Key Points

Legendary coach Michael Bohl believes India has some excellent swimmers but needs many more to reach the next level. He praised India's performance at the Asian Aquatics Championship where the country achieved its best-ever medal haul. Bohl highlighted that countries like USA and Australia succeed because they have depth beyond just one or two top swimmers. He's confident that as coaching improves and more swimmers emerge, India will see even greater improvements in the sport.

Key Points: Michael Bohl Says India Needs More Top Swimmers Like Srihari Nataraj

  • India achieved historic best with 13 medals at Asian Aquatics Championship 2025
  • Coach Bohl highlights Srihari Nataraj's seven-medal performance
  • Young talents like Rishab Das and Bhavya Sachdeva show promise
  • Bohl emphasizes need for coaching improvement and larger talent pool
  • China dominated with 49 medals including 38 gold medals
  • Indian divers made history with first-ever diving medals
3 min read

'India have good, leading swimmers, they just need more of them,' says legend coach Michael Bohl

Legendary coach Michael Bohl praises India's swimming talent after Asian Aquatics Championship but says country needs greater depth to compete globally

"I think India's done a great job here. There's been some standout performers. - Michael Bohl"

Ahmedabad, Oct 2

Michael Bohl, a legendary Australian swimming coach with over 33 years of experience, who guided China to the overall championship title at the 11th Asian Aquatics Championship 2025, shared his thoughts on the potential of Indian swimmers. He said the subcontinent already has some leading swimmers, but it needs many more to reach the next level.

While China recorded a haul of 49 medals (38 gold, 8 silver and 3 bronze) at the Veer Savarkar Sports Complex. For India, the championship marked a historic breakthrough as the contingent delivered their best-ever campaign, collecting 13 medals (4 silver, 9 bronze) and finishing ninth overall, a testament to the country’s growing depth in aquatics.

Bohl, who has guided athletes to Olympic podiums in every edition between 2008 and 2021, counts five-time Olympic gold medallist Emma McKeon and three-time champion Stephanie Rice among his most celebrated protégés.

“We didn’t know what to expect coming into the meet, the last time it was held was in 2016 and China had 18 gold medal and that was the target we were shooting for, and I believe we got beyond that so we are very happy,” commented the Australian Sports Medal and the Medal of the Order of Australia recipient.

Meanwhile, India has just begun making their mark in the sport with the emergence of young swimmers like Srihari Nataraj, Rishab Das, Kushagra Rawat, Rohit B Benedicton, Sajan Prakash and Bhavya Sachdeva who earned individual medals for India in swimming while Indiver Sairem and Willson Sing Ningthoujam made history, roping in India’s first ever medal in diving.

“I think India's done a great job here. There's been some standout performers. I think the males in particular have done very well. A female got a medal, I think, in the 400 freestyle on Wednesday night. So any time you're getting onto the podium at an Asian level meet, it's a good thing for the country,” Bohl explained.

Srihari Nataraj headlined the Indian contingent with seven medals (3 individual, 4 relay) but the Indian contingent was filled with talented youngsters like Vritti Agarwal, Dhinidhi Desinghu, Saanvi Deshwal, Advait Page, Nithik Nathella and Jashua Thomas Durai who showed immense promise and potential in this Asian meet.

“I think you've got some good leading swimmers, you just need more of them. And I think you've got the population over there. There's a very big population as you know in India, very similar to China. So I think as the coaching improves, as you get more critical mass and more swimmers performing well, it puts pressure on the top guys,” Bohl added.

“I think if you look at the top countries in the world, USA, Australia, it's not just one or two swimmers. There's an underpinning group that are doing a really good job putting pressure on the top swimmers. So I think as soon as you start to get more depth, you'll see even bigger improvements in swimming. There's certainly been some standout performers for India in the 11th Asian Aquatics Championship 2025,” he concluded.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Michael Bohl is absolutely right. We have 1.4 billion people but only a handful of elite swimmers. Need swimming pools in every district, not just metros. Government should invest more in aquatic sports infrastructure.
D
David E
As someone who follows swimming globally, India's progress is remarkable. From zero to 13 medals in Asian Championships is huge! The young talent like Dhinidhi Desinghu shows great promise for the future.
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Ananya R
Finally some positive news about Indian sports beyond cricket! 🎉 Our swimmers are proving that with proper support, we can compete at Asian level. Hope to see them in Olympics soon!
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Sarah B
While the progress is good, we need to be realistic. China got 38 golds while we got none. There's still a long way to go. But the foundation is being laid, which is encouraging.
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Vikram M
The first ever diving medal by Indiver and Willson is historic! 🥳 More parents should consider swimming as a career option for their children. We need to change the mindset that only cricket matters.

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