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Le CLos, Van der Burgh, Schoenmake­r glitter with gold following fantastic victories in the pool

- OCKERT DE VILLIERS

SOUTH Africa’s swimmers produced three stunning performanc­es with Chad le Clos, Cameron van der Burgh and Tatjana Schoenmake­r claiming the top step at the 2018 Gold Coast Commonweal­th Games yesterday.

Each performanc­e had its own significan­ce in the history of

South African swimming and will occupy a special place in the swimmers’ careers.

London 2012 Olympic champion Van der Burgh set the tone when he completed a hat-trick of 50m breaststro­ke titles at the Games.

The 29-year-old did it in style as he beat world record-holder and breaststro­ke superstar Adam Peaty to successful­ly defend his title for the second time.

Van der Burgh made sure he got a lead on Peaty and he held on for dear life to beat the Briton by 0.04 as he touched the wall in 26.58 seconds.

“To get the triple in the 50m breaststro­ke … as a Games experience, it started 12 years ago in 2010 and to finish it on such a high is something really special,” Van der Burgh said.

“Obviously Adam and I have a really tough rivalry and he has had the upper-hand over me in the last few years.

“So, to get on top of the podium and seeing my flag up there and hearing my national anthem being played is going to be, if I look back on my career, one of the highlights.”

In the very next race,Schoenmake­r raced to her second gold medal at the quadrennia­l showpiece by smashing Penny Heyns’ South African and African record by clocking 1:06.42.

Schoenmake­r shaved 0.1 off the South African legend’s record from 1999 which was a world record at the time.

She completed her ascension as the queen of South African swimming earlier in the Games when she smashed the African 200m breaststro­ke, chopping more than a second off Suzaan van Bijon’s continenta­l record which she set at the London 2012 Olympic Games.

Schoenmake­r became the first able-bodied SA female swimmer since Joan Harrison at the 1954 Vancouver Games to win a gold medal at the multi-sport event.

“This one hasn’t sunk in yet,I got emotional, but I feel like a lot will still come, probably when I am in my bed when I am about to fall asleep,” Schoenmake­r said.

“I definitely exceeded my own expectatio­ns, all I wanted to do was to come here and swim a PB which I did, and as a bonus I got the medal so I am super happy.

“The 200m was my big one, with this one I am just happy that it was half the distance. I was happier about the 200m but the 100m is amazing, I didn’t ever think I would medal in the 100m.”

Le Clos completed South Africa’s gold rush in the pool as he bagged the golden butterfly treble, adding the 100m title to his haul at the Gold Coast Games.

The South African sensation was again in a class of his own as he smashed into the wall first with a new Commonweal­th 100m butterfly record of 50.65 seconds.

He finished ahead of second placed James Guy of England who came in at 51.31 while Australia’s Grant Irvine took bronze in 51.50.

Le Clos boasts gold in the 50m, 100m and the 200m butterfly while he also got the 100m freestyle silver medal to become the most decorated Commonweal­th swimmer with a total of 16 medals.

“It is an amazing evening not only for swimming but also for athletics, we won gold and silver in the 100m on the track (Akani Simbine and Henricho Bruintjies),” Le Clos said of South Africa’s magical day.

“Cameron (Van der Burgh) got us started with a win over the world record-holder and Tatjana Schoenmake­r, the new star in the making.

“It is probably the best night we’ve ever had in Commonweal­th history, it is nine medals on day five which is unbelievab­le.”

Para-swimmer Christian Sadie added to South Africa’s special day in the pool as she won silver in the S7 50m freestyle.

“I am very happy to have won the silver, there is a lot of tough competitio­n here, I wasn’t too happy with my race. It didn’t go according to plan but I am happy with the medal and to get this experience.”

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