The Borneo Post

Records tumble at World Swimming Championsh­ips

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BU DAPE S T : The world championsh­ips came alive on Tuesday as Lilly King of the United States won the women’s 100 metres breaststro­ke title in one of three world-record swims at the end of a breathtaki­ng evening session.

Adam Peaty of Britain continued his breaststro­ke trail-blazing with his second world mark of the day to reach the 50m final and Canada’s Kylie Masse produced a world-best time to win the women’s 100m backstroke gold medal.

There was more history too for Katie Ledecky following a routine gold in the women’s 1500m freestyle. The American claimed the 12th world title of her short career.

The evening wi l l be long remembered by Olympic champion King, who posted one minute 4.13 seconds to overhaul the worldrecor­d mark set by Lithuania’s Ruta Meilutyte in 2013.

King held off the threat of Russian rival Yuliya Efimova, in a race billed as a grudge rematch of their acrimoniou­s Olympic final, and the US secured a memorable one- two as Katie Meili touched for silver in one minute 5.03 seconds.

“That race was always going to be a showdown, an exciting dog fight,” King told reporters.

“We get a lot of rivalries like this in football, basketball, swimming where we see a lot of really nice people, being really nice,” she added. “That’s great and all but it’s not my personalit­y. I’m spunky, I’m confident and I’m not going to not be myself before a race.”

King, 2 0, has voiced her disapprova­l at Efimova being allowed to compete at global level after the Russian had twice been caught using banned substances.

The spiky relationsh­ip continued in Budapest with King celebratin­g her world record wildly and failing to make eye contact with Efimova who had to settle for bronze.

A disbelievi­ng Peaty became the first man to dip below 26 seconds in the 50m breaststro­ke a day after winning the 100m title.

That race was always going to be a showdown, an exciting dog fight. Lilly King, US swimmer

By touching in 25.95 seconds, he lowered his record mark from the morning’s heats by a massive 0.15 seconds.

“I was on such a high from this morning and it was so hard to ignore the fact that I did a world record and try to get mysel f emotionall­y ready,” Peaty told reporters.

Masse produced an outstandin­g world- record swim of 58.10 seconds as Australia’s quiet world championsh­ips continued with Emily Seebohm failing to defend her title.

Kathleen Baker of the United States, the Olympic si lver medallist, had to settle for the same prize as she beat Seebohm by 0.01 seconds.

The dominant force in women’s distance swimming is Ledecky who clocked 15 minutes 31.82 seconds to win the 1500 by 19 seconds from Spain’s Mireia Belmonte.

It was a gruelling schedule for L edecky who, 3 0 minutes later, posted the best qualifying time in the women’s 200m freestyle ahead of Italy’s Federica Pellegrini.

“I was just in a really good mental spot going into the 200 and i felt like I could treat it like any other race, kind of ignore the fact that I’d swum the mile and just get up and race,” Ledecky said.

Earlier, Sun Yang of China came back from sixth position at the 100m mark to win his first men’s 200m freestyle title at a world championsh­ips in dominant fashion.

The Chinese, who has now won two of his four individual freestyle tilts this week, powered to gold in an Asian record time of one minute 44.39 seconds. Sun’s turn of pace edged American Townley Haas into silver, 0.25 seconds behind, with Russian Aleksandr Krasnykh taking bronze. China’s Xu Jiayu held on to win men’s 100m backstroke gold.

— Reuters

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 ??  ?? US Katie Ledecky reacts after competing in the women’s 1500m freestyle final. — AFP photo
US Katie Ledecky reacts after competing in the women’s 1500m freestyle final. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Women’s 100m breaststro­ke gold medallist Lilly King (centre) of the US with (from left) compatriot Katie Meili (silver) and Yuliya Efimova of Russia (bronze). — Reuters photo
Women’s 100m breaststro­ke gold medallist Lilly King (centre) of the US with (from left) compatriot Katie Meili (silver) and Yuliya Efimova of Russia (bronze). — Reuters photo

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