Orlando Sentinel

UF’s Dressel wins record 3 golds

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BUDAPEST, Hungary — Caeleb Dressel knows the comparison­s are coming.

After pulling off an unpreceden­ted Triple Crown at swimming’s world championsh­ips, it’s time to take on the legacy of Michael Phelps.

The 20-year-old Dressel establishe­d himself as America’s newest star of the pool Saturday, becoming the first swimmer to win three gold medals on a single night at either the worlds or the Olympics.

Not even Phelps managed such an audacious feat.

“The comparison­s are probably inevitable,” Dressel said. “But I’m not the same person as Michael.”

Yet it was downright Phelps-like the way he pulled off a remarkable night of swimming at Duna Arena. Dressel raced three times over the course of about two hours — and won every time. Not to mention, he had to find time to warm down and get to three medal ceremonies.

“I think I only had to run twice,” Dressel said with a smile.

The University of Florida student — yep, he’s got an algebra exam coming up Monday that he’ll be taking online — has won six golds medals in Budapest.

That gives him a shot at moving into more rarified territory: Phelps is the only swimmer to win seven golds at a world championsh­ips, which he did at Melbourne in 2007 as a prelude to his record eight golds the following year at the Beijing Olympics.

Dressel will be a virtual lock to win his seventh when he competes on the 4x100 medley relay today, the final event of the championsh­ips.

Phelps was certainly impressed.

He texted his congratula­tions shortly after Dressel led off a world-record performanc­e in the 4x100-meter mixed freestyle relay, capping a night that also included victories in the 50 free and the 100 butterfly.

“This kid is on fire!!” Phelps wrote on Instagram, including a picture of him celebratin­g with Dressel during a gold medal-winning relay they were both on last summer at the Rio Olympics. “So damn fun to watch buddy !!!! ”

Dressel started the night with a furious dash from one end of the pool to the other, adding the 50 free world title to the 100 free he already had. He came back about a half-hour later to nearly break Phelps’ world record in the 100 fly, posting a time of 49.86 that was just four-hundredths off the mark set in 2009 at the rubber suit-aided championsh­ips in Rome.

The final relay was merely a coronation, the Americans romping to gold in 3 minutes, 19.60 seconds — eclipsing by nearly 3 seconds the mark they set two years ago at worlds.

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