Birthday Tribute – Tatjana Smith | 9 July 2026 | Swimming · South Africa · Swimming
THE TOUCH
Paris, August 2024. The 100 metre breaststroke final. Tatjana Smith is fourth at the turn, a place that should worry a swimmer with a world record to her name, and then the second fifty happens, a surge that closes the field down metre by metre until her hand hits the wall first. Gold. South Africa’s first gold in this event since 1996.
She comes up out of the water not with a roar but with that same wide, unguarded grin she has worn since she was a child, and three nights later she is carrying the national flag at the closing ceremony. It is the last race she will ever swim. Tatjana Smith, born on this day, 9 July 1997, in Johannesburg, turns 29 today, and the touch in Paris is where most people’s memory of her career ends. It is not where the story starts.
Happy Birthday, Tatjana. To understand that gold, you have to go back to a five-year-old who could barely swim a length.
WHAT IT TOOK TO GET THERE
Before Tatjana Smith was Smith, she was Tatjana Schoenmaker, a girl from Roodepoort whose parents, Rene and Renske, taught her to swim at five out of simple worry for a child so close to the family pool. It worked better than anyone expected.

By eight she had won her first race. By fifteen she had left home for TuksSport High School in Pretoria, the production line behind so much of South African elite sport, and stayed with the same coach, Rocco Meiring, for the rest of her career, training on home soil at a level almost nobody else in world swimming still does.
The rise was not instant. She missed qualification for the 2016 Rio Olympics by 0.01 seconds, an ordinary heartbreak in a sport measured in hundredths, and one she has since credited with sharpening rather than dimming her.
Three years later in Gwangju, South Korea, she touched second in the 200 metre breaststroke at the World Championships, becoming the first South African woman ever to medal at a swimming Worlds. The country had a contender. The sport’s insiders already suspected they had more than that.
THE RECORD THAT CAME FIRST
Because Paris was not, in fact, her first Olympic gold. That came three years earlier in Tokyo, in a pool with no crowd at all, in the strangest Olympics anyone alive had competed in. In the 200 metre breaststroke final, Schoenmaker turned at the halfway mark already in front and simply kept extending, touching in 2:18.95 to break the world record and take South Africa’s first gold of those Games.
Days before that she had taken silver in the 100. Two medals and a world record from one Olympics, delivered by a swimmer who had missed the previous Games entirely.

So when Paris arrived, the gold in the 100 and the silver in the 200 were not a breakthrough. They were a mirror image, Tokyo’s medal colours flipped, delivered by a newly married Tatjana Smith after a difficult four-year cycle that would have ended plenty of careers quietly. Four Olympic medals across two Games made her the most decorated Olympian South Africa has ever produced. The world record from Tokyo still stands.
WHERE SHE STANDS NOW
She walked away from the sport immediately after Paris, at 27, choosing the moment on her own terms rather than waiting for the moment to choose her. She had married Joel Smith, a sports manager, in Robertson in November 2023, and has spoken since, plainly and often, about her Christian faith as the real engine behind two decades in the water, describing her swimming as a platform to glorify God rather than an end in itself.
Tatjana Smith has said she hopes to be remembered not for the medals, which fall away, but for who she was while she was winning them, and for inspiring even one person to stay in their own race.
That is the version of Tatjana Smith turning 29 today, retired, married, at peace with a career she ended herself. The touch in Paris was the headline. The five-year-old in Roodepoort, the 0.01 seconds in 2016, and the world record nobody has come close to since are the reasons it mattered.
Happy 29th Birthday, Tatjana. From all of us at Just Plain Sport, thank you for a world record still standing, four Olympic medals, and a retirement written entirely on your own terms. 🎂🏊♀️
Images via Gallo Images / AFP



































