Leanne Smith breaks three Para swimming world records in one day
Five-time Paralympic medalist Leanne Smith broke three of her own world records in one day to open the Para Swimming World Series meet in Indianapolis on Thursday.
Smith, a 36-year-old from Massachusetts, broke world records in the 50m, 100m and 200m freestyles in the S3 classification.
Advertisement
In the 100m free final, she lowered her world record from 1:27.62 (set at the 2022 World Championships) to 1:26.76.
En route, she also became the first woman to break 40 seconds in the S3 50m free, splitting 39.99. Smith previously held the world record of 40.03 from the Paris Paralympics.
In Thursday's 200m free final, she clocked 3:09.65 to smash her world record of 3:15.48 from 2022.
Smith said she took four months off from swimming after the Paris Paralympics, where she took gold in the 50m free (S4) and 100m free (S3).
'It's something I didn't expect (the world records), but switching up my training and taking a solid four months off from swimming was refreshing and much-needed,' she said, according to the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee. '(These records) are emotional for me, but they reinforce that you don't have to be doing what the person next to you is doing, and that working within your limits is OK and it's enough.'
Advertisement
Also Thursday, Katie Kubiak broke world records in the 150m individual medley and the 100m freestyle in the S4 classification. The New York University student is making her international competition debut at the World Series.
Leanne Smith
How Community Keeps Para Swimmer Leanne Smith Strong Anywhere She Goes
For the Paralympic silver medalist and 10-time world champion, Beverly, MA will always have the warm embrace of home.
Hashtags

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

NBC Sports
43 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
Stephen A. Smith: Failure to buy Bills sparked Donald Trump's first presidential run
Nearly 10 years ago to the day, a certain someone took a certain ride down a certain golden escalator and most certainly upended American politics. As Stephen A. Smith told it on Monday night's edition of The Daily Show, the rise of Donald Trump the politician is tied directly to his inability to buy the Buffalo Bills a year before he threw his hat in the presidential ring. 'In 2014, he wanted to purchase the NFL's Buffalo Bills,' Smith told Jon Stewart. 'The price tag was $1.4 billion. . . . My sources tell me he had $1.1 [billion]. . . . He literally called me in 2014 and he said, 'Stephen, I'm going to tell you this right now' — and this is a quote — 'if them mutherfuckers get in my way, I'm gonna get them all back. I'm gonna run for president.' Those are his exact words. 'And so the NFL often jokes with me, 'So it's our fault' when I tell them that story. And I say, 'Yeah.'' This prompted Stewart to make a direct plea to the camera: 'People of Buffalo. Give him the fucking team. Save us.' Smith explained Trump's viewpoint on the matter. 'He was putting the word out that if this doesn't happen — he wanted to do it, and this should happen, I'm Donald Trump, I'm very popular and well known, I'm worth over a billion dollars, I should be able to purchase an NFL team if I want it,' Smith said. 'And if I can't get it, it's because they're getting in my way. That was his position. Their position was, 'You didn't have enough money.'' And he didn't. Because at the end of the day that's all it takes to buy an NFL team: Come up with the best offer. Terry and Kim Pegula came up with a better offer than the twice future president. But, yes, there's an alternate universe in which Trump owns the Bills and he isn't the president and he calls in to PFT Live on a regular basis to complain that the league office is being very unfair.

NBC Sports
3 hours ago
- NBC Sports
Olympic wrestling gold medalist Amit Elor to miss world championships team qualifier
Olympic wrestling gold medalist Amit Elor will not compete at an event to determine the 2025 World Championships team on Saturday due to health reasons. 'I recently found out that I was anemic during the World Team Trials (May 16-17), which added up to be too much with my current injuries,' was posted on Elor's social media. 'In the meantime, I'm committed to safely working on strengthening my wrestling. I'm also very excited to contribute to the wrestling community by being more available for camps and clinics ❤️ Wishing the very best to all the wrestlers competing this weekend! No matter what, I'm sure we're going to have an incredible team representing us at the world stage. To my Final X competitor, @glaudealex (Alexandria Glaude) you got this and I'll be cheering for you at worlds!' Last August, Elor became at age 20 the youngest Olympic wrestling gold medalist in American history, extending a five-year, 82-match win streak. After competing at 68kg in Paris, she moved back up to 72kg (a non-Olympic weight) this year and qualified for this Saturday's Final X. Elor was due to face Glaude, 28, for the 72kg spot on the team for this September's World Championships in Croatia. Nick Zaccardi,
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Record-breaking England cruise to win over Windies
Third T20, Utilita Bowl, Southampton England 248-3 (20 overs): Duckett 84 (46), Smith 60 (26); Rutherford 1-20 West Indies 211-8 (20 overs): Powell 79 (45); Wood 3-30 England won by 37 runs; win series 3-0 Scorecard Ben Duckett's inventive 84 helped big-hitting England blast their way to a record score on home soil as they wrapped up a series clean sweep with a 37-run victory over West Indies in the third T20. Duckett's knock came off 46 balls as he shared a 120-run stand with fellow opener Jamie Smith, who made a 26-ball 60, as the pair provided the backbone of England's total of 248-3. Skipper Harry Brook and Jacob Bethell continued the momentum as they peppered the boundary to finish unbeaten on 35 and 36 respectively, as a dispirited West Indies bowling attack ran out of ideas. England's total was their highest in T20s on their own turf, eclipsing the 234-6 they made against South Africa at Bristol in July 2022, and was their second highest anywhere. West Indies gamely approached the chase as Rovman Powell cracked an unbeaten 79 while captain Shai Hope smeared three sixes in his 45. It helped ensure the margin of defeat for the tourists was more modest than might have been anticipated as left-arm quick Luke Wood finished the pick of England's bowlers with 3-31. The win maintained Brook's impressive start as England white-ball captain as he chalked up his sixth victory from as many matches in charge. England's total of 248-3 at Southampton was the joint-highest T20 international score overall in the country. Australia made the same total against England on the same ground in 2013. With a combined total of 459 runs this was the highest scoring T20 international in England, beating the 457 aggregate between England and Australia in 2013. It was England's second-highest T20 score overall behind the 267-3 they made against West Indies at the Brian Lara Stadium in Trinidad in 2023. England failed to score any runs off just 25 balls - the fewest number of dot balls they have faced in a T20. Ben Duckett's half-century of 20 balls was the joint-fourth fastest half-century by an Englishman in T20s. England's run-rate of 12.16 in the powerplay was their quickest in a T20 series of at least three matches. Their total of 83-0 was their second-highest in the six-over block too. A quick pitch and an England team rediscovering their white-ball swagger, up against a demoralised West Indies bowling attack, proved to be an heady cocktail for the Southampton crowd as they lapped up an evening of audacious run-scoring. England's openers bristled with intent from the get-go, as the right-left hand combination of Smith and Duckett wreaked havoc. Duckett liberally sprinkled runs to all angles, with his innings full of nifty reverse sweeps, deft cuts and clever scoops. Alzarri Joseph stuck a paw out to a brutal Duckett drive on the up when he was on 37, but such was the ferocity of the strike it still flew to the boundary leaving the West Indies quick with a bruise but nothing more. Six overs in, England were 83-0 and it already felt the like the match was over as a contest as the shoulders of those wearing maroon started to droop. The diminutive Duckett dovetailed well with the taller Smith, as West Indies' attack struggled to find the right length against England's innovative strokeplay. Thrust up the order by Brendon McCullum to open in place of Phil Salt, who is absent on paternity leave, Smith has taken to the role like the manor born as he used his leavers to good effect. Three consecutive sixes spanked off the bowling of Gudakesh Motie will have had the England coach purring before Smith dropped one inside the ropes to the biggest boundary and into the hands of Shimron Hetmyer. A century beckoned for Duckett, and the opportunity to join Jos Buttler and Dawid Malan as one of own three players with hundreds in all three formats. However, the 30-year-old misjudged a sweep and was bowled behind his legs by left-arm spinner Akeal Hosein with the milestone tantalisingly within his grasp. Duckett thumped his pad with his bat in frustration. It briefly took the sting out of England's assault before Brook and Bethell played yet more eye-catching strokes en route to an imposing total. If England were ruthless West Indies were rudderless as this match marked the end of a pretty chastening tour. A 3-0 drubbing in the one-day international series was followed up by the same scoreline in the three T20s which have followed. Indeed, this is the first time West Indies have been 'double' clean swept by England in both a ODI and T20 series since 2012. Here they were again cumbersome in the field and struggled to know how to contain England with the ball. Romario Shepherd's economy rate was 19 across two overs and Hosein went for 10.50 an over. Evin Lewis pumped Luke Wood's for six off the first ball of West Indies' innings, but there was an end-of-term feel to the early part of the chase. Certainly the callous disregard for anything tossed up by spinners Liam Dawson, Rashid and Bethell early in the innings suggested some of their top order were already in the departure lounge for the flight back to the Caribbean. West Indies skipper Hope, and the man he succeeded in the form of Powell, at least showed some fight during what always looked to be a forlorn effort. It does not help their cause that one of their best players - and one of the best T20 batters in the world - has seemingly turned his back on them. Nicholas Pooran, who was not part of this tour, announced his retirement from international cricket on Monday at the age of 29 and has prioritised franchise paydays. With eight months to go until the World Cup in India and Sri Lanka there is much for West Indies coach Daren Sammy to ponder. Notifications, social media and more with BBC Sport