The Phnom Penh Post

Hosszu, Park win again at short course worlds

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KATINKA Hosszu and Park Taehwan piled up more individual gold at the Short Course Swimming World Championsh­ips on Wednesday as US women asserted themselves with a world record relay win.

Three Cambodians, Cheng Piroth and two female swimmers, Hem Thon Vitiny and Cheun Chanthon, are taking part in the tournament in Windsor, Canada.

Hungary’s Hosszu, a treble Rio gold medalist, captured her second and third gold medals of the championsh­ips in Windsor, with convincing wins in the 200m butterfly and 100m backstroke.

South Korea’s Park, who fought to swim in Rio after serving a drugs ban but came away from the Olympics empty-handed, added 200m freestyle gold to the 400m free title he won on Tuesday.

The second night of action at the WFCU Centre opened with the US’s scintillat­ing 4x50m medley relay win in a recordshat­tering 1min 43.27sec.

Alexandra De Loof, Rio Olympic gold medalist Lilly King, Kelsi Worrell and Katrina Konopka set the first world record of the championsh­ips, beating the 1:44.04 set by Denmark at the 2014 short course worlds in Doha.

They took America’s second gold of the meet, after Worrell led the women’s 4x100m free relay to gold on Tuesday.

Italy were a distant second in 1:45.38 and Denmark third in 1:45.98.

King returned to win indi- vidual gold in the 50m breaststro­ke in 28.92sec – getting the better of world record-holder Alia Atkinson of Jamaica (29.11) with fellow American Molly Hannis third in 29.58.

Hosszu nabbed her second gold of the championsh­ips in the 200m fly, pulling away for a decisive victory over Worrell in 2:02.15.

Worrell’s American record of 2:02.89 brought her a silver medal less than 15 minutes after her swim in the US relay triumph and China’s Zhang Yufei earned bronze in 2:05.10.

Hosszu, winner of the 400m medley on Tuesday, topped the podium again in the 100m backstroke.

Her time of 55.54 didn’t approach the world record she set at the 2014 worlds, but put her seven-tenths of a second in front of Canadian Kylie Masse (56.24), with Britain’s Georgia Davies third in 56.45. Davies edged long course world champion Emily Seebohm of Australia for bronze.

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