Rohan Taylor

Rohan Taylor is the State Head Coach for swimming in Victoria and Tasmania.[1] He was the performance coach of the Nunawading Swimming Club based in Melbourne, Australia. He has previously coached the Shoalhaven Academy, Saddleback Valley Aquatics, Laguna Hills High School and Irvine Novaquatics. In September 2008 it was announced that he has been hired by the Nunawading Swimming Club as its new High Performance coach.[2]

In December 2005, he was officially rebuked by the hierarchy of Swimming Australia for organizing a training camp for his swimmers with the Royal Australian Navy in which mock military executions were held.[3]

In 2007, Leisel Jones, who had won the 100 m and 200 m breaststroke at both the 2005 and 2007 World Championships, relocated to Melbourne for family reasons and began swimming under Taylor. She won the 100 m event at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.

Notes

  1. Race, Loretta. "Rohan Taylor welcomed as new Victoria, Australia state head coach". Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  2. "Nunawading Swimming Club Hires Rohan Taylor". Swimming World. 17 September 2008. Archived from the original on 13 February 2012. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  3. "Aussie Swimmers Put Through Mock Execution". Swimming World. 15 December 2005. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
gollark: MPL?
gollark: There is also the "secondary processor exemption" thing, which caused the Librem people to waste a lot of time on having a spare processor on their SoC load a blob into the SoC memory controller from some not-user-accessible flash rather than just using the main CPU cores. This does not improve security because you still have the blob running with, you know, full control of RAM, yet RYF certification requires solutions like this.
gollark: It would be freerâ„¢, in my opinion, to have all the firmware distributed sanely via a package manager, and for the firmware to be controllable by users, than to have it entirely hidden away.
gollark: So you can have proprietary firmware for an Ethernet controller or bee apifier or whatever, but it's only okay if you deliberately stop the user from being able to read/write it.
gollark: No, it's how they're okay with things having proprietary firmware *but only if the user cannot interact with it*.


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