Chalmers, who stunned the world by winning gold
in Rio as a teenager in 2016, knocked a tenth of a second off
his personal best at the Australian swimming championships,
clocking 47.48 seconds to take the title for the second year in
a row.
A swim that fast at this stage of the season, long before he
starts tapering for the world championships in Gwangju in July,
was a major statement from the powerful 20-year-old.
"There's not many things that I want to change," he said on
Monday after the race in his home city of Adelaide.
"But there's probably those few things that are going to come
with taper and swimming that bit faster in training.
"My skills are still things that are lacking. And I know if I
can drop those 0.1 of a second, everything adds up."
Chalmers flew under the radar before his success in Rio and
missed the 2017 season, including the world championships in
Hungary, after having a second corrective surgery on a condition
that rapidly increased his heartbeat during exercise.
He returned in 2018 to win 200 gold at the Commonwealth Games on
the Gold Coast last year before winning the 100 title against a
strong field at the Pan Pacific championships in Tokyo.
With the worlds in South Korea and defense of his Olympic title
coming up in Tokyo in 2020, Chalmers knows he has plenty of work
to do on every part of his race over the next 15 months.
"I know that my skills are coming, it's just about practicing it
every time I do a turn in training," he said.
"We do hundreds of them a day. And you can practise bad skills
pretty easily with the amount we do.
"So it's practicing those right things and your muscle memory
coming into a race - you don't want to be thinking about it too
much, you just want it to happen naturally."
(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney, editing by Peter Rutherford)
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