The Hamilton Spectator

Silver after diving into rocky waters

- NEIL DAVIDSON

GOLD COAST, AUSTRALIA — After a rocky start to the Commonweal­th Games diving competitio­n Wednesday, Canada stepped up to the medal podium.

Flag-bearer Meaghan Benfeito and teenage partner Caeli McKay steadied the ship with a silver medal in the women’s 10-metre synchroniz­ed event after a botched dive dropped Jennifer Abel and Melissa Citrini-Beaulieu out of medal contention in the three-metre synchro final.

“We had a really shaky start as you might have noticed,” said Mitch Geller, Diving Canada’s chief technical officer. “That was a real hard one and a bit of a shock for all of us.

“But we also know that there are no guarantees in this sport, that’s for sure.”

Abel and Citrini-Beaulieu had won silver in the same event at the 2017 FINA World Championsh­ips last summer in Budapest. And they led after three dives Wednesday

But it fell apart on the fourth when Abel lost position on a forward 3 1/2 somersault dive from the pike position, the duo’s most difficult dive of the day. The 26-year-old from Laval, Que., all but jackknifed into the pool with her hands just beating her feet to the water.

“A big technical mistake,” said Abel, who won the event in 2010 and took silver in 2014, albeit with a different partner.

Rubbing salt into the wound, technical delays meant the duo had to sit poolside for what seemed like an eternity before they got a set of most unwelcome marks.

Australia’s Esther Qin and Georgia Sheehan rode a terrific

final dive to grab gold with 284.10 points, ahead of England’s Alicia Blagg and Katherine Torrance (276.90) and Malaysia’s Mun Yee Leong and Nur Dhabitah Sabri (264.90).

The Canadian pair finished with 246.78 points.

Benfeito, a 29-year-old from Montreal, and McKay, an 18year-old from Calgary, had no such missteps. They moved from fourth to second as the evening wore on with a polished steady performanc­e.

“We came into the event and we really wanted to have fun ... When we have fun, that’s when we dive well,” said Benfeito.

McKay, in her first multisport games, admitted to some nerves

although they didn’t show.

“I think we help each other kind of loosen up and relax and understand we know what we’re doing,” said McKay. “And we’re in it all together.”

Asked about her young partner, a smiling Benfeito said: “She did better than me today.”

Jun Hoong Cheong and Pandelela Rinong Pamg won the gold with 328.08 points with fellow Malaysians Leong and Sabri taking bronze with 308.16. The Canadians finished at 312.12.

Benfeito won the event in 2014 with the now retired Roseline Filion.

She also won the individual 10-metre event in the Glasgow games and a bronze in the 10metre

synchro in 2006.

The evening competitio­n went smoothly, in stark contrast to the windy, glitch-filled lunchtime session at the outdoor Optus Aquatic Centre.

South African diver Nicole Gillis slipped on the stairs leading to the springboar­d, competing only after a bandage was quickly applied to a damaged big toe.

The first day of the diving competitio­n was also delayed by technical issues, which briefly forced the judges to go old-school and hold up signs indicating their marks during the three-metre synchro springboar­d.

It was blamed on a keypad issue affecting one judge.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Meaghan Benfeito, left, and Caeli McKay perform in the women’s 10m synchro platform final.
RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS Meaghan Benfeito, left, and Caeli McKay perform in the women’s 10m synchro platform final.

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