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Chinese 12-year-old Yu Zidi set for world stage after stunning swims
Chinese 12-year-old Yu Zidi set for world stage after stunning swims

Free Malaysia Today

time25-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Free Malaysia Today

Chinese 12-year-old Yu Zidi set for world stage after stunning swims

Yu Zidi, set to turn 13 in October, has been recognised as a 'prodigy' by the Chinese media since gaining national attention last year. (Weibo pic) BEIJING : Chinese 12-year-old swimming sensation Yu Zidi could be the brightest young star at this year's world championships after producing a string of eye-popping performances this week. Yu, in her striking 'doggy' swim cap, rounded off a sensational China national swimming championships in Shenzhen by winning the women's 400m individual medley by almost two seconds on Saturday. Roared on by packed crowds in the southern city which borders Hong Kong, Yu crushed a quality field in a lifetime best 4min 35.53sec. Yu's time was comfortably inside the world qualifying standard of 4:43.06, the fifth fastest time of the year and would have been good enough for fourth place at the Paris Olympics. Second was Chang Mohan, who touched more than a body length adrift in 4:37.33, followed by Li Bingjie in 4:38.66. It came just a few days after the 12-year-old's 200m butterfly gold in a scarcely believable 2:06.83, also fifth fastest in the world this year and another time that would have garnered a fourth place in Paris. 'My lungs were about to explode!' Yu said after that win, according to state news agency Xinhua. 'I didn't know my time. I just focused on my pace, stroke-by-stroke.' Yu started the week-long China championships by taking second in the 200m individual medley behind Paris Olympian Yu Yiting, with another world-qualifying time of 2:10.63. That prompted the global governing body, World Aquatics, to post: '12-year-old sensation alert!' on X. The China meet serves as trials for the world championships, which take place in Singapore from July 27 to August 3, with the top two in each event eligible for selection, providing they have met the qualifying standard. Yu said it would be 'cool… to compete internationally in a swimsuit adorned with the national flag and my doggy cap', reported Xinhua, giving a nod to her black-and-white swim cap emblazoned with a cartoon puppy. China's swimming association told AFP it would finalise its team for the worlds after the national championships concluded on Saturday, without confirming if Yu would be included or giving a date for a squad announcement. Yu, who turns 13 in October, trains in the northern province of Hebei and has been earmarked as a 'prodigy' by Chinese state media since first making national headlines last year. Fellow Hebei native 23-year-old Li, whom Yu has called an 'idol', may have been only third behind the 12-year-old on Saturday, but she dominated the women's freestyle in Shenzhen with golds in the 200m, 400m, 800m and 1500m. Men's 100m freestyle world record holder Pan Zhanle, 20, won four individual golds and teamed up with the returning three-time Olympic gold medallist Sun Yang, Wang Shun and Fei Liwei to win the men's 4x200m freestyle relay. But the disgraced 33-year-old Sun, the first Chinese man to win an Olympic swimming gold, will not be going to the world championships. He recently returned to action after serving a four-year ban for a doping violation and China forbids those who have been suspended for 12 months or longer for doping from representing the country. Witness football history in Malaysia as Manchester United take on the Asean All-Stars – it's the clash you can't afford to miss. Book your seat now at before they're gone!

A charming world premiere puts a musical spin on ‘Pygmalion' — again
A charming world premiere puts a musical spin on ‘Pygmalion' — again

Washington Post

time23-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Washington Post

A charming world premiere puts a musical spin on ‘Pygmalion' — again

George Bernard Washington III, the Julliard-bound prodigy at the center of Olney Theatre Center's 'Senior Class,' is a student of stratospheric standards. Tasked with one-upping 'My Fair Lady' and penning his own adaptation of 'Pygmalion' for his high school's spring musical, G.B. repeatedly emphasizes that 'pretty good' is the enemy of greatness. If his show isn't a triumph, it's a train wreck.

‘I struggled with the lifestyle': former teen prodigy Amanda Anisimova on her career-saving break
‘I struggled with the lifestyle': former teen prodigy Amanda Anisimova on her career-saving break

The Guardian

time22-05-2025

  • Sport
  • The Guardian

‘I struggled with the lifestyle': former teen prodigy Amanda Anisimova on her career-saving break

Professional tennis players are often led to believe that taking time off is fatal. In such an intense, competitive individual sport where greatness is determined though fine margins, the pressure to keep on moving is eternal. If you are not constantly training, competing and working on your craft, it is said, someone will always be there to take your place. Once you lose your spot, you may never get it back. During the most difficult period of her career, Amanda Anisimova, a former teen prodigy, had to reckon with that myth. In the depths of her depression, when the intensity of the tennis circuit had become unbearable and her mind was screaming out for change, the 23-year-old opted for the solution of a complete break from the sport two years ago. 'I had done that my whole life – pushing through everything – because I never took any breaks,' says Anisimova, calmly narrating the past eight years of her life in a hectic, bustling players' restaurant during the Madrid Open. 'I felt like it was just unfair for me to just keep pushing and pushing as if I'm not a human being.' At an age when most tennis players are still finding their feet on the junior circuit, seven years ago a 16-year-old Anisimova arrived on the WTA tour seemingly fully formed. Her groundstrokes were not only devastating, they were clean and exquisite – her sweet timing, hand-eye coordination and effortless ability to redirect pace immediately set her apart. At just 17, she marched into the semi-finals of the 2019 French Open and was not far from winning it all. In hindsight, Anisimova says, she was not old enough to appreciate the significance of such an achievement: 'I was obviously very young, and I didn't have to deal with the highs and lows of the sport so much,' she says. The lows, it turned out, were around the corner. By 2022, the many stressors presented by professional tennis had penetrated the American player's psyche: 'I was just struggling with the lifestyle and just dealing with a lot of stress from it, and it was affecting me a lot on the court,' she says. 'Especially towards the end of the year. I think it was taking away from a lot of the joy that I was feeling when I came to training or came to tournaments. It just really wasn't working for me.' For months, Anisimova tried to play through her discomfort and it took a long time for her to understand that she could no longer continue. Finally, she decided that it was time to step away from the sport: 'I was obviously privileged and able to take a break,' she says. 'I know not many people are able to take a break from their career or their life. So, of course, I'm very grateful that I had the opportunity to do that. If I wasn't going to be ready to come back, or if my body wasn't going to be able to handle it, I knew that I would have to figure out something else to do. But I don't think pushing through it was an option for me at that point.' In lieu of her daily work on-court, Anisimova took holidays she had never previously considered and spent time with friends and family, time she normally would not be able to spare. For a semester, Anisimova studied at Florida's Nova Southeastern University in person after previously conducting her undergraduate degree – business with psychology – remotely. She also took up painting, which became a refuge from her own thoughts and she eventually chose to donate the art she created to charitable causes addressing mental health, hunger and child abuse. After months without even picking up a racket, by the end of 2023 Anisimova had found her way back to tennis. She slowly worked to regain her match fitness before returning at the beginning of 2024: 'I think that I refreshed my mind and I took the time that I needed,' she says. In a sport that teaches its subjects to never slow down, Anisimova's decision to step away from the tour has provided a necessary example for other players with similar issues. Anisimova, for her part, is appreciative of colleagues such as Naomi Osaka who have also drawn attention to the importance of prioritising mental health. She believes that her generation has a greater grasp on how to directly tackle these issues. Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion 'I feel like maybe it's not such an unspoken topic any more, and I think that's very healthy and important for it to be more of something that people are comfortable talking about and sharing how they feel,' she says. 'I feel like the older generation and the girls who probably played before us, it just wasn't a discussion. Maybe they had to push through a lot more things. At the end of the day, it's not very healthy long-term, and I think it's very important being true to yourself and how you feel because that's what contributes to happiness.' This may not have been the goal when she opted to step back, but by taking care of herself mentally, Anisimova has scaled new heights on the court. This year, she took a significant step forward in her career by winning her first WTA 1000 title at the Qatar Open in Doha. As Roland Garros shifts into focus, Anisimova will return to compete in the city that defined the first part of her career, six years on from her breakthrough run in Paris. Now ranked at a career high of No 16, this will mark her first grand slam tournament as a top 20 player. Still, Anisimova is more proud of her growth, and how she has navigated her numerous challenges, than any result. No on-court achievement is as significant as the lesson the past two years have taught her to trust her own convictions rather than simply following how things have always been done.

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