
Australia see another gold rush at LA 2028 after strong world championships
MELBOURNE: After a strong showing at the world championships in Singapore, Australia's head coach is confident a golden generation of swimmers can deliver another big performance at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. While the United States edged Australia to top the Singapore standings with nine golds and 29 medals overall, Australia were cheered by the team's tally of eight golds among 20 medals.
'From a performance point of view, when you look at the medal table, it was a great outcome for us,' head coach Rohan Taylor told Reuters. Led by a crop of generational talents in their women's programs, Australia has rivalled the United States' supremacy at the last two Olympics, scooping seven golds from the Paris Games pool after a team record haul of nine at Tokyo. The United States topped both Games meets, with nine golds at Paris and 11 at Tokyo. European nations are making inroads, particularly in men's events, but Australia's Olympic champions showed they have lost none of their hunger since Paris.
Backstroke queen Kaylee McKeown swept the 100m and 200m golds in Singapore in a repeat of the 2023 Fukuoka world championships, while Mollie O'Callaghan grabbed a second women's 200m freestyle title and was instrumental in Australia's two freestyle relay golds. The evergreen Cameron McEvoy stormed to the men's 50m freestyle gold, becoming Australia's oldest world champion swimmer at 31.
Australia invests heavily in swimming which has contributed about a third of its total Olympic medals and produced an honor roll of champions such as Ian Thorpe, Dawn Fraser and Emma McKeon.
Taylor and his staff are tasked with keeping the good times rolling through to 2032 when Australia host the Olympics in Brisbane. Australia were missing big names in Singapore, including the resting four-times Olympic champion Ariarne Titmus and injured breaststroker Zac Stubblety-Cook, a former world champion.
However, there were statement performances from lesser lights. The partially deaf Meg Harris claimed her first individual title in the women's 50 freestyle, having shared all her previous gold medals at global events with relay teammates.
Teen talents Milla Jansen and Olivia Wunsch helped Australia win the women's 4x100m freestyle relay in the absence of Shayna Jack and the retired Emma McKeon. Lani Pallister gave American great Katie Ledecky a scare in the 800m freestyle, while beating Canada's irrepressible Summer McIntosh for the silver medal.
Pallister's time of 8:05.98 shaved five seconds off her personal best and was the sixth fastest on record, marking her as a big threat to Ledecky's bid for a record-extending fifth Olympic gold in the event at LA. 'Ledecky is the greatest distance female ... we've ever seen,' said Taylor.
'But at some point there'll be an athlete taking over and I'm sure Lani is motivated to do that.' For all the podium celebrations, Australia have work to do to ensure they can challenge US supremacy at LA. The U.S. team's results in Singapore were probably affected by an outbreak of gastroenteritis at their pre-meet camp in Thailand.
Australia made little impression in the men's backstroke and breaststroke and consequently had modest results in the medley relay events. The women were well-beaten for the 4x100m medley relay gold by the world record-setting US team, which cost silver medalists Australia their top spot on the medal table. Taylor said Australia needed to develop more depth in men's backstroke and breaststroke across the board to strengthen their relay teams. 'If we keep building on that, we will always be around the mark.' — Reuters

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Kuwait Times
6 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
China's 12-year-old phenom Yu sparks wonder and concern
MELBOURNE: Beating a 12-year-old rival was once child's play for an elite swimmer but it has become an unlikely badge of honor when China's Yu Zidi is in the race. Only the very best in women's swimming were able to beat Yu at the world championships where the prodigy became the youngest medallist in the global meet's 52-year history. Yet even as the swimming world marveled at Yu's talent, her age raised questions about the ethics of someone so young competing at the highest level. In a sport where the mental and physical toll can prove overwhelming for adults, Yu's success at the world championships was viewed dimly by some child protection advocates. 'Twelve-years-old is incredibly young in swimming,' author Linda Flanagan, a vocal opponent of children competing in elite sport, told Reuters. 'A 12-year-old does not train like an 18 or 20-year-old because their bodies aren't equipped to handle the work involved. 'And also emotionally, it's not in their best interest. 'It flies in the face of what psychologists say about what's healthy for kids, which is not to put all your eggs in one basket, to spread your interests so you don't become this narrow person.' Adolescents are hardly rare in swimming, particularly in women's competition where athletes tend to reach peak performance earlier than men. Dane Inge Sorensen was 12 when she won the 200 meters breaststroke bronze at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. She remains the youngest Games medalist in individual events. Sharron Davies swam for Britain at 11 and made her Olympic debut at the 1976 Montreal Games at 13. Far from being concerned about Yu's wellbeing, Davies said the Chinese wunderkind, who won a relay bronze and came fourth in three individual events on her world championships debut, would have found it a thrill. 'It is a total misconception that that young girl would have been extremely nervous. It would have been the opposite,' Davies told Reuters in an interview. '(When) I made that Olympic Games, I was just on cloud nine. 'There was nothing for me to lose and everything to gain. And it would have been the same for her: she had nothing to lose and everything to gain.' More intense There was little sign of Yu being overawed as she recorded personal bests in the 200m and 400m individual medley (IM), and 200 butterfly. Her time of 4:33.76 in the 400 IM final would have taken the Paris Olympic bronze medal away from 23-year-old American Emma Weyant. Yu told Chinese media the Singapore meet was more intense than she had imagined but the atmosphere was great. 'This relay bronze motivates me to keep working hard,' Yu told Xinhua. 'Right after the race, I talked to my family. I want to bring back the medal .... to share the joy with them.' Yu's may be the last world swimming medal won by a 12-year-old pending a World Aquatics review. Although the global swimming body has a minimum age of 14 for Olympics and world championships, its by-laws allow younger swimmers with qualifying times to compete. Yu qualified at the national championships in May. World Aquatics Executive Director Brent Nowicki said the governing body would have to take a look at the age rule. 'I didn't think I'd have this conversation, but now I think we have to go back and say, 'Is this appropriate?'' Nowicki told reporters in Singapore. 'Do we need to do other things? Put other guard-rails up? Do we allow it under certain conditions? I don't know the answer.' An International Olympic Committee consensus statement on elite youth athletes published last year noted adolescent athletes are more susceptible to 'musculoskeletal injuries' while the intense physical and mental demands of sport can bring 'psychosocial strain' and mental health challenges. China's state broadcaster CCTV reported that Yu nearly quit swimming last year when she was 11 because she felt pressure before the national championships. 'I was just overwhelmed with emotion and didn't want to train anymore,' Yu said in comments published by the broadcaster in May. — Reuters


Arab Times
6 hours ago
- Arab Times
Kuwait U-23 dominates Yarmouk before heading to Thailand for training camp
KUWAIT CITY, Aug 11: Kuwait's Olympic soccer team recorded a 3-0 victory over Yarmouk in a friendly match at Abdullah Al-Khalifa Stadium. Goals came from Adel Al-Shammari, Moaz Al-Osaimea, and Abdulrahman Al-Rashidi. The squad departs today for Thailand to begin an overseas training camp in preparation for the AFC U-23 Asian Cup qualifiers. Kuwait will compete in Group B, which features Japan, Afghanistan, and host nation Myanmar, with matches scheduled from September 1 to 9. The tournament finals will take place in Saudi Arabia in January next year. The delegation is headed by Kuwait Football Association board member Dr. Ahmad Ajab and includes the technical, administrative, and medical staff, along with 29 players: Jassim Al-Mutair, Abdullah Al-Ghaniman, Ahmed Boudi, Mohammed Al-Shuraifi, Abdullah Mousa, Abdulreda Shehab, Badr Al-Mutairi, Yousef Majed, Hussein Al-Aryan, Mohammed Al-Kandari, Omar Al-Mutair, Khaled Al-Khurqawi, Mohammed Al-Surai'e, Saleh Al-Mathib, Jarrah Al-Hulailei, Salem Al-Khatlan, Omar Al-Sulaim, Montaser Abdulsalam, Omar Al-Azmi, Hussein Shehab, Abdulrahman Al-Rashidi, Ali Jabr, Nasser Al-Enezi, Bandar Al-Barazi, Abdulrahman Al-Harbi, Jassim Al-Enezi, Adel Al-Shammari, Dhari Al-Masri, Moaz Al-Osaimea, and Munir Al-Subaie.

Kuwait Times
2 days ago
- Kuwait Times
PSG to sign Lille's keeper Chevalier
Lucas Chevalier PARIS: European champions Paris Saint-Germain have reached an agreement with Lille to sign highly-rated goalkeeper Lucas Chevalier, a source close to the negotiations told AFP on Friday. Chevalier, 23, will sign a five-year contract and command a fee of around 40 million euros ($46.5 million). He was nominated on Thursday for this year's men's Yashin Trophy for best goalkeeper at the Ballon d'Or gala after exceptional performances in Ligue 1 and the Champions League last season. Lille finished fifth in Ligue 1 last season and qualified for the Europa League. Chevalier's arrival is likely to pose questions over the future of Italian international 'keeper Gianluigi Donnarumma at PSG. It is believed PSG sporting director Luis Campos has given Chevalier certain guarantees about his place in the squad, and the Frenchman's ability with his feet would align more with Luis Enrique's style of play. All of which would point to Donnarumma, 26, being relegated to the role of back-up. A position that would be little to the taste of Italy's number one, who was named the world's best goalkeeper in April by the CIES Football Observatory. PSG have previously dabbled with having a first-choice 'keeper for league matches and another for European and cup matches, however this system rarely bore fruit in the past. Donnarumma, who was outstanding as PSG won the Champions League for the first time in their history last term, is in the final year of his contract and would likely interest Premier League clubs. Indeed England seems the most plausible option for Donnarumma, with both Manchester clubs and Chelsea showing interest. Manchester United would appear the likely destination for the former AC Milan shotstopper after Cameroon's Andre Onana has failed to convince since replacing David de Gea between the sticks at Old Trafford two seasons ago. — AFP