Le Clos speeds to butterfly triumph
Chad le Clos torpedoed American speed king Caeleb Dressel to take the 100m butterfly crown at the world shortcourse championships in Hangzhou‚ China‚ on Thursday.
Le Clos‚ the three-time defending champion and world record-holder in this event in the 25m pool‚ went lane-tolane for the first time against Dressel‚ the man who last year took the South African’s 100m ’fly world crown in the 50m Olympic-sized pool.
But it was never close as Le Clos shot into an early lead and held his advantage throughout the four laps to touch in 48.50sec.
He was well short of the 48.08 world record he set at the last short-course showpiece in 2016‚ but he was also comfortably ahead of second-placed Dressel in 48.71.
“It was the biggest race of my short-course career. I was up against the best field by far and this was the main event of the whole week,” Le Clos said.
He admitted he had been nervous ahead of the battle.
“I was anxious because I was waiting the whole day for this‚ the whole week and the past three months because I knew this one could come.
“I really wanted to race Dressel. He is the best short-course yards swimmer and I am the best metres swimmer‚” he said‚ referring to the American system where they race shortcourse yards.
This was the ninth world short-course butterfly title of Le Clos’s career‚ making him the most prolific champion in a single stroke‚ though American Ryan Lochte won 10 shortcourse crowns in the individual medley.
The triumph also made Le Clos only the fourth man to win a world title four times in a row‚ along with Lochte and Britons James Hickman and Mark Foster.
It was also good consolation for Le Clos, who had to settle for silver in the 200m butterfly earlier in the gala.
But he acknowledged that Dressel had the additional challenge of having to recover after racing the 50m freestyle semifinals 20 minutes earlier.
The American was untouchable in that contest‚ setting the fastest time of the night‚ 20.51.
SA’s Brad Tandy‚ a 50m freestyle finalist at the Rio Olympics‚ finished third in his semifinal in 21.07 to qualify for Friday’s final seeded seventh.
Tandy was quick off the mark to ensure he was third behind winner Ben Proud of Britain (20.71) and Russian runner-up Vladimir Morozov (20.83). –