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Swimming: Lewis Clareburt to go head-to-head with Olympic champion in Singapore

Swimming: Lewis Clareburt to go head-to-head with Olympic champion in Singapore

RNZ News2 days ago
Lewis Clareburt into semi-finals at World Aquatic Championships.
Photo:
AAP Image/Dave Hunt/Photosport
Leon Marchand was fastest in the 200 metres individual medley (IM) heats at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore on Wednesday as France's Olympic hero made his long-awaited return to the world stage.
The four-times Olympic champion glided to a time of one minute, 57.63 seconds, 0.11 ahead of Japan's Kosuke Makino, in an encouraging start to his bid for a third world title in the event and a possible world record.
Exhausted after the Paris Games, Marchand skipped the short course world championships in Hungary last December and suffered injuries before returning to the pool for the TYR Pro Series in Florida in May.
He is swimming a reduced programme in Singapore, focusing on the 200 and 400 IM alone for individual events as he works through what he calls a "transition year".
Aqua Black Lewis Clareburt was ninth fastest after the 200 IM heats and will race in the same semi-final as Marchand on Thursday morning (NZT).
Summer McIntosh is on the other end of the spectrum as she looks to match Michael Phelps's record of five individual gold medals from a single world championships.
Having already won two of them, the 200 IM and 400 freestyle, the 18-year-old Canadian started her bid for the third in the 200 butterfly on day four with the fastest swim in the heats (2:07.07).
American Regan Smith was third quickest into the semi-finals, more than a second behind McIntosh, while China's 12-year-old wunderkind Yu Zidi was fifth fastest (2:08.95).
Three years after winning the 100 and 200 freestyle in Budapest, Romania's David Popovici is eyeing another double in the sprints.
The 20-year-old Olympic bronze medallist was fastest in the 100 heats in 47.41, the morning after his 200 triumph in Singapore.
Olympic champion and world record holder Pan Zhanle (47.86), and runner-up Kyle Chalmers (47.48) were among eight swimmers under the 48-second barrier on the way to the evening semi-finals.
Canada's Kylie Masse qualified fastest for the women's 50 backstroke semi-finals with a time of 27.46. Regan Smith and fellow American Katharine Berkoff, who medalled in the 100 behind winner Kaylee McKeown, were also safely through.
Australia's world record holder McKeown skipped the event.
The session finished with a shock as Olympic champions the United States failed to reach the final of the 4x100 mixed medley. Several U.S. swimmers have not been at their best in Singapore after a bout of food poisoning swept through the team's pre-meet camp in Thailand.
France and Britain also missed out but Italy emerged quickest in the heats in a time of 3:42.19, ahead of the Netherlands and China. Fourth-quickest Australia are also a chance for a medal in the evening final.
Five golds will be up for grabs in the evening session, with Australian Olympic champion Mollie O'Callaghan bidding for a second 200 freestyle title in a final in which Aqua Black Erika Fairweather will also be competing.
The men's 800 freestyle final will feature Ireland's Olympic champion Daniel Wiffen battling a stacked field including Australian Sam Short and Tunisia's Ahmed Jaouadi.
- Reuters/RNZ
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Lewis Clareburt fifth, achieves personal best in 200m IM at world champs
Lewis Clareburt fifth, achieves personal best in 200m IM at world champs

RNZ News

time11 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Lewis Clareburt fifth, achieves personal best in 200m IM at world champs

Lewis Clareburt has swum his fastest time in the 200m IM. Photo: photosport New Zealand's Lewis Clareburt has swum his fastest 200m individual medley ever in finishing fifth at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore. French sensation Leon Marchand won the gold medal though he failed to improve on a new world record in the heats just a night earlier . It was always going to be tough for Clareburt swimming against the Olympic champion Marchand, but he built his race well in lane seven, before storming home over the final 50 metres, to touch the wall in one minute 56.07 seconds, his fastest time and a fresh New Zealand record. Marchand won in 1:53.68s, the second fastest time ever. Shaine Casas from the United States was second and Hungary's Hubert Cos took bronze. Marchand finished 0.62sec ahead of Casas and said the record may have taken a bit out of him but he was hardly complaining, Reuters reported. "I felt so excited yesterday that I couldn't sleep," he said. "So I think I lost a lot of energy yesterday night, but it was my goal to break the record, so I was really happy with it." Clareburt will swim in his specialist event, the 400m individual medley, on Sunday. Meanwhile, Summer McIntosh came within a whisker of breaking a long-standing world record in the 200m butterfly. The record of 2:01.81 set by China's Liu Zige in 2009 is the last surviving mark from the supersuit era in women's swimming - and McIntosh all but took it down. She stormed to her third individual gold medal of the meet in 2:01.99, the second-fastest swim of all time and a yawning three seconds better than American silver medallist Regan Smith. Summer McIntosh has won her third gold medal at the world champs in Singapore. Photo: FRANCOIS-XAVIER MARIT / AFP Having made the last turn under world record pace the Canadian 18-year-old flagged slightly coming home and shouted an expletive when she spied the clock. "I know that I messed up the last 15 metres of my race," she said. "Overall, happy with the time and a PB, but I didn't reach my goal tonight." China's 12-year-old marvel Yu Zidi finished just off the podium again having also placed fourth in the 200 IM. McIntosh might console herself in the knowledge that her bid for five individual titles remains intact, with the 400 IM and a hugely anticipated showdown with American great Katie Ledecky in the 800 freestyle still to come. Only Michael Phelps has won five individual golds at a world championships. Romania's David Popovici also flirted with a record on day five, the 20-year-old claiming a thrilling 100 metres freestyle gold to go with his 200m crown on day three. Popovici clocked 46.51 in the 100 to give Pan Zhanle's world record (46.40) a big scare. American runner-up Jack Alexy also broke the 47-second barrier (46.92), while Paris Games silver medallist Kyle Chalmers took the bronze for Australia. At 20, 200 Olympic champion Popovici has already completed the 100-200 sweep twice at world championships, having done the double at Budapest three years ago. The relaxed Romanian said he had reached a higher plane; no longer worried about winning or losing. "I just feel very relieved that this huge pressure of being afraid of winning or losing is off me," he said. "I don't mean it in an arrogant way, I mean it in a self-maturing way." In the finale of Thursday's programme, Australia's women clinched a second relay gold as Mollie O'Callaghan held off Ledecky in a thrilling final leg to guide her 4x200 freestyle relay team over the finish line. Australia also won the men's and women's 4x100 freestyle golds on Sunday. O'Callaghan, whose 11th gold tied her with Ian Thorpe as the most successful Australian at the world championships, will now look to add the 100 freestyle title to her 200 crown on Friday. - RNZ Sport/Reuters

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