with their medals

Solid gold: He Zi and Wu Minxia with their medals

This afternoon they were comfortable winners, leading after all five rounds to finish with a gap of 24.30 points from nearest rivals Abigail Johnston and Kelci Bryant from the United States.

Canada’s Emilie Heymans and Jennifer Abel took bronze to ensure Heymans became the first diver to win a medal at four consecutive Olympics.

British duo Becky Gallantree and Alicia Blagg had to be content with seventh place in the eight-team final as a couple of errors cost them after being fourth after two rounds.

The plunge: Minxia (left) and He Zi (right)

The plunge: Minxia (left) and He Zi (right)

The City of Leeds pair both missed their third dive, a front two-and-a-half somersaults, before 15-year-old Olympic debutant Blagg came out too late on the final dive to leave them down the rankings.

'We were really happy with the first two dives but then I missed my last dive and my third,' said Blagg.

'It was my first Games, it was just an absolutely incredible experience. The whole crowd was incredible.

In sync: The Chinese pair in flight

In sync: The Chinese pair in flight

'Hopefully I’ve got many more Games in me to improve on this and the dives I’m not confident on.'

While small sections of the 17,500 capacity Aquatics Centre were left empty the duo still enjoyed a boisterous home support that Gallantree, competing at her second Olympics, admitted she was blown away by.

'It was absolutely incredible. The crowd out there was just mind-blowing. It was really, really fantastic,' the 27-year-old said.

'It just made us smile. We were grinning at each other.The result could have been better but there were a lot of positives in there.'

London 2012 Olympics: Tom Daley ready for his moment of destiny

It's scary but it's all down now to just six dives: Moment of truth for Tom Daley after his months of personal pain

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UPDATED:

21:18 GMT, 28 July 2012

Olympics 2012

Tom Daley has trained for his Olympic entrance in London on Monday since childhood. But he knows that no amount of preparation can save him from the reality that will confront him when he stands on the end of the 10-metre diving board.

‘You’ve done hundreds of thousands of dives in training but the Olympics will come down to just six dives on the day. That’s scary,’ said Daley.

At 18, he has grown from child protg to a young man carrying a burden of expectation known only to the most hardened of athletes within the British Olympic team.

Great expectations: The pressure is on for Tom Daley

Great expectations: The pressure is on for Tom Daley

‘I try to ignore it,’ said Daley. ‘I focus on what I can control … and I can’t control the expectation. I have medal chances in both my competitions but I’ve always said that to win a medal will be tough. Diving is such an on-the-day sport.’

Daley knows, too, that he must deal with the emotional reaction he will inevitably face when he enters the Olympic arena knowing that his late father, Rob, will not be in the crowd cheering him on.

Perhaps only when Daley looks around the diving pool and sees his mother, Debbie, younger brothers, William and Ben, and his grandparents and other members of his family, will he fully absorb the fact that the man who introduced him to diving, nurtured his ambition and accompanied him around the world draped in an over-sized Union flag is missing.

Taking it all in: Tom Daley and Peter Waterfield enjoy the Opening Ceremony

Taking it all in: Tom Daley and Peter Waterfield enjoy the Opening Ceremony

The 15 months since Rob Daley lost his battle with cancer will be distilled into this instant.

Daley can lay claim to a legitimate challenge for a medal, with partner Pete Waterfield, an Olympic silver medallist, in the synchronised 10-metre platform in the Aquatic Centre tomorrow afternoon. But can he keep control of his mind when confronted with the absence of his father

He vows not to let it overwhelm him — at least until his Olympics end with the 10-metre individual event in 13 days’ time. ‘It’s going to be an emotional time after I’ve finished, definitely,’ said Daley. ‘Me and Dad worked so hard to get here. But I feel he will be looking after me.’

Daley is in peak condition, diving better than ever. His coach, Andy Banks, said: ‘Tom can compartmentalise his life, he always has done. Of course, it’s still very difficult for him to deal with his Dad’s death. But Rob was a strong character and Tom knows he’s doing what Rob wanted.’

The time is now: Daley knows the pressure is on him to deliver

The time is now: Daley knows the pressure is on him to deliver

Banks and Daley will walk into the Aquatic Centre tomorrow with a sense of pride. ‘Somewhere, Rob will be waving a big flag,’ said Banks.

Banks believes Daley’s dive programme has matured to where he can compete, in terms of degree of difficulty, with the best in the world, China’s Qui Bo. ‘We’ve worked on making Tom consistent and confident with what he has developed for London,’ said Banks. ‘I’d have no hesitation in calling him one of the best in the world. It will all come down to a mighty punch-up at the Olympics.’

Waterfield, 31, a father of two and a silver medallist in Athens in 2004, grew up a bus ride away from the Olympic Park and has willingly undergone a course of painful injections to hold his body together for one final afternoon rich in promise.

Going for gold: Daley hopes to do enough to win his diving event

Going for gold: Daley hopes to do enough to win his diving event

‘Tom has been making some high scores,’ he said. ‘Together, our timing has become better and better. We have a real chance of medalling.’

Performance director Alexei Evangulov feels there is a buoyant atmosphere within the team, in no small part created by the profile Daley has given British diving. But while team preparation has been professional, it is light years from the military-like training of the Chinese.

‘The team are so enthusiastic, I love working with them,’ said Evangulov. ‘They listen, they accept my experience. In terms of conditions, the financial support, all this stuff, British Swimming has provided us with everything we need. Our target is between one and three medals with four divers in top-eight positions.

Timing it to perfection: Waterfield says he and Daley are getting their timing right

Timing it to perfection: Waterfield says he and Daley are getting their timing right

‘In China, it’s like the old Soviet Union when I was a diver. I had no funding but we had free pools, free coaches, and we lived on full board. Divers had to fight for survival or be off the programme. It’s the same in China. And the Chinese have been dominating but this time we plan to pick up medals from them. We’d like to destroy their domination.’

Sarah Barrow and Tonia Crouch have elevated themselves to medal-winning candidates since capturing the recent European synchronised championship. ‘It has been a great 12 months,’ said Barrow, 23. ‘Tonia and I have known Tom since he started and we all look up to Tom for the way he has handled things.’

Four years ago, when Daley made his Olympic entrance as a 14-year-old schoolboy in Beijing, his father was easy to spot in the crowd, draped in his flag and cheering loudest of all.

In London, Daley will draw on those memories. And his gift is that, so far, he is emotionally in one piece. Tomorrow will be his greatest test. But once his Games end, hopefully with at least one medal, he can become a son who, in public and in private, can grieve for the loss of his father.

London 2012 Olympics: Qiu Bo going for diving gold

Bo must shoulder expectations of a nation as he bids to beat Daley to diving gold

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UPDATED:

10:20 GMT, 6 July 2012

Without the benefit of a swimming pool for practice, China's Qiu Bo launched his diving career by jumping off trampolines into worn-out cushions, but now finds himself the key to his team's hopes of sweeping the Olympic competition.

The world champion will go head-to-head with home favourite Tom Daley in a battle of teenage dreamers for the 10-metre platform title at the Aquatics Centre, each facing crushing pressure for different reasons.

Daley, who stunned the world by winning the 2009 world title at the age of 15, faces the burden of expectation as his country's Olympic poster-boy, while 19-year-old Qiu must satisfy his peerless team's demands for perfection.

Rivals: Qiu Bo (centre) is favourite to win gold ahead of Tom Daley (left)

Rivals: Qiu Bo (centre) is favourite to win gold ahead of Tom Daley (left)

China's divers were denied their target of scooping all eight titles in Beijing when Zhou Luxin surrendered his lead and the 10m platform gold to Australia's Matthew Mitcham, leaving the home team one short of a clean sweep.

Qiu can sympathise with Zhou. As a 16-year-old on the brink of winning gold at his first world championships in 2009, he executed his final dive poorly, allowing Daley to pip him for the title.

Qiu found redemption two years later at the 2011 world championships when he stormed to the 10m platform title in his home pool, and took a second in the synchronised 10m platform, helping his team pocket all 10 golds.

'The biggest challenge is from myself to beat myself. The aim is to win everything,' he said at a World Series meeting in Dubai earlier this year, where China swept all eight titles.

Qiu's emergence has eased a long headache for head diving coach Zhou Jihong, who had searched in vain for a diver to fill the enormous void left by 10m platform specialist Tian Liang, who captured gold at the 2000 Sydney Games and a 10m platform sychronised gold at Athens four years later.

Pressure: Qiu Bo will have the weight of his nation on his shoulders

Pressure: Qiu Bo will have the weight of his nation on his shoulders

Like many other Chinese Olympians, Qiu started from the humblest of beginnings, the son of laid-off factory workers in southwestern Sichuan province.

As a bouncy five-year-old, Qiu would mimic the handstands his gymnast uncle would perform and so impressed his family with his arm strength that they persuaded a local sports school to take him in.

With no pool at the school, training began in a shabby gymnasium that leaked on rainy days, but within two years, Qiu was diving for the provincial team despite the training fees swallowing his parents' combined salaries.

'He has always wanted to stick with the training, so we as parents had to clear the path for him,' Qiu's mother Liu Liyu said.

His sturdy frame was seen as a disadvantage in a sport which places a premium on a splash-free entry.

'But he has naturally the skill to smoothly enter the water, plus he was very quiet and stable,” his provincial-level coach Liu Meichuan added.

Tumble and fall: Qiu Bo is favourite to take gold in London next month

Tumble and fall: Qiu Bo is favourite to take gold in London next month

'He never tried to compete with others. Some kids would slack off in the training but Qiu would never stop until he got sweat all over himself.'

Qiu has lived by the mantra of ignoring his rivals and focusing on his performance, which may prove crucial when he battles Daley and the home crowd at London.

Capturing Olympic gold would not only bring adulation in a country of 1.3 billion but also untold financial rewards from endorsements and grateful sports officials.

The Sichuan government paid out 500,000 yuan (50,000) for each gold home-grown athletes brought back from Beijing in 2008, a small fortune in a hardscrabble province where relatively affluent urban residents earn an average annual income of about 1,500.

'If he won, we would use the money to buy a home,' said Qiu's mother, who with her husband have never owned one in their lives.

'I will watch his event, but I won't watch the last two dives,' she said. 'I will feel extremely nervous.'

London 2012 Olympics: Daniel Fogg in open water marathon

Fogg to fly the flag for Britain in open water marathon at Olympics

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UPDATED:

10:39 GMT, 18 June 2012

Swimmer Daniel Fogg will be Great Britain's sole representative in the men's open water 10km marathon swimming competition at this summer's Olympics after his place was confirmed.

The 24-year-old, already selected to Team GB back in March to compete in the 1,500m event in the Aquatics Centre, has now been picked by the British Olympic Association for the outdoor event in Hyde Park on August 10.

'I am really happy to have been selected for my second event at the Games,' said Fogg, who finished 16th in the 10km marathon at the 2011 World Championships.

Made it: Daniel Fogg will swim the open water marathon at London 2012

Made it: Daniel Fogg will swim the open water marathon at London 2012

'I'm back into hard training after recovering from the FINA Open Water event in Portugal and have been focusing on my first event, the 1,500m.

'I'll now sit down with my coach to look at the strategy for the open water event too which is a week after the pool swim.

'It's fantastic to get to race in both events.'

The BOA have also confirmed diver Rebecca Gallantree will contest the 3m individual springboard diving event after confirmation from the international federation, FINA, that Team GB has been awarded a second host nation place.

Gallantree was already selected to compete in the 3m synchronised event alongside partner Alicia Blagg but now also joins GB team-mate Hannah Starling in the individual discipline.

London 2012 Olympics: Tonia Couch appeals Monique Gladding call-up

Couch launches appeal over Gladding call-up as selection row now hits GB diving team

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UPDATED:

13:33 GMT, 13 June 2012

Appeal: Tonia Couch was left angered

Appeal: Tonia Couch was left angered

Monique Gladding's Olympic dream is officially on hold after Tonia Couch lodged an appeal against her place in Great Britain's diving team.

Gladding, 30, was selected for her first Olympics in the women's platform on Monday just 16 months after she almost died after fracturing her skull at a meet in Russia.

A British Diving selection panel made the emotional call despite Couch beating Gladding at the weekend's British Gas Diving Championships in Sheffield, which were effectively an Olympic trial.

Couch, who reached the 2008 Olympic final, finished second at Ponds Forge behind Stacie Powell – who was also named in the squad – while Gladding was third as all three recorded personal best scores.

But with Couch set to challenge for an Olympic medal alongside Sarah Barrow in the platform synchro in London the selection team, headed by performance director Alexei Evangulov, opted for Gladding.

Couch was left in tears at Ponds Forge on Sunday night after she was informed of the decision, which has caused outrage in her home city of Plymouth where council leader Tudor Evans described her omission as a “slap in the face” for the city.

Coach Andy Banks had also revealed his frustration on Monday, hinting he would appeal, telling BBC Sport: 'I feel, quite strongly, that she (Couch) has demonstrated over the course of this year that she is still the UK's premier platform diver – she has been since 2008 when she made the Olympic final.'

British Diving confirmed that the complaint had been filed this morning with all 12 members of the diving Olympic team, including Gladding and Couch, having already flown out to Majorca for a two-week training camp.

The complaint is now set to be heard by a Fast Track Appeal process with a decision set to be made before the weekend.

Diving in to the team: Monique Gladding

Diving in to the team: Monique Gladding

Should Gladding lose her place it would almost certainly spell the end of her career, which had certainly looked over when she almost lost her life in February last year.

Gladding had to be dragged to safety from the bottom of the diving pool after she hit her head on the 10m concrete platform and plummeted unconscious into the water.

The sickening incident left her with a huge scar across the top of her head and her Olympic hopes seemingly in tatters.

Remarkably Gladding was back on diving's highest board less than six months before top-10 finishes at the World Cup and European Championships this year marked a stunning comeback.

Those results seemingly proved enough for the selectors to overlook the weekend result, after which Gladding had admitted she had almost given up on reaching an Olympics.

'There was a definite moment when I started doubting it,' she said. 'I had to really draw on something much deeper than I ever have before to get myself back and get the confidence back. It's my third attempt at an Olympics. To be in London, after the year I've had – I've had to dig deeper than ever.'

London 2012 Olympics: Tom Daley qualifies

Daley books Olympics ticket to honour late father's memory

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UPDATED:

17:29 GMT, 10 June 2012

Tom Daley hoped he had done his late father proud after he booked his place at the London Olympics on Sunday.

Daley confirmed he will be one of the faces of this summer's showpiece with the most comfortable of wins in the 10 metre platform at the British Gas Diving Championships in Sheffield.

In a spin: Daley hopes to lay down a marker for the Chinese to match

In a spin: Daley hopes to lay down a marker for the Chinese to match

While the 18-year-old was unable to
break his personal best of 565.05, which he set when reclaiming the
European title last month, he did more than enough to ensure he was
already decked out in a Team GB tracksuit before leaving Ponds Forge.

The Sheffield venue had set an
emotional stage for Daley as it was the pool his father Robert last saw
him compete before his death following a long battle with brain cancer
last May.

Diving blind: Daley has been impressed with his recent performances

Diving blind: Daley has been impressed with his recent performances

Diving blind: Daley has been impressed with his recent performances

Robert Daley had been a permanent
fixture alongside his son at all his competitions and had pledged to see
his son compete in London this summer.

'It's great to know that I have
qualified and he will be proud of what I have done,' Daley said. 'It
feels great to actually win here in front of my mum and my brothers,
obviously it is sad that my dad is not here.

'It's just such a great feeling to know you are going to the Olympic Games because it is what every athlete wants.'

Daley will head to London in career-best form despite stinging criticism at the World Cup at the beginning of the year.

British Diving performance director Alexei Evangulov claimed the former world champion was letting his media commitments undermine his Olympic dream before likening him to Russian tennis player Anna Kournikova.

Nest stop London: There's only a matter of weeks until the Olympics start

Nest stop London: There's only a matter of weeks until the Olympics start

Nest stop London: There's only a matter of weeks until the Olympics start

Daley has let his diving do the
talking since, responding emphatically by becoming overall World Series
champion and reclaiming the European title he first won as a
13-year-old.

'I'm diving at the moment the best I have throughout my career,' he said.

'I'm loving my diving at the moment.
Knowing that I'm diving well going to an Olympic Games is a really nice
feeling. I just have to maintain it.

'I'm going into each competition knowing I can perform and score a 10. It's just about doing it on the day.'

Daley twice attracted scores of 10
tonight and only a slight mistake on his penultimate back three-and-half
somersaults prevented him from eclipsing his best for the third
successive meet.

'That's the dive I want to really work on before the Olympics,' he said.

'I can either get a really big score from it or like this evening it can cost me

'There's lots of hard work to do before the Olympics Games.'

Britain's Olympic diving team will be confirmed in an announcement tomorrow lunchtime, with only a few positions up in the air.

The women's 3m springboard is one of
those after tonight's winner Rebecca Gallantree failed to make the
qualifying mark in an unusually poor preliminary round.

The City of Leeds diver responded though with a British record and personal best 326.05 to wrap up her fourth domestic title.

Gallantree must now await Monday's announcement, with teenage duo Hannah Starling and Alicia Blagg also in contention.

'I was really pleased to get a good
run out this afternoon,' she said. 'I didn't make the score this morning
so it will be up to Alexei now to see who is in. Fingers crossed.'

Gallantree, who was cheered on by a
large support of family and friends, is already set to be named in the
3m springboard but admitted she was 'desperate' to also compete
individually for a second successive Olympics.

'It would mean the world to me –
competing at the Olympic pool in February at the World Cup was
absolutely fantastic,' she said. 'I'm desperate to go back for both
events. I'd love to.'