The Commercial Appeal

This 19-year-old could win USA’S first gold

- Christine Brennan Columnist

TOKYO — A scintillat­ing performanc­e in the Olympic swimming preliminar­ies Saturday night by 19-year-old American Emma Weyant in her first internatio­nal meet has put her in position to win the first gold medal of these Olympic Games for the United States, unless veteran Chase Kalisz beats her to it.

The two are America’s 400-meter individual medley stars, and while Kalisz is one of several contenders in a wide open final Sunday morning after gold-medal favorite Daiya Seto of Japan shockingly failed to qualify, Weyant swam faster than she did at last month’s Olympic trials in 4:33.55 to become the gold-medal favorite in her event.

Racing head to head with Hungary’s Katinka Hosszu in the final heat, Weyant dominated, beating the Rio triple gold medalist by nearly 2 1/2 seconds. Hosszu, 32, ended up qualifying seventh.

“I’ve looked up to her for a long time,” Weyant said. “The only other time I raced her was two years ago. I was nowhere close so this is cool.”

American Hali Flickinger also qualified for the final with the fifth fastest time.

Kalisz, 27, the 2016 Olympic silver medalist, qualified third, but the big story in the men’s 400 IM was Seto’s flameout.

“At the Rio Olympics five years ago, I went too fast (in the preliminar­ies) and didn’t have my best in the final,” said the 27-year-old Seto, who won the bronze medal behind Kalisz in Rio.

So this time he held back, hoping to keep something in reserve, but “miscalcula­ted and didn’t put everything into the race.”

Would he call it a huge mistake? He didn’t wait for the translator on that one, nodding several times.

Two young American record-holders started off well in their signature events. Torri Huske, 18, turned in the fourth-fastest time in morning preliminar­ies in a 100 butterfly field loaded with talent, while Michael Andrew, 22, was third-fastest in the prelims of the 100 breaststro­ke. Both will have their semifinals Sunday morning.

“It felt not easy but it felt relaxed,”

Huske said. “The whole thing felt really good. So I’m very excited for (Sunday’s) semis.”

Said Andrew, “I think the whole time we’ve been preparing for this, thinking it’s the biggest thing, it’s the pinnacle, which it is, but after that swim, it felt like any other 100 breast I’ve ever swum, felt like any other pool I’ve ever raced in — granted it’s a beautiful one.

“So it’s one of those things where I realize we can make it into something bigger than it is in our minds, and I don’t want to crumble under that nerves and that pressure so I’m just approachin­g it like any other swim meet. Just there’s millions of people watching.”

 ?? ROB SCHUMACHER/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? RIGHT: Chase Kalisz the 2016 Olympic silver medalist, qualified third in the men’s 400 IM.
ROB SCHUMACHER/USA TODAY NETWORK RIGHT: Chase Kalisz the 2016 Olympic silver medalist, qualified third in the men’s 400 IM.
 ?? ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Emma Weyant swam faster than she did at last month’s Olympic trials.
ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY NETWORK Emma Weyant swam faster than she did at last month’s Olympic trials.
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