Mollie O’Callaghan – The World’s Best Leg Kick Born in Springfield

When Mollie O’Callaghan delivered a devastating burst on the final 50m of the 200m Free in Paris, to launch from 3rd place behind Siobhan Haughey of Hong Kong and Mollie’s training partner at St Peters Western, Ariarne Titmus, the outboard motor that she engaged to produce a final lap of 27.98 was built in Springfield.



Mollie’s 27.98 final 50m took 0.66 seconds out of Arnie in the 200m Free. Arnie was the defending champion and she was not someone you’d ever want to take on but against Mollie’s gold medal-winning performance, Arnie had to accept silver. Canadian 17-year-old superstar Summer McIntosh made a very sensible decision to ditch the 200m Free because, frankly, she would have been battling for bronze when her extraordinary talent was acquiring gold in the 400 IM.

So Mollie can reflect that she has climbed the highest mountain in Paris, beating arguably the greatest freestyle swimmer at the Paris Olympics.

Yet the story of Mollie’s mind-blowing engine “Made in Springfield” needs telling.

The story’s venue was the Waterworx Swim Club, an operation so humble that their Facebook page has very little “Mollie” cheering, rather a list of updates on Aqua aerobics classes.

The sort of unheralded operation that lives and breathes what it does, and relies on people whose passion for teaching and coaching is far greater than their desire to be paid accordingly.

It’s a long way from the glamour of Paris, but Waterworx Swim Club was where Mollie built her outboard engine, her leg kick.

Nicholas Smith of the Queensland Academy of Sport pointed out that Mollie’s underwater turns and her underwater kick are where she gets her edge.

He explains that in the context of Mollie’s World Record 200m Free in the 2023 Fukuoka World Championships in this video:

Paul Sansby

Paul “Cowboy” Sansby’s passion for coaching young swimmers would be tough to beat. His coaching journey started in the 1970s when he emigrated from the UK to Bundaberg as a competitive swimmer, based at the Fairymead Swimming Club. His move to Brisbane a few years later, to be coached by Bill Sweetenham and Ken Wood, considered legends of the swim coaching world.

Under Sweetenham and Wood, Paul improved his PBs but also developed and sharpened his coaching skills. His first coaching gigs were at Lawnton and Jindalee swimming clubs until he was made head coach at St Peters Western in the late 1980s, the club that Mollie now swims for under Dean Boxall.

After a decade at St Peters Western, he and his business partner, Greg Fasala, established Waterworx Swimming Club.

They have produced a long line of great swimmers but it was when Sansby teamed up with another coaching legend, that things went to a new level.

Pete Cherry

When Pete Cherry arrived to help Sansby at Waterworx in 2007, he came with a great reputation.

Gina Rinehart’s profile on Mollie, which you can read here, lays out the respect that Sansby had for Cherry.

“We had been together ever since (until Pete passed in 2021). We were like brothers, and he has developed the skills of so many great champions, including kids like Mollie,” said Sansby.

Cherry’s particular focus was the underwater kick.

Sansby said Cherry would really accentuate the kicking part of training and would break it down in great detail, in a way that was ahead of his peers.



Mollie O’Callaghan started at Waterworx in 2012 when she was eight. She started to swim at four and competed from the age of seven. When she moved on in 2019 at the age of 15, the outboard engine that powered Mollie past Arnie in Paris was fully in place. Her ankle flexion had developed and State Championships and a National Championship were the results.

Dean Boxall has taken Mollie to the next level and bringing 11 Olympians through the St Peters Western program is an enormous feat in itself (surely, the world’s #1 swim club) but Sansby and Cherry and the team at Waterworx Swim Club delivered a massive contribution towards Mollie’s devastating finish.

In 2021, Pete Cherry passed away but his legacy was that 0.66 of a second that Mollie took out of Arnie in the final 50m of the 2024 Olympics 200m Freestyle.

Published 30-July-2024

St Peters Lutheran College Springfield, Mollie O’Callaghan Triumphs at QGSSSA

Olympic triple medallist Mollie O’Callaghan continued her winning streak as she led St Peters Lutheran College Springfield to an exciting ninth successive Swimming Championship at the QGSSSA held at the Brisbane Aquatic Centre, Chandler.



On 16 March 2022, St Peters Lutheran College joined Brisbane State High School as QGSSSA’s record holder of nine consecutive Mollie Gould Cup titles. 

St Peters’ swim team broke individual records courtesy of O’Callaghan (50m freestyle, 25.69), Ainsley Trotter (15 years 50m backstroke, 29.74) and Isabella Morris (14 years 50m freestyle, 27.81). Annika Silvester (12 years, 50m butterfly, 30.31) of  Brisbane State High School also broke an individual record that night.

Meanwhile, the Saints’ 15 Years B Division Team (1:56.26) composed of Gemma Glen, Chloe Cholet, Gabrielle Frisbee and Josephine Illing and 14 Years A Division team (1:53.31) of Kaci Curtis, Isabella Morris, Alexa S and Abby George also broke relay records.

Photo Credit: David Martin: Ipswich / Facebook

St Peters started strong with Jamie Perkins winning the first individual event of the night, the 200m open freestyle. Ella Ramsay and Mollie O’Callaghan followed suit in the 100m breaststroke and the 100m backstroke, respectively.

All in all, Mollie O’Callaghan finished on top in the 100m backstrokes, 50m freestyle and 100m freestyle, and was part of the Saint’s winning team in the 200m freestyle relay and 200m freestyle relay.

Mollie O’Callaghan OAM finished the 2020 Summer Olympics with two gold medals (4×100 medley relay and the freestyle relay as a heat swimmer) and one bronze medal (as part of the 4×200m relay team).  

Before her spectacular Olympic performance in Tokyo, she also beat training partner and fellow Olympic champ and club mate, Ariarne Titmus, in Queensland’s swimming championships.  O’Callaghan clocked 1:56.51 to win the 200m freestyle.



QGSSSA Swimming Championship final ranking:

  1. St Peters Lutheran College, 
  2. St Margaret’s Anglican Girls’ School
  3. Moreton Bay College
  4. Somerville House
  5. Brisbane State High School
  6. Brisbane Girls’ Grammar School
  7. St Hilda’s School
  8. St Aidan’s Anglican Girls’ School
  9. Clayfield College
  10. Ipswich Grammar School

St Peters Springfield’s Mollie O’Callaghan to Headline 2022 QGSSSA Swimming Championships

St Peters Lutheran College Springfield’s pride, Olympian Mollie O’Callaghan, is set to make waves once more as she headlines the 2022 QGSSSA Swimming Championships.



Fresh from her successful Tokyo Olympics stint, O’Callaghan will be competing for the Mollie Gould Cup on the 16th of March 2022 at the Brisbane Aquatic Centre. Joining her in the Saints’ elite girls swimming squad are Ainsley Trotter, Amelia Weber, Ella Ramsay, Jaclyn Barclay, Jamie Perkins, and Semra Olowniyi.

Mollie O’Callaghan
Photo Credit: Lutheran Education Queensland / https://leq.lutheran.edu.au

O’Callaghan was recently awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) on Australia Day in recognition of her two gold medals and one bronze finish at the 2020 Summer Olympics; she was the youngest member of the Australian swimming team.

O’Callaghan bagged the gold medal in the 4×100 medley relay and the freestyle relay as a heat swimmer and was also part of the 4×200-m relay team that took home the bronze medal. She also broke the world junior record in the 200m freestyle.

Mollie O’Callaghan
Photo Credit: St Peters Lutheran College Springfield / Facebook

But whilst the odds are in favour of St Peters Lutheran College given their formidable lineup, other stellar athletes and rising stars including the likes of Tribeca Liu of St Hilda’s, Brisbane State High School’s Hannah Allen and St Margaret’s Sophie Martin are sure to give the Saints some fierce competition.



The 87th Annual Swimming Championships will also feature for the first time, four open multi-class events for swimmers with a disability. The four events are the Open 50-m Freestyle Multiclass, Open 50-m Breaststroke Multiclass, Open 50-m Butterfly Multiclass, and  Open 100-m Freestyle Multiclass.

The 2022 QGSSSA Swimming Championships will be streamed live via Clutch. Triple Australian Olympian and St Margaret’s Anglican Girls School Alumni, Bronte Barratt, will be co-commenting with Joel Murray this year’s live stream production.