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Kate Douglass, Lilly King go 1-2 in King's last race in a U.S. pool at swimming nationals

Kate Douglass, Lilly King go 1-2 in King's last race in a U.S. pool at swimming nationals

NBC Sports17 hours ago

In a passing of the torch, Olympic 200m breaststroke champion Kate Douglass overtook Lilly King, the 100m breast world record holder, in the 100m event in King's final career domestic race at the Toyota U.S. Championships on Friday.
Douglass edged King by 23 hundredths of a second at the IU Natatorium in Indianapolis, a pool that the Evansville native King has been racing in since she was 10 years old.
Both Douglass and King made the team for the World Championships in July and August in Singapore, which will be King's last major international meet.
King has won a medal at a major international meet every year (save 2020) since her breakout 2016, when she won Olympic 100m breast gold after her freshman season at Indiana University.
SWIMMING: Broadcast Schedule | Results
Also Friday, Katie Ledecky added a 400m free title to her 800m free crown from Tuesday. She hasn't lost to an American in a 400m free since placing third at the 2012 Olympic Trials at age 15.
Rising Stanford junior Rex Maurer won the men's 400m free in 3:43.33 — the fastest time ever in a U.S. pool — to become the third-fastest American in history. Maurer's mom, Lea, won relay gold and 100m backstroke bronze at the 1992 Barcelona Games.
Luka Mijatovic, 16, finished second, which will likely be enough to make the world championships team once the meet ends Saturday. Mijatovic would be the youngest U.S. man to swim at worlds since Michael Phelps in 2001.
World record holder Regan Smith won the 100m backstroke after placing second in the 50m and 200m distances. She can swim all three backstrokes, plus the 200m butterfly, at worlds.
Campbell McKean, 18, took the men's 100m breast by lowering his personal best from 1:00.40 to 58.96 on Friday, one year after placing 21st at the Olympic Trials.
On Thursday, McKean won the 50m breast by lowering his personal best from 27.40 to 26.90 between prelims and the final.
The Toyota U.S. Championships end Saturday with finals at 7 p.m. ET, live on Peacock.
Nick Zaccardi,

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