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Today's Paper | September 22, 2024

Published 17 Feb, 2024 06:49am

World record holder Pan takes 100m freestyle gold

DOHA: China’s Pan Zhanle backed up his men’s 100 metres freestyle world record by winning the world title in Doha on Thursday in a warning to rivals for the Paris Olympics gold medal.

The 19-year-old did not threaten the stunning 46.80 seconds mark he set with the leadoff swim in Sunday’s relay at the World Championships but 47.53 was enough to secure his first individual world gold at the Aspire Dome pool.

He had to fight for it, though, with Italian runner-up Alessandro Miressi and Hungary’s bronze medallist Nandor Nemeth threatening to upset the Chinese favourite in a furious finish.

“I was a bit nervous because this is my first individual final at the World Championships,” Pan told reporters.

Pan was strong favourite for the blue riband title but Canadian Finlay Knox’s 200 metres individual medley gold was something of a surprise.

The United States’ Fukuoka runner-up Carson Foster had bigger claims but Knox took him down from lane seven in the final freestyle leg to win in 1:56.64, improving on his Canadian record. Italy’s Alberto Razzetti claimed bronze.

In a modest field lacking all of the Fukuoka medallists, Briton Laura Stephens won the wom­en’s 200m butterfly in 2:07.35, pipping Denmark’s Hel­ena Bach by less than a tenth of a second.

Bosnia’s 18-year-old Lana Pudar took bronze and enjoyed the biggest cheers of the night from a rowdy pocket of Bosnian fans.

American Claire Curzan continued her fruitful campai­gn by winning the non-Olympic 50m breaststroke in 27.43 seconds, pipping Aust­ralian surprise package Iona Anderson by 0.02 seconds.

Having missed out on a spot in the United States’ World Championships team to Fukuoka last July, Curzan now has four medals, including golds in the 100m backstroke and mixed medley relay.

Buoyed by Pan’s wo­rld title, China’s wo­m­en capped a successful night for the nation by claiming the 4x200m freestyle relay gold ahead of Britain and Australia.

Published in Dawn, February 17th, 2024

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