time Olympic champion Ian Thorpe is developing a new swimming technique as he works to return to elite competition for the first time in five years, reports said Monday. Thorpe, who retired in 2006 but is back in the pool aiming for next year's London Olympics, is working under Russian coach Gennadi Touretski in Switzerland. He is in hard training ahead of his comeback to competitive swimming at the World Cup short-course meeting in Singapore on Nov. 4-5. Thorpe, whose classic freestyle technique earned him five Olympic gold medals, 11 world titles and 13 world records in his prime, now looks a different swimmer in the pool. “It's still Thorpe. You can see it in the power of his kick, the extraordinary wave he produces when he swims at full speed and the seemingly effortless way he glides through the water,” said The Australian. “But now his freestyle stroke looks like a hybrid of himself and Alex Popov, the great Russian sprinter who Touretski guided to four Olympic gold medals in the 1990s.” Touretski, who coached at Australia's Sport Institute in the 1990s, said he was aiming to give Thorpe more freedom in his swimming action through more hip rotation and a greater range of movement in the shoulders. “I want him to swim with freedom,” Touretski told The Australian. “We have to activate his racing ability through other strokes. He must put himself into racing conditions, but I don't want him to show all his cards. “I want him to enjoy racing. I don't want him to measure himself, I want him to be free to race. “The main thing I want is for him to be hungry for the race”. Thorpe intends to race at three World Cup meets in Singapore, Beijing (Nov. 8-9) and Tokyo (Nov. 12-13), in which Touretski wants him to compete in a variety of events.