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'Swim faster than ever': Aussie to take drugs again

Steve Larkin, AAP  •  February 6th, 2026 1:13 pm
'Swim faster than ever': Aussie to take drugs again

James Magnussen has sensed some envy from swimmers not taking parting in the Enhanced Games | Photo: Dave Hunt/AAP

James Magnussen believes his next round of performance enhancing drugs will wind back the clock a dozen years and put him within touching distance of a world record.
The Australian swimmer will start taking drugs again within weeks ahead of the inaugural Enhanced Games in Las Vegas in May.
And Magnussen, the first athlete in the world to commit to Enhanced Games, says his next enhancements combined with rigorous training will have a far different effect than his first round.
Magnussen has dropped almost 20 kilograms of muscle mass which he put on during his initial enhancement protocol last year.
"I will probably be doing lower dosages of some enhancements and probably changing some enhancements altogether," Magnussen told AAP.
"I will have much more a focus on my anaerobic energy system rather than my pure strength and power output.
"The combination of those two things will create a very different outcome at the end of it."
Magnussen, 34, is temporarily living at a five-star resort in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates - the site of Enhanced Games' training camp - until the multi-sport event with no drug testing in Las Vegas from May 21-24.
"It's like any other staging camp but 10 times better," he said.
"I'm staying in a five-star resort. I have got amazing food, all my facilities are walking distance, I have got the best coaches, the best staff, the best facilities.
"No other Australian swimmer has been on a training camp like this.
"I think that is actually one of the things that other athletes are going to sit back and feel a sense of envy or jealousy.
"When they see what is being provided for us as Enhanced athletes, that none of these other athletes would even dream of having access to."
The 2012 Olympic 100m freestyle silver medallist and three-time world championship gold medallist is among 42 athletes currently signed for Enhanced Games, which will feature swimming, track and field and weightlifting.
And the lead-up to the first Enhanced Games has far exceeded anticipation ahead of his two Olympics or world championships.
"Way more exciting," Magnussen said.
"Because it's the first, we're pioneers. It's the first of its kind. There is 5000 Olympians every four years, there is one first Enhanced athlete.
"This will be the most watched swimming event in history, certainly."
James Magnussen 2012

James Magnussen, who won silver at the 2012 London Olympics, is ready to go faster than ever | Photo: Dean Lewins/AAP

Magnussen will race the 50m freestyle in Las Vegas and has added the 100m freestyle, his pet event in his previous swimming career that ended after the 2018 Commonwealth Games.
"My first goal is to swim faster than I ever have before," he said.
Magnussen's 100m personal best was 47.10 seconds, set as a 22-year-old in March 2012 at selection trials for that year's London Olympics.
"I want to beat that," he said.
"I think that is a pretty big storyline in itself for a 35-year-old to swim a lifetime best.
"And if or when I beat that time, I'm thereabouts in striking distance of that world record.
"I would say that 100 freestyle world record would probably be the hardest world record in the pool now, based off what happened at the Paris Olympics, so I am realistic about that.
"But I think if I am swimming at my lifetime best: a, I am a really good chance of winning the race and, b, I'm giving myself the best chance of breaking that record."
Magnussen 2012

Magnussen is desperate to better his 100m time from Australia's 2012 Olympic selection trials | Photo: Ben Macmahon/AAP

China's Pan Zhanle set a 100m freestyle world record of 46.40 at the 2024 Olympics in Paris.
Magnussen, who turns 35 in April, was sharing lessons he and Enhanced Games' head swim coach, Australian Brett Hawke, learnt from his initial enhancement regime with other athletes.
"I have had a lot more time to prepare than I did for the first round of competing and enhancing," he said.
"I am coming in a lot fitter and a lot lighter, a lot more focus on that anaerobic energy system and probably with a lot more knowledge about what is about to happen this time than I did last time.
"Brett and I learnt what worked and what didn't work; how these substances respond for a swimmer, for their workload, for their recovery, the impact on strength, power, aerobic endurance - all those things.
"They are learnings for everyone.
"For the best interest of the Games, I want all athletes swimming fast, running fast, lifting heavy. I am not going to gatekeep any secrets and use them as an advantage."
James Magnussen 2018

James Magnussen in 2018 at the Commonwealth Games - he retired soon after | Photo: Dave Hunt/AAP

Enhanced Games will pay $US250,000 ($NZ421,000) to race winners, and a $US1 million ($NZ1.6 million) bonus for anyone breaking a world record.
Magnussen sensed envy from swimmers who hadn't joined Enhanced Games.
"Big time," he said.
"I think the final nail in the coffin will be when those swimmers are sitting at home in May watching those novelty sized cheques come rolling out with hundreds of thousands of dollars written on them.
"That is when it will really sink in that they may have missed out on something."
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