Gulf Today

Peaty shakes off ‘cobwebs’ in style, Seto misses 400 medley final

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TOKYO: Adam Peaty said he was just shaking off the cobwebs, and felt weird without fans watching, but he still won his Olympic 100m breaststro­ke heat on Saturday with a time faster than any other man has ever swum as Japanese world champion Daiya Seto failed to make the 400m medley final.

The world and Olympic champion’s time of 57.56 seconds, while way off his world record 56.88, meant he now has the top 16 fastest swims of all time in the event - and he has yet to shave his moustache.

The only other man to have broken the 58 seconds barrier is Dutch rival Arno Kamminga, second fastest on Saturday with a career best 57.80.

It is a measure of Peaty’s dominance and status as an absolute gold medal certainty that it was almost alarming that he was not further ahead than the 0.24 that separated him from Kamminga.

There is however, no doubt that Britain’s best bet for gold has a lot more in the tank.

“Heats are heats. I always have cobwebs - it’s prety much the exact same time I did in Rio - and I always build on that. We will just see where we go from here,” said Peaty.

“It is weird with no crowd. Really weird. But those are the psychologi­cal things we have to adapt to. I’m glad the cobwebs are out now.”

To put his performanc­e into perspectiv­e, the world record before the Rio de Janeiro 2016 Games was 57.92 - a mark also held by Peaty at the time.

He smashed that twice in Brazil, starting with a 57.55 in the heats - just 0.01 quicker than Saturday - and then a 57.13 in the final.

It would be no surprise if the Briton manages something truly phenomenal by the time the medals are handed out in Tokyo. Seto badly misjudged his swim to crash out, shatering Japanese hopes of a gold medal on Sunday.

The Rio bronze medallist and world champion, who has had a tumultuous year, resigning as captain of their swim team ater an extramarit­al affair, was leading his heat through 300m.

But he eased up and was hauled in by Australian Brendon Smith who qualified fastest in 4:09.27 ahead of New Zealand’s Lewis Clareburt.

Seto faded to fith and ninth overall and admitted he misread the situation.

“It was a bit shaky off the start for some reason, I was gripping it a bit too hard,” said Peaty.

“There are a lot of variables when it comes to the Olympics, and it is about trying to control as many as you can. But some you can’t control. It was very hot, but that is how we adapt into the semis and that is how we adapt into the final.”

Kamminga said he knew he was in good shape and was ready to go faster.

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