logo
McKeown untouchable at Australian trials as Chalmers, Pallister shine

McKeown untouchable at Australian trials as Chalmers, Pallister shine

France 242 days ago

McKeown was under her own 200m backstroke world record pace at the halfway mark in Adelaide before easing up to touch in 2mins 04.47secs.
Such was her dominance that she was more than five seconds clear of second-placed Hannah Fredericks, who also qualified for next month's world championships in Singapore.
Like many top swimmers, McKeown did not go to the 2024 worlds in Doha, instead focusing on her Paris Olympic preparations.
But at the 2023 event in Fukuoka she won all three backstroke gold.
Despite swimming the world's fastest time this year, McKeown, who had already coasted to the 50m and 100m titles, was still not happy.
"Look, there's a lot of work that I've got to do in the next six weeks to try and pull something together for the world stage," she said. "Hopefully I can manage that."
Chalmers, who has medalled in the 100m free at three consecutive Olympics, including gold on debut in Rio 2016, surged home in 47.29 with Flynn Southern (47.69) also doing enough to qualify.
"Fastest time in Australia that I've ever done, so super happy with that," said Chalmers, who will be looking for revenge in Singapore against China's Pan Zhanle, who edged him to gold in Paris last year.
"I'm just trusting what I have been doing in training, listening to what my coaches are telling me. trusting that we've done the work."
Chalmers, the 2023 world champion, has also qualified for the 50m free.
With Ariarne Titmus taking the season off, Pallister smashed her teammate's Australian record in the 800m and will take the fight to American great Katie Ledecky in Singapore, clocking 8:10.84.
Only Ledecky and Canadian sensation Summer McIntosh have ever been under 8:10.
"I've wanted that record for so long," said Pallister. "It's kind of bittersweet not have her (Titmus) in the pool at this moment. I have a lot to thank her for with what she's done in inspiring me as an athlete."
In an upset, Elizabeth Dekkers failed to qualify for the 200m butterfly, edged into third by Brittany Castelluzzo (2:06.91) and Abbey Connor (2:07.14).
Dekkers came fourth in a stacked Olympic final behind McIntosh, American Regan Smith and China's Zhang Yufei. She was the silver medallist at the 2023 worlds, trailing only McIntosh.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Boutier, Ciganda among four-way tie for lead at Meijer LPGA Classic
Boutier, Ciganda among four-way tie for lead at Meijer LPGA Classic

France 24

time3 hours ago

  • France 24

Boutier, Ciganda among four-way tie for lead at Meijer LPGA Classic

France's Boutier coped admirably with the breezy conditions at Blythefield Country Club to put herself in position to challenge for a seventh LPGA title and a first since she claimed three in 2023. Ciganda and Choi both shot five-under-par 67s to join her on eight-under 136 while Davidson had two birdies in her last three holes in a two-under 70. "Very satisfied with my round," Boutier said. "I feel like I made a lot of birdies, a few bogeys as well but I was able to handle the wind quite well today and was able to make a few putts, which really helped me out." Boutier, 31, teed off on 10 and birdied the 12th and 14th, then followed a bogey at 15 with birdies at 16 and 18. She gave a stroke back at the first, birdied the third and fifth and after a bogey at the seventh birdied the eighth to seize her share of the lead. "I definitely feel like today you had to take into account the wind a little bit more," Boutier said. "Even putting and stuff, sometimes you have to back out a little bit because it was kind of gusty." Ciganda had seven birdies and two bogeys in a five-under round she called "very solid". "Stayed patient out there," Ciganda, a two-time LPGA winner, said. "The back nine I hit good shots and made really good putts coming in," added the Spaniard, who needed 28 putts for the round. Choi Hye-jin, who is seeking her first LPGA title, had six birdies and a bogey, seizing her share of the lead with birdies at the 16th and 18th. The leading trio had a one-shot lead over a group of six players on a congested leaderboard. Denmark's Nanna Koerstz Madsen, Americans Lexi Thompson and Amanda Doherty, England's Bronte Law, Australian Minjee Lee and Paraguay's Sofia Garcia were all tied on 137. Australian Grace Kim, who started the day one shot off the lead, was tied atop the leaderboard at eight-under before two late bogeys and finished the day among another a half-dozen players sharing 11th on 138 -- just two shots off the lead. Overnight leader Lee Mi-hyang of South Korea carded a three-over 75 and was in a group of eight players on 139.

Nagayama and Scutto win gold at world judo champs
Nagayama and Scutto win gold at world judo champs

France 24

time7 hours ago

  • France 24

Nagayama and Scutto win gold at world judo champs

After winning his first bout on penalties, Nagayama -- a bronze medallist at last year's Paris Olympics -- was then imperious for the rest of the day. In the final against promising Frenchman Romain Valadier-Picard, the 29-year-old Japanese judoka stepped up a notch in the second half of the bout to win by ippon. Ten years after his junior title, Nagayama finally reached the top step of a world championship podium after finishing third twice. In the women's category, Scutto defeated Azerbaijan's Abiba Abuzhakynova in the final. Last year's world silver medallist and a bronze medallist the previous two years, the 23-year-old judoka completes her collection with world gold. © 2025 AFP

Verstappen on top in opening Canadian GP practice after Leclerc crashes
Verstappen on top in opening Canadian GP practice after Leclerc crashes

France 24

time8 hours ago

  • France 24

Verstappen on top in opening Canadian GP practice after Leclerc crashes

The 27-year-old Dutchman, who has won the last three Canadian races, clocked a fastest lap time in one minute and 13.193 seconds to outpace Alex Albon by 0.039 seconds -- after Charles Leclerc crashed in his Ferrari. The session was red-flagged and delayed following Leclerc's accident, in which he was unhurt, but it was a grim early blow for the under-scrutiny Ferrari team following a disappointing start to the season. It was the first time this year that Verstappen has topped a practice session. As the championship-leading McLarens worked on progression with an update package, Carlos Sainz was third in the second Williams, ahead of Mercedes' George Russell and seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton in the second Ferrari. Isack Hadjar was sixth for Racing Bulls ahead of Lando Norris in his McLaren, Liam Lawson in the second Racing Bull and Pierre Gasly of Alpine. Leclerc was 10th fastest before his crash. The session was run in mild conditions on a 'green' and dirty track with Haas marking their 200th race weekend by returning to their original livery and Yuki Tsunoda hoping for a boost in form for his 100th race. McLaren were one of the few teams to bring upgrades –- front wing and suspension -- to the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve where a packed Friday crowd generated plenty of atmosphere. After an early yellow flag when Franco Colapinto spun on his first flying lap, Hamilton briefly topped the times before Verstappen took control, grumbling as he did so that "my steering wheel feels heavy". Ten minutes later, Ferrari suffered a serious early blow when Leclerc, who had gone top, went off at Turn Four, his car sliding into the barriers. "Sorry," said the Monegasque driver. "I'm in the wall. I should have gone straight on." He was unhurt, but his Ferrari suffered serious front end damage. Amid all the speculation about the team's loss of form and the future of team boss Fred Vasseur, this was not the start they needed. After an eight-minute red flag break, Russell re-started the action which continued to provide unexpected thrills as drivers grappled with the conditions –- caused mainly by the circuit's lack of use for the rest of the year. In this period, Russell, Norris and then Hamilton all had twitchy moments or spins before Verstappen, chasing an unprecedented fourth consecutive Canadian win, clocked 1:13.863 to regain the initiative ahead of Leclerc and Russell. Gradually, the track conditions improved permitting Russell to go top in 1:13.535 while Nico Hulkenberg 'kissed' the 'wall of champions' so faintly it was indiscernible before Sainz and then Verstappen trimmed the top lap time again. The Dutchman then went so close to the wall that the circuit recorded the gap as -0 cms. Hulkenberg was within 0.4 cms according to the circuit TV graphic -– enough to avoid trouble in a relatively straightforward session on an improving track.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store