
HAVE A GO AT OLYMPIC SPORTS
HAVE A GO AT OLYMPIC SPORTS
Age
21
Place of Birth
TRARALGON WEST, VIC
Hometown
Carlton, Tasmania
Junior Club
Hobart Aquatic Club
Senior Club
Miami Swim Club
Coach
Richard Scarce
Olympic History
Paris 2024
High School
St Virgil’s College, Guildford Young College
Career Events
Swimming Men's 200m Freestyle
Swimming Men's 4 x 200m Freestyle Relay
Tasmanian young gun Maximillian Giuliani almost quit swimming as a 17-year-old to become a tradie.
“All my mates kind of ended up doing that [getting a trade],” Max said. “I moved up to the Gold Coast [in 2022] to give it [swimming] one last final crack.”
Despite obvious talent and years of training, Max had never made a senior Australian team, finishing last in the final of his favoured 200m freestyle event at the Australian trials in Melbourne in 2022, in a time of 1:48.05.
A keen water polo player and surf lifesaver, who grew up in the beachside town of Carlton, east of Hobart, he did work experience as a plumber while he was at school and thought about getting an apprenticeship.
“I was very, very close to throwing it all in and going down that trade route,” he said. “Another bad result and I probably wouldn’t be here today."
When he moved to the Gold Coast in 2022 and joined the Miami Swim Club, things began to change.
Max didn’t make the team for the World Swimming Championships in Fukuoka, Japan, in July 2023. But in December of that year, one race turned him to an exciting freestyle prospect.
Leading off the Miami Swim Club’s 4x200m freestyle relay at the Queensland Championships, Max stopped the clock at 1:44.79. A quick check confirmed it was the second-fastest time in Australian history.
The oldest Australian long-course swimming record is Ian Thorpe’s mark of 1:44.06 in the 200m freestyle, set at the 2001 World Championships.
Max’s effort was a remarkable swim, considering he hadn’t cracked the 1:50 barrier until late 2022 – the time would have seen him finish fourth at Fukuoka.
Breaking Ian's record was “absolutely a goal of mine”, he said.
After missing the Fukuoka team, Max competed on the US circuit and at World Cup events in Europe in 2023.
At the Berlin stop of the 2023 World Aquatics Swimming World Cup, he landed on his first international podium, clocking a time of 1:46.18 in the 200m freestyle.
He took that down to a new PB of 1:45.42 at the Budapest stop on the tour before throwing down the swim of his life at the Queensland championships.
After setting out to win a medal at the Paris Games, Max's dream came true when he won bronze in the men's 4x200m freestyle relay with Flynn Southam, Elijah Winnington and Tommy Neil. With a time of 7:01.98, the team finished two seconds off the gold medal.
Max also competed individually in Paris, finishing seventh in the men's 200m freestyle final.
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