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Former Australian swimming great Hackett in rehab

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Australian swimming great Grant Hackett is seeking treatment for addiction to prescription drugs, his manager and father said on Wednesday, days after he was pictured half-naked in a hotel lobby looking for his young son.

Hackett, who won the 1,500m freestyle at both the 2000 and 2004 Olympics and claimed four world titles in a dominant decade at the top, jetted to the United States on Tuesday, apparently to begin rehabilitation.

It comes just weeks after fellow Australian swimming star Ian Thorpe began treatment for depression after a mixture of painkillers and anti-depressants left him disoriented on a Sydney street.

"Grant is currently in transit to seek treatment for a dependency to Stilnox medication," his manager Chris White said in a statement.

Australia's Grant Hackett at a medal ceremony at the Beijing Olympic Games on August 17  2008
Australia's Grant Hackett at a medal ceremony at the Beijing Olympic Games on August 17, 2008
Martin Bureau, AFP/File

"His family and friends are enormously proud of his courage in pursuing this course of action."

Stilnox is a drug used to treat insomnia, with athletes sometimes prescribed it if they are having trouble sleeping before big events, although it was banned by the Australian Olympic Committee just before the 2012 London Games.

- 'In denial' -

However, on arrival in Los Angeles, Hackett told waiting Australian media that he was in the United States for a "retreat".

"No, I'm not calling this rehab whatsoever," he said. "This is a retreat, to get away for a while, to recharge the batteries which I have been planning for some time."

His father Neville said his son was "in denial".

"I think Grant is a little bit in denial, he thinks he just needs a bit of a recharge and a rest," Neville Hackett told Sydney radio station Triple M.

"I'd say rehab is certainly something that's needed there."

Former Australian swimmer Grant Hackett (R) and his then wife Candice  pictured during a promotional...
Former Australian swimmer Grant Hackett (R) and his then wife Candice, pictured during a promotional event in Beijing, on August 17, 2008
Mark Ralston, AFP/File

He added that his son would not be able to "fool the experts for long", saying that family had organised the treatment for him.

"We got onto the best experts we could who were available. They suggested the US after two meetings we had, and that's how it's all come about," he said.

"We weren't about to tell the world about this, of course, because we consider it a private family matter, but Grant being who he is, it's all over the media."

Asked what the main issue was, he replied: "I would suspect Stilnox but I can't be a 100 percent sure and that is why we have taken that action we've taken."

Hackett's departure from Australia came just days after he was photographed in the early hours with only a singlet around his waist in the foyer of a Melbourne hotel, searching anxiously for his four-year-old son.

The former great, 33, retired from the pool in 2008 and has worked for the Nine Network and Westpac Bank since then.

But his reputation took a huge hit after he trashed his apartment in an alcohol-fuelled rampage in 2011 that saw his wife Candice Alley leave him. They have two young children.

His father said that since then his son had suffered "two years of hell, living by himself, working hard".

The lanky Queenslander burst onto the scene at the 1998 world championships in Perth as a 17-year-old, where he lost the 400m final to a 15-year-old Thorpe.

The pair went on to help Australia's swimming team to the nation's best run of success since the golden days of the late 1950s and early 1960s.

Australian swimming great Grant Hackett is seeking treatment for addiction to prescription drugs, his manager and father said on Wednesday, days after he was pictured half-naked in a hotel lobby looking for his young son.

Hackett, who won the 1,500m freestyle at both the 2000 and 2004 Olympics and claimed four world titles in a dominant decade at the top, jetted to the United States on Tuesday, apparently to begin rehabilitation.

It comes just weeks after fellow Australian swimming star Ian Thorpe began treatment for depression after a mixture of painkillers and anti-depressants left him disoriented on a Sydney street.

“Grant is currently in transit to seek treatment for a dependency to Stilnox medication,” his manager Chris White said in a statement.

Australia's Grant Hackett at a medal ceremony at the Beijing Olympic Games on August 17  2008

Australia's Grant Hackett at a medal ceremony at the Beijing Olympic Games on August 17, 2008
Martin Bureau, AFP/File

“His family and friends are enormously proud of his courage in pursuing this course of action.”

Stilnox is a drug used to treat insomnia, with athletes sometimes prescribed it if they are having trouble sleeping before big events, although it was banned by the Australian Olympic Committee just before the 2012 London Games.

– ‘In denial’ –

However, on arrival in Los Angeles, Hackett told waiting Australian media that he was in the United States for a “retreat”.

“No, I’m not calling this rehab whatsoever,” he said. “This is a retreat, to get away for a while, to recharge the batteries which I have been planning for some time.”

His father Neville said his son was “in denial”.

“I think Grant is a little bit in denial, he thinks he just needs a bit of a recharge and a rest,” Neville Hackett told Sydney radio station Triple M.

“I’d say rehab is certainly something that’s needed there.”

Former Australian swimmer Grant Hackett (R) and his then wife Candice  pictured during a promotional...

Former Australian swimmer Grant Hackett (R) and his then wife Candice, pictured during a promotional event in Beijing, on August 17, 2008
Mark Ralston, AFP/File

He added that his son would not be able to “fool the experts for long”, saying that family had organised the treatment for him.

“We got onto the best experts we could who were available. They suggested the US after two meetings we had, and that’s how it’s all come about,” he said.

“We weren’t about to tell the world about this, of course, because we consider it a private family matter, but Grant being who he is, it’s all over the media.”

Asked what the main issue was, he replied: “I would suspect Stilnox but I can’t be a 100 percent sure and that is why we have taken that action we’ve taken.”

Hackett’s departure from Australia came just days after he was photographed in the early hours with only a singlet around his waist in the foyer of a Melbourne hotel, searching anxiously for his four-year-old son.

The former great, 33, retired from the pool in 2008 and has worked for the Nine Network and Westpac Bank since then.

But his reputation took a huge hit after he trashed his apartment in an alcohol-fuelled rampage in 2011 that saw his wife Candice Alley leave him. They have two young children.

His father said that since then his son had suffered “two years of hell, living by himself, working hard”.

The lanky Queenslander burst onto the scene at the 1998 world championships in Perth as a 17-year-old, where he lost the 400m final to a 15-year-old Thorpe.

The pair went on to help Australia’s swimming team to the nation’s best run of success since the golden days of the late 1950s and early 1960s.

AFP
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