Daley delights in Delhi spotlight

Max Brick (left) and Tom Daley
12 April 2012

Tom Daley and Max Brick commanded the spotlight after the third day of diving at the Dr SP Mukherjee Aquatics Complex ended with varying degrees of satisfaction for England's divers.

While Daley and Brick were beaming after being crowned Commonwealth champions in the 10metre synchro, double world junior title holder Jack Laugher was in the unaccustomed position of finishing last with partner Oliver Dingley, the pair having a combined age of 32, in the 3m event.

National performance director Alexei Evangulov said: "I am really optimistic about the future. There is a great future, we will see. All the world is already talking about them."

Of the British divers competing on Tuesday, only Nick Robinson-Baker and Rebecca Gallantree, at 23 and 26 respectively, had progressed beyond their teenage years. And - with the likes of Alicia Blagg, national 1m champion at 13 - the future is bright as the youngsters hold their own against senior opposition.

Daley, the child prodigy, and Brick claimed the Home Nations' first diving medal of the competition, edging the Australian pair of Matthew Mitcham, the Olympic 10m platform champion, and Ethan Warren into second.

The young English pair, with London 2012 chairman Seb Coe looking on, scored 439.65 points, 15.84 ahead of Australia with Canada third and Malaysia last in a four-team final in which only gold and silver medals were awarded.

For Daley it brings to an end 14 difficult months since he won the 10m platform crown at last year's World Championships in Rome. The 16-year-old has had to adapt to new, more difficult dives as well as contending with injury and growing to 5ft 8ins.

Daley said: "It has been a difficult year since Rome with injury, growing and learning new dives. It has been tough.

"We were only training 10 days at the European Championships before I tore my tricep and we had 10 days before we came here so it's only been 20 days of training since Rome and we've come away with a Commonwealth gold medal."

He added: "It's amazing. I've just got one more title to get before the end of my career and that is the Olympic gold. That is the aim I've got to get before I retire. I hope to try and do as many Olympics as I can before my body falls apart and I'd love to keep going until I get that gold medal."

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