Woah Adam Peaty 🤩 you’re really hitting the jackpot with these interviews now bro
@CristianoRonaldo-wp3vt4 күн бұрын
Hi Fares please consider making a swim rap with the chorus having water is 800x more dense than air
@Claudia189153 күн бұрын
Cool interview. I think Adam really hits the nail on the head when he mentioned some of the issues with the drop off rate in swimming. I know so many people (here in UK) who gave up and quit because they got burnt out from the sport, as well as adults who now have so many shoulder problems from the quantity over quality approach given to kids
@marccheckpoint535314 сағат бұрын
Really good interview, Adam is a great guy and swimmer. Swimming needs more people like Adam.
@kris31783 күн бұрын
Thanks for this amazing interview! What an amazing human Adam is! ❤
@FaresKsebati3 күн бұрын
He truly is a champion in and out of the pool. Happy Swimming!
@austinmccollumgmailКүн бұрын
Thank you Fares and Adam for this great interview! I've been a longtime fan of Mr. Peaty, but didn't really know him. Now I can say I admire his achievements AND his purpose, who he is outside of the water. Very inspiring!!🤩
@SanSebRacingКүн бұрын
Fares/Adam, The drop out rate, from competitive swimming, in the UK (and further afield) is down to several factors: - career prospects in swimming. Prize money is poor and career length, short. - people focus on university/further education over swimming. - clubs not having squads for high performance once you hit 18 years old. In effect, one has to leave the club and be left to your own devices. - the lack of centres for adults where you could train intensively, with dedicated coaches and no ‘leisure’ swimmers in the way. - Having to hold down a job and train super early. - Yet to be proven but removing 50m races at major champs in the 13/14/15/16/17 ages, having to qualify via the 100, ceases to make it fun for some. - swimming is an expensive sport. Costs my son £8,000/year to be in it.
@wellnessinsiderКүн бұрын
Great interview ☺👍 We love swimming very much! ❤🏊
@abraaoshavershian60392 күн бұрын
Adam Peaty has great wisdom. I hope he breaks his world record one more time before he retires. OBS: Interestellar is my favorite movie to.
@floriansacchetti6842 күн бұрын
Incredibly pleasant to watch!
@open_water24113 күн бұрын
Great interview Fares with a great Olympian. Really informative.
@RyanPowell-y6m2 күн бұрын
Fabulous interview - thank you! Really cast Adam in a totally different light for me from the personality you see in the pool.
@alejandrodeferrari26042 күн бұрын
Excellent interview !
@larsdoring83493 күн бұрын
Great interview! My son is 14 years old, and starting to focus more on breastroke. Swim training is deffinately a grind. Like you Adam mentions, you need to keep your focus and know what drives you
@Ajajambo2 күн бұрын
Fares, excellent questions 👏 brilliantly interview as not many people ask about details. Cheers
@ryansnyder8859Күн бұрын
💯great video Fares
@Bashycat2 күн бұрын
The funny thing about all of these interviews and documentaries on Olympic swimmers is that it seems that they all say that they were afraid of water when they first started swimming.
@renzo1673 күн бұрын
Thank you both soo much for this, a pleasure to watch and absolutely fantastic content! Interesting about purpose, in my own world, it's less about high performance and more about small, personal, low performance goals and the love of the sport; Feel, both physical and mental, are often the drivers for getting in the water and thus, the purpose. Cheers guys!!
@이세진-x1y2 күн бұрын
Adam Peaty is really GOAT.
@charityalice55022 күн бұрын
Adam Peaty🎉🎉🎉🎉
@kingkrishiv58303 күн бұрын
Yo fares i got your autogrph at the abu dhabi swim for life i got the gold in 200 meters butterfly in the 12 years category
@spicypretzel761617 сағат бұрын
Awesome bro
@BlooseeКүн бұрын
Damn Adam is huge! Looks like he's twice the size of Fares. What are those, 22 inch biceps!
@andrewjyates2118Күн бұрын
Adam Peaty talks about drop off in the later teens. One way to address this is by having a professional swim league where swimmers are paid good money for swimming. To illustrate my point, look at how much a dart player earns for a single match. Luke Littler already has match money of over a million pounds in around a year and he's only 17. If they are professional swimmers they should be getting money from swimming not coaching or losing. Footballers may do this as part of a contract but their primary focus is on playing their sport and getting money from this.
@steviekroghmatzenbutler3765Күн бұрын
Spot on Adam, swim because you enjoy it first 🙌🏻👍🏻 Children should not be swimming excessively (my club promotes 9sessions for the youth performance team) and made to do early mornings 👎🏻
@senorquiza3 күн бұрын
Also make a movie about swimming. Voilà
@senorquiza3 күн бұрын
Add gambling and betting
@valecturas9 сағат бұрын
Great questions. But you look a little bit proud, maybe the next to be more humble.