logo
'Struggling' Marchand targets second gold at swimming worlds

'Struggling' Marchand targets second gold at swimming worlds

Yahoo13 hours ago
Leon Marchand admitted he was "struggling" on the final day of the world championships on Sunday after qualifying for the 400m individual medley final with an uncharacteristically sluggish swim.
The French superstar broke the world record and won gold in the 200m individual medley earlier this week in Singapore but he was seventh fastest in the 400m medley heats with a time of 4min 13.19sec.
Marchand, who broke Michael Phelps's 400m individual medley world record at the world championships in Japan two years ago, said his performance "worries" him ahead of Sunday night's final.
"I would have preferred to set the best time this morning and it didn't go as planned, I was struggling a bit," said the 23-year-old.
"Strange, because I slept well, I felt fine this morning, but that's swimming -- sometimes you dive in and you don't feel good."
Japan's Tomoyuki Matsushita set the fastest time in 4:10.39, almost three seconds quicker than Marchand.
Marchand is swimming a lighter programme than usual in Singapore, competing only in the individual medley and relay events.
His heat on Sunday morning was only his fifth swim of the championships.
"It worries me, but I have a lane tonight so in the end it's OK," said the Frenchman.
Summer McIntosh was fastest in the women's 400m individual medley heats, the morning after her epic battle with American great Katie Ledecky in the 800m freestyle final.
McIntosh saw her bid to join Phelps as the only swimmers to win five individual golds at a single world championships end after finishing third behind Ledecky and Australia's Lani Pallister.
McIntosh said she "got all of my thoughts and emotions out last night", before coming through the 400m individual medley heats in 4:35.56.
"I'm really just focusing on the 400 IM and putting a good time down and touching the wall first," said the 18-year-old Canadian, who has already won three golds in Singapore.
"There's more reflection that I can do from what happened last night in the 800 but I think that's reflection that will be happening at the start of next season."
Chinese 12-year-old Yu Zidi also qualified for the final in a third-fastest time of 4:36.49, less than a second behind McIntosh.
Yu won her heat and will be appearing in her third individual final in Singapore.
She finished fourth in both the 200m individual medley and 200m butterfly and picked up a bronze medal as a member of China's 4x200m women's freestyle relay team.
Yu became the youngest swimmer in history to win a world championships medal.
amk/jfx
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US overcomes outbreak of ‘acute gastroenteritis' to top swimming medal table at World Aquatics Championships
US overcomes outbreak of ‘acute gastroenteritis' to top swimming medal table at World Aquatics Championships

CNN

time18 minutes ago

  • CNN

US overcomes outbreak of ‘acute gastroenteritis' to top swimming medal table at World Aquatics Championships

The United States finished top of the swimming medal table at the World Aquatics Championships on Sunday, overcoming a slow start to its campaign in which several of its swimmers battled an outbreak of 'acute gastroenteritis.' The team capped its championships with a world record in the women's 4x100-meter medley relay on Sunday, marking its ninth gold and 29th total medal as it consolidated first place ahead of Australia's eight gold and 20 total medals. The late surge meant that American swimmers had one more gold and nine more medals in total than they did in last year's championships, even if their overall haul was significantly less than the 38 they won in 2023 and the 45 they claimed in 2022. The team's eventual success came after it had seemed diminished in the opening days, with its spokesperson telling the Associated Press that many of its swimmers were battling 'acute gastroenteritis' they had contracted at a training camp in Thailand. The USA's initial struggles at the championship – it won only five gold medals in the opening six days – drew criticism from some of its former stars, particularly as it came a year after the Paris Olympics where it won its lowest tally of Olympic gold medals in the pool since 1988. Six-time Olympic champion Ryan Lochte posted an image on social media of a tombstone with the epigraph: 'In loving memory of United States Swimming. They set the bar high – until they stopped reaching for it,' which 23-time Olympic champion Michael Phelps reposted with the caption: 'Is this the wake-up call USA Swimming needed?' according to Reuters. The US team wasn't immune to the criticism – Gretchen Walsh, who won three gold medals in Singapore – said she was 'trying to block it out.' 'I think we've been dealing with a lot so it's hard to get the criticism in the first place because I don't think people quite understand the magnitude of everything going on behind the scenes,' she said. In the last two days of the world championships, the US won four gold medals, including Katie Ledecky's thrilling victory in the women's 800m freestyle, which she claimed with a championship-record time. That came a day after Kate Douglass clocked in with her own championship-record time in the women's 200m breaststroke. 'I wanted to just get a gold for Team USA to help our medal count there and I think with the rough week that we've had, I think we've done a great job of coming back and showing that we are here to race,' Douglas said afterward according to World Aquatics. Meanwhile, Canadian sensation Summer McIntosh capped one of the greatest world championships performances of all time on Sunday, winning the women's 400m individual medley to claim her fourth gold medal of the week. The 18-year-old finished in a championship-record 4:25.78, not quite enough to beat her own world record of 4:23.65, but more than seven seconds ahead of her nearest challengers. McIntosh joins Katie Ledecky as the only women ever to have won four individual golds at a world championships, according to NBC Sports. The Canadian was attempting to join Michael Phelps' record of winning five individual golds, but lost to Ledecky in Saturday's 800m freestyle final. In Sunday's 400m individual medley final, Australia's Jenna Forrester and Japan's Mio Narita were tied in a dead heat for silver with times of 4:33.26, while 12-year-old Chinese phenom Yu Zidi was half a second further back and finished in fourth place.

This Olympic Champion Gave Herself Three Years to Win the Tour de France. She Only Needed One.
This Olympic Champion Gave Herself Three Years to Win the Tour de France. She Only Needed One.

Wall Street Journal

time21 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

This Olympic Champion Gave Herself Three Years to Win the Tour de France. She Only Needed One.

Before riding a single mile of the women's Tour de France, Pauline Ferrand-Prevot was already one of the most accomplished cyclists of all time—on any kind of bicycle, on any kind of terrain. At 23, she had been a world champion in road cycling, mountain biking and cyclocross, the muddy winter sport that also features grass, sand, barriers and sometimes stairs. She was the first rider, man or woman, to hold the title in all three disciplines at once. Then, nearly a decade later, she became an Olympic champion at her home Games at Paris 2024.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store