logo
Jersey swimmer breaks British Junior Record previously held by Adam Peaty

Jersey swimmer breaks British Junior Record previously held by Adam Peaty

ITV News10-07-2025
A swimmer from Jersey has broken a British Junior Record held by Olympic gold medalist Adam Peaty, at the European Junior Championships in Slovakia.
Filip Nowacki, 17, completed the Men's 100m Breaststroke in 59.59 seconds, beating Peaty's time of 59.92 seconds.
Nowacki now stands as the third fastest 17 & Under 100m breaststroker in history.
The teenager, who now trains at Millfield School, spent his age group days under the guidance of Nathan Jegou with the Jersey Tigers Swimming Club.
He has also broken the European Junior Record in the 200m breaststroke, clocking a time of 2:09.11 minutes in the semi-final, breaking the record that had been set in the previous race by Turkey's Doruk Yogurtcuoglu, who swam 2:10:63.
His time would have placed him in contention for a spot in the Olympic final in Paris 2024, demonstrating Nowacki is performing at an Olympic-calibre.
Speaking after the event Nowacki said, "the team speaks for itself, I'm really happy with the outcome there and it's a really strong team so I'm really pleased".
The rising star has secured four Gold medals at this years European Junior Championships:
Gold in the Men's 200m Breaststroke (breaking the European Junior Record).
Gold in the Men's 100m Breaststroke (breaking the British junior record).
Gold in the Mixed 4x100m Medley Relay (contributing to a new Championship and European junior record).
Gold in the Men's 4x100m Medley Relay.
The teenager won three medals at the British Senior Championships earlier this year.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dutch trip is nothing new for Wrexham AFC coach Jones
Dutch trip is nothing new for Wrexham AFC coach Jones

Leader Live

time3 minutes ago

  • Leader Live

Dutch trip is nothing new for Wrexham AFC coach Jones

Wrexham fly off to the Netherlands today and will take on Groningen tomorrow in their final pre-season friendly ahead of next week's Championship opener at Southampton. Jones had a successful spell in Holland at NEC Nijmegen while on loan from Manchester United, scoring six goals in 17 appearances - and one of those strikes came against Groningen. 'It will be an excellent game for us in preparation for the Championship,' said Jones. 'Groningen are a good side with some decent players. 'They finished last season quite strongly and had some big results in the run in, including a 2-2 draw with Ajax, which was the game that handed the advantage to PSV in the title race. 'They have goals in their team from all areas so it's a test we're looking forward to as we get closer to the start of the season. 'It's always beneficial to play different types of teams in pre-season as each week the Championship presents a new challenge'. Jones was only 22 at the time and went on to have a top career at Derby, Wolves, Wigan, Blackburn, Burnley and Sheffield Wednesday. 'It was a great move for me as a young player,' he added. 'The league is highly competitive and very tactical with some big European clubs so it was the ideal place for me to go at the time. 'Making my debut in a 1-1 draw against Ajax in the Amsterdam Arena was a memorable occasion and then only a few weeks later, I was man marking Philip Cocu against PSV Eindhoven. 'These experiences are invaluable when you are making your way in the game and you learn so much from playing against top players on a regular basis.' Reds boss Phil Parkinson says the club's pre-season schedule proves Wrexham are an attractive proposition after a trip to the Netherlands to face FC Groningen in a friendly was added to the list. As part of the preparations for the 2025-26 Championship campaign, Parkinson's men will face the Dutch top-flight side at De Langeleegte in Veendam (3pm kick-off local time). 'We're playing two games so all players will get a run out,' said Parkinson ahead of his team's final friendly before the season starts at Southampton. 'One will be in the morning and then one in the afternoon.' Away supporters are not allowed to attend the game at the request of the local authorities. The Dutch trip follows on from Wrexham's Down Under Tour while the club has enjoyed two highly successful pre-season tours to the USA and North America. The club has become a global sensation under Hollywood owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney and Parkinson feels Wrexham are much-sought after opponents for high-profile friendlies. 'Wrexham is an attractive proposition, hence the reason we have been able to agree to the friendlies,' added the Reds' boss. 'I couldn't have imagined that a few years ago but it is where the profile of the club is now, and obviously we are Championship standard as well.'

Inside Hibs' devastated dressing room as squad plots way to make sure pain doesn't linger
Inside Hibs' devastated dressing room as squad plots way to make sure pain doesn't linger

Scotsman

time3 minutes ago

  • Scotsman

Inside Hibs' devastated dressing room as squad plots way to make sure pain doesn't linger

O'Hora admits Midtjylland goal was punch in guts - but there is no chance of letting heads hang Sign up to our Football newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... No time for feeling sorry for yourself. That was the message coming out of the Hibs camp less than an hour after a painful European defeat by Midtjylland. As well as Hibs did in competing with an accomplished and seasoned European opponent before succumbing to a Junior Brumado bicycle kick in the last minute of extra time in their Europa League qualifier, it is back to the bread and butter for David Gray's men. The domestic season kicks off on Sunday for the Hibees with a trip to Dens Park to face Dundee. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Hibs finished third in the Premiership last season, which permitted them to enjoy a night like Thursday against Midtjylland. While Hibs were defeated 3-2 on aggregate by the Danes, they remain in Europe and have a Conference League third qualifying round match against Partizan Belgrade to navigate next week. The matches come thick and fast. Hibs' Warren O'Hora looks on after the defeat by Midtjylland. | SNS Group For Hibs' Irish defender Warren O'Hora, the past two weeks have been a huge learning curve. The 25-year-old is experiencing European football for the first time in his career and wants more. Performing well in the league opens the door to that once more. 'Devastated is probably the word for it,' O'Hora said to sum up the feeling in the Hibs dressing-room after Thursday night. 'We gave it our all over two legs. The goals that they scored over two legs are of very, very high quality. A free-kick, a 20-yard strike and an overhead kick, which is very, very hard to take. 'Did they cut us open much? Did they have chances? Not as much. It didn't really feel like it on the pitch. I felt like we had chances as well, but to lose a game with two goals like that tonight is a very hard one to take.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad From Dens Park to the Balkans Belgrade may be looming but O'Hora is looking closer to home first. 'That's next week,' he said. 'The league starts on Sunday, we regroup right now. We can come out of this game with two legs with our heads held high. We went toe-to-toe 200 odd minutes with a team at a very, very high level. I don't think we have anything to be ashamed of. 'We have a lot of positives to take into Sunday. It's definitely going to be a tough game. It's the first game of the season, we want to start well. We have no time to let our heads hang. We'll come in, we'll recover, and we'll go through everything. 'We'll definitely look at things we could have done better. I'm not saying we'll just go away from the game, but we'll definitely look at things where we can improve, because that's what we've been doing through the whole start. Midtjylland celebrate their winning goal at Easter Road. | SNS Group 'Since I've come to the club, that's the way it works. After every performance, we look at what we can do better, what we did well. But like I said, we can't let it linger. The changing room we have, us boys won't let anybody feel sorry for themselves or anything like that, because it's in the past now, we can't control it. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'We still have another opportunity next week [in Europe], but at the end of this season, you want to be able to do something here in Europe again. That is obviously a goal that we'll set, no doubt about it. But we need to start taking it game by game, and we'll start this Sunday.' Hibs started last season poorly, losing 3-0 to St Mirren. It set the tone for a miserable first three months of the league campaign in which they won just one match before turning things around spectacularly from December onwards and finishing third. There is no doubt the squad that Gray has assembled has character. Hibs did not feel overawed O'Hora listed the attributes that were on show against Midtjylland. 'Discipline, work-rate,' he said. 'I think we always knew that we'd probably have to give up some possession, that we'll get into areas. I think we worked our socks off. I thought we started at both legs really, really well. We got a disallowed goal today as well, and the first leg started really well. 'We can play against that level, we believed. We knew for ourselves, we believed that we can get something from this game, and we did, we brought a draw back to Easter Road, which is exactly what we needed. Obviously you want to win, but you want to bring something back, you don't want to lose the tie. I think today's performance showed that we can play against opposition at this level.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad There was a special moment against the Danes in extra time when Rocky Bushiri levelled. Easter Road celebrated wildly. It ultimately didn't give Hibs what they wanted - but it was a goal to relish. O'Hora wants more of that. Easter Road was left delighted by Rocky Bushiri's strike. | SNS Group 'That's why you play football, isn't it?' he added. 'It's for moments like that. It's so nice. Rocky scored so many important goals for us last year, and he's just scored another one for us this year. That's a credit to him. He's a real goal threat in the box. 'You can see the reaction from the fans, singing his name. You see everybody celebrating, the whole bench celebrates. There's boys that didn't play, didn't start, didn't come on, whatever. 'But it's all forgotten about, that's how together this group has been since we've first come in. And we showed that today, and we're going to need that tenfold for the whole season, which no doubt we will.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store