Gulf News

SOUTH AFRICAN FADES TO FINISH SEVENTH IN 200M AFTER TAKING GOLD IN BUTTERFLY

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Chad Le Clos won the 50-metre butterfly for South Africa, did a victory lap on the pool deck and was back in the water within minutes leading halfway through the 200m freestyle final.

It was pretty much Australia’s night after that yesterday in the Commonweal­th Games pool.

Lactic acid kicked in and Le Clos ran out of steam, fading to finish seventh after the Australian pair of Kyle Chalmers and Mack Horton overhauled him over the last two laps to take gold and silver. “I’m very happy with the 50m. The 200m, not so much,” said Le Clos, who came to the Gold Coast hoping to set a record for most career medals in the Commonweal­th Games. “I went hard early, try to kill the race if I could, then hang on.

“The turnaround was tougher than I expected. When I saw Kyle coming past I was like, ‘aghh,” he joked, “I nearly grabbed his leg.”

Chalmers, the Olympic 100m freestyle champion who missed the world championsh­ips last year to undergo heart surgery for a for a non-life-threatenin­g condition, powered home to hold off Olympic 400m gold medallist Horton.

That kicked off a run of gold medals for the Aussies, with Clyde Lewis holding off Scotland’s Mark Szaranek and New Zealand’s Lewis Clareburt to ■ win the 400 medley, Mitch Larkin winning the 100m backstroke, Emma McKeon leading a sweep of medals in the women’s 100 backstroke in a games record 56.78 seconds.

Chalmers capped the night when he anchored the home team to a dominant victory in the 4x100 freestyle relay, the sixth Australian gold of Day 2 in the pool.

Le Clos hadn’t won any kind of 50m title in an Olympic-size pool, so he was content with his opening victory despite the absence of world champion Ben Proud of England, who was disqualifi­ed in the preliminar­ies.

Record career haul

He entered the Gold Coast games chasing seven medals in a bid to surpass the Commonweal­th Games record career haul of 18. After missing out in the 200, he revised his target down to equal the mark.

Le Clos swam the second leg of the relay but his South Africa team finished out of the medals, meaning his bid to set the record will have to wait until 2022. He has 13 to date.

Chalmers knew Le Clos would go out hard in the 200m, so he settled early and then made up five places over the last two laps to win in 1 minute, 45.56 seconds for his first Commonweal­th Games title. He was 0.33 ahead of teammate Mack Horton, who won the 400 free the previous night. Scott Duncan of Scotland took bronze.

S9 6 4 4 1 0 0 3 2 0

B13 3 5 4 1 1 0 3 0 0

T36 18 11 10 4 3 2 7 3 1

“The third 50 felt pretty strong, and I knew I had a bit to give in that last 50,” he said. “It’s awesome to go 1-2 with one of my best mates.”

Le Clos won the 50m fly in 23.37 seconds, beating Dylan Carter of Trinidad and Tobago and fellow South African Ryan Coetzee to open the night programme. His victory ceremony for that followed Sarah Vasey’s win in the women’s 50-meter breaststro­ke in the very next race, and didn’t give him much time to prepare for the freestyle.

Vasey’s win in 30.60 seconds gave England its fifth gold medal in the pool and Alia Atkinson of Jamaica picked up silver for the second straight Commonweal­th Games. Australia’s Leiston Picket, who entered as the two-time defending champion, finished third.

The second-night surge gave Australia the lead in the pool with eight gold, seven silver and seven bronze.

 ?? AP ?? South Africa’s Chad Le Clos competes in the men’s 50m butterfly final at the Aquatic Centre during the Commonweal­th Games on the Gold Coast yesterday.
AP South Africa’s Chad Le Clos competes in the men’s 50m butterfly final at the Aquatic Centre during the Commonweal­th Games on the Gold Coast yesterday.

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