The Phnom Penh Post

GB’s Peaty smashes the world record

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ADAM Peaty said he wanted to “dominate” his rivals after smashing his own world record in the 100m breaststro­ke at the European Championsh­ips in Glasgow on Saturday.

The British swimmer stopped the clock at 57 seconds dead as he obliterate­d both his rivals and his own previous best mark of 57.13 seconds, which he set on the way to winning Olympic gold at Rio 2016.

It marked a remarkable return to form for the 23-yearold, who had cut a dejected figure at the Gold Coast Commonweal­th Games earlier this year, where he won in an uncharacte­ristically slow time of 58.84sec, as well as being beaten over his less-favoured shorter distance of 50m.

“I don’t just want to win – I want to dominate,” said a delighted Peaty. “That’s not an arrogant side, it’s just the competitiv­e side in me.

“I wasn’t going out there to break the world record but when I got to 50m I thought, this is so easy. Then I came back and all the passion and emotion of the let-down of the Commonweal­ths really fuelled that.

“After the heats yesterday I knew I was in good shape. After the semi I was back in the 58sec but it just shows what you can do if you have a positive mental attitude.”

‘Another level’

Peaty’s superiorit­y was such that his British teammate James Wilby, who took silver, finished more than one and a half seconds behind him in 58.54.

Peaty, still the only man to have cracked the 58-second barrier, now stands on the brink of achieving his longheld and personal “Project 56” campaign.

“It gives me another level of motivation,” said Peaty of narrowly failing to beat 57 seconds two years ahead of schedule. “If I’d done it, everybody would have started to talk about ‘Project 55’.

“It’s a great place to be in, to break the world record by a marginal gain and two years out [from Tokyo 2020]. It leaves me and Great Britain in a very good place.”

Brimming with new-found enthusiasm, Peaty had indicated he was back close to his best when he timed 57.89 in his opening heat on Friday.

Despite dipping just outside 58 seconds in his semi, Peaty suggested he had deliberate­ly eased off to save himself for Saturday – and his tactic paid off as he emphatical­ly delivered in front of his home crowd.

Staffordsh­ire native Peaty will seek to restore his 50m dominance later this week.

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