logo
Wiffen wants more world titles and unbeaten run

Wiffen wants more world titles and unbeaten run

Yahoo3 days ago
Olympic champion Daniel Wiffen says he hopes that defending his world titles will mark the start of an unbeaten run during the Los Angeles Olympic cycle.
Magheralin swimmer Wiffen enjoyed a memorable 2024, winning 800m freestyle gold for Team Ireland at the Paris Games after his World Championship double in February.
He will defend his 1500m and 800m freestyle world titles in Singapore, and will also look to challenge in the 400m.
The 24-year-old says the prospect of remaining undefeated until the next Olympics in Los Angeles in 2028 has given him a new focus.
"For me, it is about trying to win again and that motivation to stay undefeated going into LA," Wiffen said.
Wiffen took some time out of the pool after his Olympic success and returned to competition at the Irish Championships in April, where he set the fastest time of the year in the 800m freestyle.
He will first race at the Worlds in Singapore in the 400m freestyle heats on Sunday (03:20 BST). Should he advance, the 400m final is at 19:00 BST.
He will also compete in the 800m and 1500m heats on Tuesday and Saturday.
Wiffen said it has "been amazing" being the reigning Olympic and World champion, but added his focus shifted to future goals pretty quickly after the Games in Paris.
"I looked back at the races in Paris, and looked at what has changed this year and what we are doing differently.
"Moving on from that, you look and what is next and that was pretty easy for me."
Ellie McCartney and Ellen Walsh are also in action on Sunday in the 200m individual medley, while Shane Ryan goes in the 50m butterfly and Eoin Corby swims in the 50m breastsroke.
Olympic bronze medallist Mona McSharry and Larne's Danielle Hill will be in action later in the championships.
'Back-to-back world titles would top Olympic gold'
'Gold is what we swim for'
Wiffen is not the only Olympic champion from Northern Ireland competing in Singapore, with Jack McMillan competing for Great Britain in the 4x200m relay.
McMillan helped Team GB win gold in Paris by swimming in the heats of the relay and he is now targeting a world medal to add to his collection.
"That's why we go to these competitions, to do that," McMillan told BBC Sport NI.
"It's the ultimate goal, but it's about being level headed so we don't get ahead of ourselves. When it comes to that moment we need to be prepared for it, so it's just trying to prepare ourselves for that moment.
"That would obviously be great and it's what we swim for. Why we're competitive is for those things."
Like Wiffen, McMillan also took some time away from the pool after the Paris Games.
The 25-year-old heads to the World Championships set to fulfil a similar role for Team GB as he did at the Olympics.
McMillan swam in the heats in the relay as GB set the fastest time, but sat out the final as Matt Richards and Duncan Scott returned to the team.
However, his performance in the heats was enough to secure a gold medal along with his team-mates.
McMillan says it is important to peak at the right time of year and his return to the pool has been geared towards performing at the Worlds.
"It's only really two times you are at your best and it's where you need to peak," he added.
"We are putting all this effort and training in for like a minute and 40-odd seconds of racing, twice a year. So it's quite a lot of sacrifice and training for one moment, you could say.
"When you do get the result at the end of it, it shows that all the hard work and sacrifice paid off at the end of it."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Katie Ledecky wins 1500m free at swim worlds on 15-year streak, breaks ties with Phelps, Lochte
Katie Ledecky wins 1500m free at swim worlds on 15-year streak, breaks ties with Phelps, Lochte

NBC Sports

time35 minutes ago

  • NBC Sports

Katie Ledecky wins 1500m free at swim worlds on 15-year streak, breaks ties with Phelps, Lochte

Katie Ledecky extended her 15-year win streak in the 1500m freestyle and broke career medal ties with Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte at the World Swimming Championships on Tuesday. Ledecky earned her sixth title in the 1500m free and 22nd world title overall. She clocked 15 minutes, 26.44 seconds in Singapore, comfortably prevailing by 5.35 seconds over Italian Simona Quadarella. 'Each one has meaning, and I love every race that I've had at worlds over the years,' Ledecky said on Peacock. SWIMMING WORLDS: Results | Broadcast Schedule It was actually Ledecky's closest 1500m free at an Olympics or worlds since her first title in 2013. Credit Quadarella, who became the second-fastest woman in history in the event by 7.09 seconds over Dane Lotte Friis' silver medal time from 2013. Ledecky entered the race with the top 24 times in history. She swam the fifth-best time ever Tuesday but leaves with the top 11 times with Quadarella now slotting at No. 12. Ledecky last lost a 1500m free at the 2010 Potomac Valley Championships in her native Maryland — as a 13-year-old to a 17-year-old Kaitlin Pawlowicz. '(Ledecky) was leading and her cap came off,' Pawlowicz said in 2016, according to Yahoo Sports. Ledecky earned her 28th world medal of any color, breaking her tie with Ryan Lochte for second all-time behind Michael Phelps' 33. She won a 21st individual medal, breaking her tie with Phelps for second all-time behind Swede Sarah Sjostrom's 23. Ledecky has two events left at these worlds: the 4x200m free relay on Thursday and the 800m free, the most anticipated race of the meet due to a likely showdown with Canadian Summer McIntosh. That final is Saturday. Also Tuesday, Australian Kaylee McKeown swam the second-fastest women's 100m backstroke in history — 57.16 seconds — to overtake American Regan Smith. Fellow American Katharine Berkoff took bronze in a repeat of the Paris Olympic podium. Smith, the world record holder at 57.13, and McKeown combine to own the top 25 times in history. Romanian David Popovici rallied past American Luke Hobson in the last 50 meters to win the 200m free in 1:43.53. Hobson took silver in 1:43.84, one year after earning bronze behind gold medalist Popovici at the Olympics. Olympic 200m breaststroke gold medalist Kate Douglass gave the U.S. a third silver of the session. She finished runner-up to German Anna Elendt in the 100m breast. Pieter Coetze of South Africa rallied from third at the 50 to take the men's 100m back in 51.85. Coetze matched the third-best time in history in relegating Olympic champion Thomas Ceccon of Italy to silver. Worlds continue all week with preliminary heats at 10 p.m. ET and finals at 7 a.m., live on Peacock. Wednesday's finals feature Olympic champion Bobby Finke in the men's 800m freestyle. Nick Zaccardi, David Popovici of Romania touched the wall just 0.31 seconds ahead of U.S. swimmer Luke Hobson to secure the gold medal in the men's 200m freestyle at the 2025 World Aquatics Championships in Singapore.

Katie Ledecky wins 1,500-meter freestyle gold at the World Aquatics Championships, her 22nd world title
Katie Ledecky wins 1,500-meter freestyle gold at the World Aquatics Championships, her 22nd world title

CNN

time35 minutes ago

  • CNN

Katie Ledecky wins 1,500-meter freestyle gold at the World Aquatics Championships, her 22nd world title

American swimming star Katie Ledecky won yet another 1,500-meter freestyle world title in Singapore, her sixth victory in the event. The dominant performance on Tuesday marked Ledecky's 22nd gold medal at the World Aquatics Championships and took her overall tally to 28 medals. After a fast start, the nine-time Olympic champion was projected to finish ahead of her own world record set in 2018 before closing in 15:26.44 – six seconds outside her best-ever time. Italy's Simona Quadarella was second in 15:31.79, while Australia's Lani Pallister, who followed Ledecky closely in the opening stages of the race, was third in 15:41.18. 'Lani took it out there,' Ledecky said in her post-race interview. 'I knew she'd be out fast and I just wanted to get out fast but comfortable enough that I could build from there. (I'm) happy with the time and happy with the swim.' Ledecky was in superb form heading into the World Championships in Singapore, breaking her own long-standing 800m freestyle record in May and posting her second-best time in the 1,500m at the end of April. The 28-year-old took bronze behind Canadian teenager Summer McIntosh in the 400m freestyle on Sunday but was the firm favorite for Tuesday's 1,500m final – an event which Ledecky has dominated her entire career. Pushed hard by Pallister in the first half of the race, Ledecky was at one point as much as three seconds ahead of world record pace, and 2.35 seconds ahead by the halfway mark. Despite a slower second half, she still remains unbeaten in the 1,500m freestyle at the World Championships, ever since she made her debut in 2013. Ledecky withdrew from the event in 2019 due to illness and missed last year's worlds to focus on the Olympics. 'I love this race,' added Ledecky. 'This race was the race I broke my first world record in 2013 so lots of great races and memories over the years at worlds and happy I can do it in Singapore.' The most decorated female swimmer in history, Ledecky now has 42 medals across the Olympics and World Championships, including 31 golds.

Kaylee McKeown tops rival Regan Smith for another major title at swimming worlds
Kaylee McKeown tops rival Regan Smith for another major title at swimming worlds

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Kaylee McKeown tops rival Regan Smith for another major title at swimming worlds

Australia's Kaylee McKeown edged American Regan Smith to win gold in the women's 100-meter backstroke final Tuesday at the swimming world championships in Singapore, a blistering-fast edition of the rivalry between two of the best in the sport. McKeown won in 57.16, just missing the world record, with Smith just behind in 57.35 for silver. Both were among the top five times in the event's history. American Katharine Berkoff took bronze in 58.15. Regan Smith and Katharine Berkoff take silver and bronze in the women's 100m backstroke. 🥈🥉 📺: Peacock | #AQUASingapore25 — NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) July 29, 2025 Smith was a fraction ahead at the 50-meter mark, but McKeown passed her coming home for her second world title in the event. It's the fourth time in four tries that McKeown has outpaced Smith in the event at either an Olympics or world championships. Smith also took silver behind McKeown at the Paris Olympics and 2023 worlds and earned bronze in the Tokyo Olympics behind McKeown and Canada's Kylie Masse. Smith won gold at the 2022 worlds, which McKeown did not compete in. Advertisement Smith's time was her third-best ever and is now the fifth-best in the event's history. But one of those four superior swims was McKeown's in the lane next to her Tuesday. 'That's my third-best time ever,' Smith said in an interview on Peacock. 'What more can you do? I have no control over how fast Kaylee swims. I'm going to choose not to be frustrated — 57.35 is pretty fantastic.' Though McKeown has owned the biggest meets, the rivalry is still one of the best in swimming. Smith is the current world-record holder, setting the mark of 57.12 at last year's U.S. Olympic trials. She also set the Olympic record of 57.28 in Paris — the event's second-best time ever before Tuesday — but it came in the women's medley relay, in which the U.S. beat McKeown's Australian squad for gold. In the individual 100-meter final, McKeown beat Smith 57.33 to 57.66. McKeown now has five world championship golds and 13 overall medals. (Photo of, from left, Regan Smith, Kaylee McKeown and Katharine Berkoff on the podium Tuesday: Lintao Zhang / Getty Images)

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