The Herald (South Africa)

Dressel emerges from Phelps’s shadow at champs

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WITH Michael Phelps back in retirement, Caeleb Dressel stepped out of his idol’s shadow to match the US legend’s tally of seven golds at the world championsh­ips in Budapest.

Dressel became the first swimmer to win three world gold medals in one session on Saturday, then claimed his seventh of the week in the men’s 4x100m medley relay on Sunday to match Phelps’s record tally from the 2007 world championsh­ips.

Dressel’s tally includes three individual titles in the 50m, 100m freestyle and 100m butterfly, plus four relay golds in the 4x100m freestyle, 4x100m mixed freestyle, 4x100m mixed medley and Sunday’s 4x100m medley.

It put him level with US legends like Phelps, Ryan Lochte, who won five worlds golds in 2011, and Mark Spitz, who won seven golds at the 1972 Olympics in Munich.

Dressel’s feat -- especially his jaw-dropping treble of golds over 98 minutes on Saturday night -- is all the more remarkable given that he was virtually unheard of, even in the swimming community, before these Budapest championsh­ips.

“I don’t even know if he went to the Olympics last year? He has definitely taken a really big step this year,” Sweden’s sprint queen Sarah Sjostrom said.

Dressel’s performanc­es have been the icing on the cake for the USA, who finished with 38 swimming medals in Budapest -- over five times more than nearest rivals Britain, who have seven.

Katie Ledecky also made history in Budapest as she finished with 14 world golds in her career to eclipse Missy Franklin, who has 11, as the most decorated female in championsh­ips history.

The 20-year-old freestyle queen won five golds, but by her own admission the medal which stood out was her silver in the 200m freestyle -- her first defeat in 15 finals at a worlds, spanning three championsh­ips.

“That will light some fire under me for the next couple of years,” Ledecky said after losing to Italy’s Federica Pellegrini over 200m.

Sjostrom underlined her status as the world’s best sprinter with freestyle world records over 50m and 100m.

Sjostrom also set a new world record in the semifinals of the 50m freestyle with a time of 23.67sec.

She claimed two of the seven individual world records which fell at these world championsh­ips.

British lionheart Adam Peaty claimed two in one day when he smashed his own 50m breaststro­ke in last Tuesday’s heats and then again in the evening’s semifinals when he became the first swimmer to go under 26 seconds.

The 22-year-old was peerless as he defended his 50m and 100m titles, but by his own admission, his thirst for world records is relentless.

Olympic champion Lilly King took both the 50m and 100m breaststro­ke world records set by Ruta Meilutyte in 2013.

Canada’s Kylie Masse set a new world record in the women’s 100m backstroke of 58.10m. It was one of four records which fell on Tuesday last week alone.

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CAELEB DRESSEL

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