Phelps wins 22nd Olympic gold

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Phelps wins 22nd Olympic gold

Rio de Janeiro, Aug 12 (IANS) Michael Phelps became the first swimmer to win the same event at four consecutive Olympics when he claimed the gold medal in the men’s 200m individual medley at the Rio Games.

Phelps finished the final in 1 minute 54.66 seconds on Thursday, almost two seconds ahead of Japan’s Kosuke Hagino at the Olympic Aquatics Stadium. China’s Wang Shun took bronze in 1:57.05, reports Xinhua.

While the landmark is a swimming first, two other athletes have achieved the feat in other Olympic sports: Al Oerter in discuss and Carl Lewis in long jump.

Phelps could also perform the so-called four-peat in the 100m butterfly here.

Thursday’s victory was Phelps’ 22nd Olympic gold medal as he continues to extend his record as the most successful Olympian of all time.

The 31-year-old has now won each of his four finals in Rio so far: the 200m butterfly, the 4x100m freestyle, the 4x200m freestyle and the 200m individual medley.

On Friday, he will compete in the final of the 100m butterfly and he is expected to also take part in the 4x100m medley relay.

High drama in Olympic pool as Phelps makes history again (Lead)

Rio de Janeiro, Aug 12 (IANS) It was a night of high drama at Rio’s Olympic Aquatics Stadium on Thursday with a new Michael Phelps record, a dead heat and Canada’s first gold medal of these Games.

Phelps became the first swimmer to win the same event at four consecutive Olympics when he claimed the gold medal in the men’s 200m individual medley, reports Xinhua.

The American finished the final in 1 minute 54.66 seconds, almost two seconds ahead of Japan’s Kosuke Hagino. China’s Wang Shun took bronze in 1:57.05.

While the landmark is a swimming first, two other athletes have achieved the feat in other Olympic sports: Al Oerter in discuss and Carl Lewis in long jump.

Phelps could also perform the so-called four-peat in the 100m butterfly here.

Thursday’s victory was Phelps’ 22nd Olympic gold medal as he continues to extend his record as the most successful Olympian of all time.

The 31-year-old has now won each of his four finals in Rio so far: the 200m butterfly, the 4x100m freestyle, the 4x200m freestyle and the 200m individual medley.

On Friday, he will compete in the final of the 100m butterfly and he is expected to also take part in the 4x100m medley relay.

He backed up his win on Thursday by returning to the pool half an hour later for the semifinals of the 100m butterfly, in which he qualified fifth for the final. Singapore’s Joseph Schooling was fastest in 50.83 seconds.

Thursday’s dead heat came in the women’s 100m freestyle final, in which US swimmer Simone Manuel and Canada’s Penny Oleksiak both finished in an Olympic record of 52.70 seconds. Sweden’s Sarah Sjostrom took the bronze medal in 52.99.

Australia’s Bronte Campbell, who qualified fastest for the final and set a world record in the event last month, was fourth in 53.02 seconds.

It was Canada’s first gold medal of these Games and the US’ 16th, 11 of them coming in the pool.

Oleksiak has also claimed silver in the 100m butterfly and bronze in the 4x100m freestyle and 4x200m freestyle here.

Earlier, the USA’s Ryan Murphy grabbed his second gold medal in Rio by winning the men’s 200m backstroke final.

Murphy hit the wall in 1 minute 53.62 seconds, 0.34sec ahead of Australia’s Mitchell Larkin. Russia’s Evgeny Rylov was third in 1:53.97. Murphy also won the men’s 100m backstroke final on Monday.

His time fell narrowly short of the Olympic record of 1:53.41 set by the USA’s Tyler Clary at the London 2012 Games.

Rie Kaneto claimed Japan’s second swimming gold medal of the Rio Olympics by winning the women’s 200m breaststroke final.

Kaneto finished in 2 minutes 20.30 seconds, beating Russia’s Yulia Efimova by 1.67 seconds. China’s Shi Jinglin took bronze in 2:22.28.

World record holder Rikke Moller Pedersen of Denmark was last, 3.44 seconds behind Kaneto.

Japan’s other triumph in Rio’s pool came on Saturday when Kosuke Hagino won the men’s 400m individual medley.

Meanwhile Hungary’s Katinka Hosszu qualified fastest for the women’s 200m backstroke final on Friday with a time of 2:06.03. Canada’s Hilary Caldwell was second, 1.14sec behind, and the USA’s Maya Dirado third, 1.5sec further back.

In the 50m freestyle semi-finals, France’s Florent Manaudou touched the wall first in 21.32, 0.14 seconds ahead of both Andrii Govorov of Ukraine and the US’ Anthony Ervin.


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