• Home
  • Other Sports
  • Wales’ World Champion Aidan Heslop Seeks Olympic Glory . . . In

Wales’ World Champion Aidan Heslop Seeks Olympic Glory . . . in 2032

Swim Wales logo

Swim Wales logo

A 27-metre platform perched above the Doha Old Port was Aidan Heslop’s launchpad for a first high diving world championship title which one day the young Team Wales star hopes may be a milestone on the way to an Olympic gold. Heslop’s final dive on Thursday was a thing of vertiginous beauty – a forward launch, four somersaults and three-and-a-half twists pike rated the toughest in the business.

By David Parsons

A 27-metre platform perched above the Doha Old Port was Aidan Heslop’s launchpad for a first high diving world championship title which one day the young Team Wales star hopes may be a milestone on the way to an Olympic gold.

Heslop’s final dive on Thursday was a thing of vertiginous beauty – a forward launch, four somersaults and three-and-a-half twists pike rated the toughest in the business.

Straight as a pin on a feet-first entry into a six-metre deep tub, the 21-year-old nailed the dive with barely a splash, triggering a roar from a healthy crowd in temporary terraces and a huge score of 151.90.

https://twitter.com/WorldAquatics/status/1758094126614990856?s=20

Heslop – who was born in Chelmsford but qualified to represent Wales at the Commonwealth Games through a Welsh mother – had a nervous wait as the final divers sought to dislodge him from the gold medal position.

In the end, though, he finished just clear of France’s runner-up Gary Hunt and hirsute Romanian, Catalin-Petru Preda, who took the bronze.

“As soon as I put that last one down, I thought I had a good chance, but you can’t leave these things to chance,” said Heslop.

“It’s pretty nerve-wracking, standing and watching. We’ve all been in that situation before.”

Simply watching as a spectator can be nerve-wracking.

Though buffeted by a stiff sea-breeze and with a drone-camera buzzing nearby, divers performed hand-stand launches from the edge of the platform.

https://twitter.com/WorldAquatics/status/1758073317670502648?s=20

The margins between success and painful failure seem razor-thin – but there are relatively few wipe-outs at the elite level.

They mercifully enter the pool with their feet rather than head-first and pretty much all high divers have a background in the regulation diving seen at the Olympics, where the highest platform is 10 metres.

Heslop, who dived for Wales at the 2018 and 2022 Commonwealth Games, is confident he will be high diving for Britain at the Olympics eventually.

“I don’t hope high diving will be there. It’s going to be there. I’ll be there, I reckon at Brisbane,” he said of the 2032 Games.

“When you look at the progression of this sport, in the last five years it’s just been phenomenal.”

Though a niche discipline within a niche sport, high diving has plenty going for it.

It looks spectacular on screens and as a spectator. Virtually made for the social media age, dives fit neatly into share-able short videos.

https://twitter.com/BBCSportWales/status/1758090717438640618?s=20

It would also seem to fit with the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) push for youth, which has seen surfing, sport climbing and skate-boarding added to the programme at recent Games.

Global governing body World Aquatics (WA) added high diving to its World Championships programme in 2013 and is lobbying the IOC to add it to the Olympics.

WA will stage three high diving events on its 2024 calendar, two more than usual.

“Olympic inclusion is always a complex topic, but we have already made our case to the IOC and remain hopeful for the future,” said World Aquatics Executive Director Brent Nowicki.

The Olympic programmes are settled for this year’s Paris Games and Los Angeles in 2028 but a 2032 debut might offer enough time for high diving to grow and work on its IOC pitch.

https://twitter.com/IanGord23992577/status/1758117646040482027?s=20

Eighteen nations competed in the men’s and women’s high diving competitions in Doha.

Many of the divers may no longer be in the sport by 2032 but will gladly cheer on the next generation.

High diving, after all, is punishing on the body, said 39-year-old silver medallist Hunt, who won two world titles for Britain before switching allegiance to France a few years ago.

“Every off-season, getting back into shape is harder and harder,” he said.

“I still feel good, so I still want to go for at least another two years.”

https://twitter.com/britishswimming/status/1758091501584650306?s=20

Related News

Glamorgan’s Ben Kellaway. Pic. Alamy

Glamorgan Given Ben Kellaway Boost After Tame Draw

Ben Kellaway is expected to return to fitness in around a fortnight after Glamorgan head coach Richard Dawson confirmed the all-rounder is making encouraging progress in his recovery.

David Williams | Apr 28, 2026
Elfyn Evans and Scott Martin, Toyota GR Yaris Rally1, action during the 2026 Rally Islas Canarias. Pic: Alamy

Elfyn Evans Feeling Up and Down Even Though He’s Back on Top

Elfyn Evans is back on top of the World Rally Championship standings but admitted to mixed feelings after gathering points at Rally Islas Canarias.

Gareth James | Apr 28, 2026
Mark Williams congratulates Barry Hawkins. Pic: Alamy

Mark Williams Admits Fourth World Title Remains a Bridge Too Far

Mark Williams bowed out of the Halo World Championship with trademark honesty and dignity after admitting Barry Hawkins was simply too strong for him at the Crucible.

Rhys Davies | Apr 26, 2026
Ben Kellaway leaves the field at Cardiff. Pic. Alamy

Ben Kellaway Spins Both Ways . . . But is Definitely Heading Upwards

Ben Kellaway is tipped for big things this season and wants to grasp his opportunities with both hands, as he tells Graham Thomas.

Graham Thomas | Apr 23, 2026
: Team Wales swimmer Matt Richards. Pic: Alamy

It’s All Kids’ Play for Matt Richards

Matt Richards reckons his biggest successes come when he stops overthinking and “races like I did when I was a little kid”.

David Williams | Apr 21, 2026
The Dragon Diary

Mark Williams is Still the Hottest Potter in Wales

Snooker’s World Championship gets into full swing this week, with Mark Williams – as ever, it seems – carrying Welsh hopes.

Graham Thomas | Apr 20, 2026