Business Day

More glory as Van der Burgh goes out in blaze of gold

- David Isaacson

Cameron van der Burgh won the fifth world championsh­ip gold medal of his career on Wednesday and then confirmed his retirement.

The newly married 30-yearold‚ who recently relocated to London to pursue a career in finance‚ claimed victory in the 100m breaststro­ke in a 56.01sec championsh­ip record at the short-course (25m pool) showpiece in Hangzhou‚ China.

Van der Burgh‚ the Olympic champion at the London 2012 Games and silver medallist in Rio four years later‚ made the podium at every world championsh­ip gala in which he competed‚ starting with his debut as a teenager at the 2007 longcourse (50m pool) showpiece in Melbourne‚ amassing 17 medals in total.

Over the years the Pretoriabo­rn swimmer has missed only the 2012 short-course gala.

“It means the world to me. It is my last race‚ so I am extremely happy‚” he said.

“The world championsh­ip means a lot. It is the last one. It is sad but I am happy to end on a high‚” he said‚ saying he had to fight incredible pain over the final metres.

OVERCOMING PAIN

“The last 25m was the most pain I have ever had in my life in swimming‚ so it was a good way to finish.

“It is funny how these things turn out. At least I have no loose ends to tie up or reason to come back.”

Van der Burgh edged Ilya Shymanovic­h of Belarus by nine-hundredths of a second. “When I made the turn at 75m I knew I had a good chance and I had to hold on.

“Luckily it wasn’t one metre more or I would have lost that one‚” said Van der Burgh‚ who still owns the 100m and 50m breaststro­ke short-course world records (55.61 and 25.25).

Van der Burgh also spoke of fighting through pain when he won the Olympic gold in a then world record‚ and in 2018 he conquered his nemesis‚ Adam Peaty of Britain‚ to win the 50m breaststro­ke at the Commonweal­th Games in Gold Coast‚ Australia.

That victory, considered a major upset, was one of the most rewarding of his career.

In other SA action in China on Wednesday‚ Chad Le Clos qualified for Thursday’s 100m butterfly final where he will go up against new American star Caeleb Dressel.

Le Clos won his semifinal in 49.07‚ with Dressel going even quicker in the other eliminator‚ touching the wall in 48.93.

Dressel dethroned Le Clos as the long-course world 100m fly champion in Budapest in 2017‚ but Le Clos‚ who took silver in the 200m butterfly on Tuesday‚ owns the short-course world record of 48.08.

Erin Gallagher qualified for the women’s 100m freestyle final on Thursday after finishing sixth in her semifinal for an overall seeding of seventh.

In doing so she clocked a 52.07 African record.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Ending on a high note: Cameron van der Burgh celebrates winning the 100m breaststro­ke in China on Wednesday.
/Reuters Ending on a high note: Cameron van der Burgh celebrates winning the 100m breaststro­ke in China on Wednesday.

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