O’Callaghan breaks world record as Marchand wins another gold

Published July 27, 2023
MOLLIE O’Callaghan (top) of Australia competes in the women’s 200m freestyle final of the World Aquatics Championships at the Marine Messe Fukuoka Hall ‘A’ on Wednesday. —AFP
MOLLIE O’Callaghan (top) of Australia competes in the women’s 200m freestyle final of the World Aquatics Championships at the Marine Messe Fukuoka Hall ‘A’ on Wednesday. —AFP

FUKUOKA: Australia’s Mollie O’Callaghan said she was “a wreck” after breaking the women’s 200m freestyle world record at swimming’s world championships on Wednesday while French superstar Leon Marchand claimed more gold.

O’Callaghan beat Olympic champion Ariarne Titmus and Canada’s Summer McIntosh to touch the wall in 1min, 52.85sec in Fukuoka, breaking a world record that had stood since 2009.

The 19-year-old dislocated her knee five weeks before the championships in Fukuoka and said she was “really shook” to break the record.

“I couldn’t really explain it in the moment,” said O’Callaghan, who had fired a warning shot when she beat Titmus over 200m at the Australian trials last month. “There were tears, there was happiness. It was very mixed emotions.”

There was more glory for Marchand, who added the 200m butterfly title to the 400m individual medley gold he won in record-breaking time on the opening day.

Tunisia’s Ahmed Hafnaoui took revenge on Australia’s Sam Short to win the men’s 800m freestyle, while China’s Qin Haiyang picked up his second gold in the men’s 50m breaststroke.

O’Callaghan came out on top after another epic women’s freestyle battle.

Titmus was looking to grab her second gold of the championships after winning the 400m in a world record time on the opening night.

She led for most of the race but O’Callaghan turned on the afterburners over the home straight to reel her in.

Her time beat the world record of 1:52.98 set by Italian Federica Pellegrini at the 2009 world championships.

“Heading into this, I just really wanted to have fun and enjoy it and try my best and try some new race plans,” said O’Callaghan.

“To come out with a world record was really unexpected for me.”

Titmus finished second on 1:53.01, ahead of McIntosh on 1:53.65.

Marchand made headlines on Sunday when he beat Michael Phelps’s legendary 400m IM world record, a mark that had stood since the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

He picked up his second title in the 200m butterfly, coming home in 1min, 52.43sec, ahead of Poland’s Krzysztof Chmie­lewski on 1:53.62 and Japan’s Tomoru Honda on 1:53.66.

Marchand was back in action just 40 minutes later, qualifying from the 200m individual medley with the fastest time.

Hafnaoui came off second best to Short in the 400m freestyle final on Sunday, an event in which the Tunisian is the reigning Olympic champion.

He got the better of his Australian rival in the 800m final, coming home in 7min, 37.00sec, ahead of Short on 7:37.76 and American Bobby Finke on 7:38.67.

Hafnaoui, Short and Germany’s Lukas Martens were neck-and-neck for almost the entire race until Hafnaoui edged ahead at the last.

“It’s too much adrenaline when you see all these guys next to you battling for the gold,” he said.

China endured a championships to forget last year in Budapest, picking up only one individual swimming gold medal.

Qin gave the Chinese team their third title so far in the 50m breaststroke, and his second individual gold of the competition.

He finished in a time of 26.29sec, ahead of American Nic Fink on 26.59 and China’s Sun Jiajun on 26.79.

Published in Dawn, July 27th, 2023

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