The Columbus Dispatch

Manuel’s golden run continues at worlds

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BUDAPEST, Hungary — Simone Manuel felt the pressure of being an Olympic champion. It sure didn’t bother her at the world championsh­ips.

The 20-year-old Texan backed up her historic victory in Rio de Janeiro by rallying to beat Sweden’s world-record holder Sarah Sjostrom in the 100-meter freestyle Friday.

Hey, when you’ve got two older brothers, you’re used to playing catch-up.

“It’s kind of been ingrained in me,” said Manuel, who edged Sjostrom on the final stroke. “I want to win, and I’ve been training to do that this whole time.”

Last summer, Manuel became the first AfricanAme­rican woman to win an individual swimming gold at the Olympics when she tied Canada’s Penny Oleksiak for the top spot on the podium.

“It was a lot of pressure knowing that I was the Olympic gold medalist in that event,” Manuel said. “I had a lot of nerves.”

Manuel touched in 52.27 seconds — edging Sjostrom by four-hundredths of a second.

Pernille Blume of Denmark picked up the bronze.

Manuel claimed her third gold of this meet, having also competed on a pair of winning relay teams, and she’s still got the 50 free.

Another U.S. Olympic champion came up short in his bid for an individual gold.

Ryan Murphy settled for silver in the 200 backstroke behind Russia’s Evgeny Rylov, while another American, Jacob Pebley, took the bronze.

Murphy swept the backstroke events last summer in Rio, but he hasn’t been quite as sharp in Budapest. He took bronze in the 100 and couldn’t catch Rylov in the longer event, the Russian finishing in 1:53.61 to beat Murphy by a comfortabl­e 0.60 seconds.

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