Windsor Star

Masse breaks world record in winning 100m backstroke gold

LaSalle native Canada’s first world champion in women’s swimming event

- BEV WAKE

Kylie Masse didn’t know how special her race was, that she was making history as she completed the 100-metre backstroke Tuesday in a world record time of 58.10 seconds.

“I touched the wall and I looked back and I had to make sure I was looking at the right name and the right time,” Masse said on a conference call. “In the moment, I don’t even know what I was thinking but excitement and joy.”

With the win, the LaSalle native became Canada’s first world champion in a women’s swimming event and the country’s first world record holder since Annamay Pierse set the standard in the women’s 200-metre breaststro­ke in 2009, before high-tech swimsuits were banned.

She is the first Canadian world champion since Brent Hayden won gold in men’s 100-metre freestyle in 2007. She broke the oldest world record in women’s swimming, 58.12 seconds, set by U.K. backstroke­r Gemma Spofforth on July 28, 2009.

“I don’t think it’s really sunk in yet,” said Masse, who finished well ahead of silver medallist Kathleen Baker of the U.S. (58.58) and Australia’s Emily Seebohm (59.59).

“I was really just focusing on my start. I’ve been working really hard on it, so just executing that well and just the first 50, controlled fast speed, then really building on the last 50 and the last 15 metres into the finish.”

The win caps an incredible 12-month run for the 21-year-old, who won bronze in the event at the 2016 Olympics in Rio and silver at the 2016 short course world championsh­ips in Windsor last December, where she also won silver in the 4x100-metre medley relay. She’s the third Canadian woman to hold the world record in 100-metre backstroke following Wendy Cook (1974) and Elaine Tanner (1967).

A year ago, she wouldn’t have thought this possible.

“I think definitely before the Olympics I wouldn’t have thought that (I could win a world title),” she said. “But after the Olympics, I think I really saw that I belong in the final and I belong on the podium so, yeah, I think that just all comes with confidence. I think that, like, this entire year I felt better I guess about my racing. That all helped leading up to the championsh­ips.”

It also has helped, she said, to be part of strong group of female swimmers competing for Canada. The team left the Rio Olympics with six medals, including four by Penny Oleksiak.

“I think it was incredible last summer to be part of that Canadian team,” she said. “It really gave us confidence and momentum to show we belong on the internatio­nal stage. I think we were trying to continue that momentum and continue that success into these championsh­ips.”

While Masse said a growing sense of confidence has made the biggest difference for her over the last year, she’s put in a lot of work with University of Toronto swimming coaches Byron MacDonald and Linda Kiefer. They’ve analyzed her stroke during practices, worked on her with video analysis.

“The smaller details would be things like my start and transition, from the underwater into the swimming, and the turn especially,” she said.

Most important to her this week were their final words of advice.

“They just said have fun,” she said. “All the training that I’ve done is behind me, this is the fun part and this is the best part, just racing. Having fun, I think that’s the most important, as well.”

When she spoke to the media, Masse had yet to see her parents, Cindy and Louie, who had travelled to Budapest to watch her compete. She said having them there made the win even sweeter — and if she didn’t get to see them for a while, they’d understand.

“My parents, I’m super grateful that they’re able to travel here and come and watch me,” she said. “They really just leave it up to me. They know swimming’s my thing. They kind of just cheer me on. They’re the best.”

Masse returns to the pool Wednesday for the 50-metre backstroke. In other events Tuesday: American Katie Ledecky breezed to her third and fourth gold medals of the world championsh­ips, capturing the 1,500-metre freestyle by more than half the length of the pool and the 200-metre freestyle by .39 seconds. Having already won the 400 free and 4x100 free relay on the opening day of swimming, Ledecky stayed on course for a record-tying six golds by a female swimmer. Her third medal made her the first woman to win 12 gold medals at the world championsh­ips.

Kierra Smith of Kelowna, B.C., finished sixth in the 100-metre breaststro­ke final with a time of 1:06.90. It was her first internatio­nal final in the distance. American Lilly King won gold. Smith will compete Thursday in the 200-metre breaststro­ke, in which she finished seventh at the Rio Olympics. Canadians MarySophie Harvey of Trois- Rivieres, Que., (1:58.15) and Katerine Savard of Pont-Rouge, Que., (1:58.46) finished 14th and 15th in the women’s 200-metre freestyle.

I think definitely before the (2016 Rio) Olympics I wouldn’t have thought that (I could win a world title).

 ?? CHRISTOPHE SIMON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Twenty-one-year-old Kylie Masse of LaSalle shows off her gold medal Tuesday after breaking the world record to win the women’s 100-metre backstroke at the 2017 FINA World Championsh­ips in Budapest, Hungary.
CHRISTOPHE SIMON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Twenty-one-year-old Kylie Masse of LaSalle shows off her gold medal Tuesday after breaking the world record to win the women’s 100-metre backstroke at the 2017 FINA World Championsh­ips in Budapest, Hungary.
 ?? ADAM PRETTY/GETTY IMAGES ?? Kylie Masse, right, is congratula­ted by silver medallist Kathleen Baker of the United States after winning 100-metre backstroke gold on Tuesday.
ADAM PRETTY/GETTY IMAGES Kylie Masse, right, is congratula­ted by silver medallist Kathleen Baker of the United States after winning 100-metre backstroke gold on Tuesday.
 ?? MICHAEL SOHN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kylie Masse credits her record performanc­e to working on details with swimming coaches and increased confidence.
MICHAEL SOHN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kylie Masse credits her record performanc­e to working on details with swimming coaches and increased confidence.

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