Posts tagged ‘Swimming’

Photos: China’s Liu wins Women’s 200m Butterfly in world record time

Updated: 2008-08-14 12:02:49

Photos: China's Liu wins Women's 200m Butterfly in world record time
Liu Zige of China competes. (Photo credit: Fan Jun/Xinhua)

The Women’s 200m Butterfly final at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games took place in the National Aquatics Center, also known as the Water Cube, in Beijing, China, on August 14, 2008. Liu Zige of China won the gold medal with a new world record of 2 minutes 04.18 seconds. Fellow Chinese Jiao Liuyang took silver in 2:04.72 and Australia’s Jessicah Schipper grabbed the bronze in 2:06.26.

Photos: China's Liu wins Women's 200m Butterfly in world record time
Liu Zige of China reacts. (Photo credit: Fei Maohua Xinhua)Photos: China's Liu wins Women's 200m Butterfly in world record time
Liu Zige (L) of China receives congratulations from Jessicah Schipper. (Photo credit: Fei Maohua Xinhua)Photos: China's Liu wins Women's 200m Butterfly in world record time
Liu Zige of China poses with the gold medal. (Photo credit: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)

Women’s 200m Butterfly: Liu wins China’s first pool gold

Updated: 2008-08-14 11:50:48

Women's 200m Butterfly: Liu wins China's first pool gold
Gold medalist Liu Zige racing in the pool (Photo credit: Xinhua)

(BEIJING, August 14) — Liu Zige of China thrilled the home crowd at the National Aquatics Center with China’s first Swimming gold medal at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, winning the Women’s 200m Butterfly in a world record 2:04.18.

Women's 200m Butterfly: Liu wins China's first pool gold
Liu Zige smiles after winning gold in 200m Butterfly (Photo credit: Xinhua)

Liu, who had qualified fastest for the final in an Asian record of 2:06.25, lowered the old world mark by 1.22 seconds.

It was a double celebration for the home crowd, who has seen plenty of Chinese success in Diving but little in the Swimming pool, as Jiao Liuyang finished behind her teammate to take the silver medal. Her time of 2:04.72 was also under the old world record mark.

Former world record holder Jessicah Schipper of Australia, who recovered from a poor heat swim to qualify second fastest for the final, took the Chinese pair out hard and early and was 1.12 seconds under her own world mark at the 100m.

But she tired in the second half of the race and was overtaken in the final 50m, having to make do with the bronze medal in a time of 2:06.26.

Defending Olympic champion Otylia Jedrzejczak of Poland finished fourth in 2:07.02.

Men’s 200m Breaststroke: Kitajima wins second Beijing gold

Updated: 2008-08-14 11:08:28

Men's 200m Breaststroke: Kitajima wins second Beijing gold
Kitajima competes. (Photo credit: Fei Maohua/Xinhua)

(BEIJING, August 14) — World and defending Olympic champion Kitajima Kosuke of Japan led all the way to take gold in the Men’s 200m Breaststroke at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games in an Olympic record 2:07.64.

Thursday’s Olympic title was Kitajima’s second from the National Aquatics Center after he took the 100m Breaststroke title on Monday in world record time and matched his 2004 Athens Olympic Games performance of gold in both Breaststroke events.

Australia’s Brenton Rickard, who was sluggish in the heats, came out strongly to stay with Kitajima in second for the entire race, touching for the silver medal and an Oceania Record in a time of 2:08.88.

The man who took bronze in the 100m Breaststroke on Monday, Hugues Duboscq of France, took bronze again finishing 0.06 seconds behind Rickard of 2:08.94

Kitajima’s title defense was made somewhat easier in July when his long-time rival in the breaststroke events, American Brenden Hansen surprisingly failed to qualify for the 200m Breaststroke at the US Olympic Swimming Trials.

Kitajima, who qualified fastest for the final, was 0.14 seconds under world record at the 100m. He extended this and at the flip was 0.19 seconds under the world record but tired in the last 50m.

Men's 200m Breaststroke: Kitajima wins second Beijing gold
Kitajima Kosuke celebrates. (Photo credit: Chen Kai/Xinhua)Men's 200m Breaststroke: Kitajima wins second Beijing gold
Kitajima Kosuke poses with the gold medal. (Photo credit: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)

Photos: Japan’s Kitajima wins Men’s 200m Breaststroke

Updated: 2008-08-14 10:54:36

Photos: Japan's Kitajima wins Men's 200m Breaststroke
Kitajima Kosuke poses with the gold medal. (Photo credit: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)

The Men’s 200m Breaststroke final took place at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games in the National Aquatics Center, also known as the Water Cube, in Beijing, China, on August 14, 2008. Kitajima Kosuke of Japan set a new Olympic record and won the gold medal in the event with 2 minutes 7.64 seconds. Australian Brenton Rickard got the silver in 2:08.88 and French Hugues Duboscq finished third in 2:08.94.

Photos: Japan's Kitajima wins Men's 200m Breaststroke
Kitajima Kosuke swims. (Photo credit: Al Bello/Getty Images)Photos: Japan's Kitajima wins Men's 200m Breaststroke
Kitajima Kosuke competes. (Photo credit: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)Photos: Japan's Kitajima wins Men's 200m Breaststroke
Kitajima Kosuke celebrates. (Photo credit: Chen Kai/Xinhua)

Swimming Day 6 Preview: Sullivan duels Bernard, US women defend Athens gold

Updated: 2008-08-14 02:04:27

(BEIJING, August 12) — The blue ribbon event of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games will be decided on Thursday when Eamon Sullivan of Australia competes with other fast men, excluding Michael Phelps, for gold in the Men’s 100m Freestyle final.

Finals:

Eamon Sullivan will participate in the Men’s 100m Freestyle final at 10:49 a.m. (UTC/GMT 8), carrying on his tug-of-war for world records with Alain Bernard of France. The two broke the WR in turns in the 100m Freestyle semis, and Sullivan wound it up with an even quicker time. Tomorrow’s race will reveal which of the two will have the final edge over the other.

The Women’s 200m Butterfly semis saw China’s Liu Zige and Jiao Liuyang ascend to the top three, together with veteran Jessicah Schipper (AUS), who is also the world record holder. If the semifinal results are any indication of how tomorrow morning’s final will go, the home crowd will go wild with celebration.

In the Men’s 200m Breaststroke final, Kitajima Kosuke might dominate the pool again just as he did in the 100m Breaststroke on August 11, grabbing gold and setting a new WR. He qualified the fastest in the semis and is up for a second gold in Breaststroke. Mike Andrew Brown of Canada and Scott Spann of the United States might pose a threat though.

The Women’s 4 x 200m Freestyle Relay will be held later in the morning. France has placed ahead of the United States to top the qualifiers. Whether the US girls will shine as brightly as their male counterparts is still unknown, since France will likely aim for more than just a silver medal. The US women are, however, anticipated to add at least one more gold to their swimming medal chart. Meanwhile, Italy, China and Sweden are in competition for bronze.

Semifinals:

The Women’s 100m Freestyle semis will be held early in the morning. In the prelims Hanna-Maria Seppala (FIN) and Britta Steffen (GER) swam neck-and-neck, an early sign that the semis will see an even fiercer battle.

Ryan Lochte of the United States topped the Men’s 200m Backstroke heats almost two seconds slower than the WR he set himself in Melbourne Worlds, followed by Aaron Peirsol (USA) and Markus Rogan (AUT), who were also saving their energy for tomorrow’s semis. All three veterans are medal hopefuls.

The Women’s 200m Breaststroke semis await Leisel Jones(AUS), who championed the 100m Breaststroke Wednesday and qualified later in the evening for the 200m Breaststroke. She maintains the WR of the 200m Breaststroke, though she faces competition from Rebecca Soni, who topped the prelims breaking the OR. The clawing for gold might play out after their semifinal duel.

The Men’s 200m Individual Medley semis welcome Michael Phelps, who has already grabbed five of the eight gold medals he is eyeing at these Games. Laszlo Cseh from Hungary and Ryan Lochte are also swimmers to watch. Sixteen qualifiers will fight for the eight final berths.

Heats:

After the morning duel Sullivan will take to the pool as the favorite for the Men’s 50m Freestyle, with big-time rivals Garrett Weber-Gale (USA) and Frenchman Amaury Leveaux out to push the 22-year-old hard.

In the Women’s 800m Freestyle heats, Rebecca Adlington of Great Britain and Katie Hoff of the United States will go into the race with the 1989 world record (8:16.22) under serious threat.

US swimming stars Michael Phelps and Ian Crocker will go head-to-head in the Men’s 100m Butterfly in a key event that could derail Phelps from his quest for a clean sweep of the medals. As the current world and defending Olympic champion, Phelps is favored to take the event, though Crocker still holds the world record (50.40), which he set in 2005.

Margaret Hoelzer of the United States will need to see off Kristy Coventry of Zimbabwe and Laure Manaudou of France if she plans to take the gold medal in the Women’s 200m Backstroke.

Swimming Day 5 Review: Phelps makes history with 11 career Olympic gold medals

Updated: 2008-08-13 22:13:04

Swimming Day 5 Review: Phelps makes history with 11 career Olympic gold medals
Michael Phelps poses with the gold medal (Photo credit: Adam Pretty/Getty Images)

(BEIJING, August 13) — After cruising to a world record win in the Men’s 200m Butterfly on Wednesday morning, US swimming powerhouse Michael Phelps became the greatest Olympian of all time, with 10 Olympic gold medals under his belt.

Just an hour later, one more gold was added to Phelps’s huge medal collection, as his teammate Peter Vanderkaay touched the final wall over four seconds ahead of the previous world record in the Men’s 200m Freestyle Relay. After a day’s rest, Phelps will continue his eight-gold quest at the Water Cube.

Another two gold medals and three world records were generated at the Water Cube on Wednesday morning.

In the Women’s 200m Freestyle final, Italy’s Federica Pellegrini finally claimed her first gold in Beijing after smashing a world record (for the Women’s 200m Freestyle) and an Olympic record (for the Women’s 400m Freestyle) in the evening prelims. Her time of 1:54.82 is also a new world record.

In the Women’s 200m Individual Medley, Stephanie Rice of Australia grabbed her second gold with a world record time of 2:08.45, and Zimbabwean Kirsty Coventry (2:08.59) touched in second to take her third silver.

Alain Bernard of France broke the world record of 47.24 set by Australian Eamon Sullivan on Monday in the first heat of the Men’s 100m Freestyle semifinals, but only to have Sullivan claim it back two minutes later in the following heat with a time of 47.05.

Soni breaks OR in Women’s 200m Breaststroke

Updated: 2008-08-13 20:15:36

(BEIJING, August 13) — Rebecca Soni of the United States broke the Olympic record in the Women’s 200m Breaststroke with a time of 2:22.17 at the National Aquatics Center on Wednesday, August 13. The former Olympic record of 2:23.37 was set by Amanda Beard of the United States at the 2004 Athens Games.