Journal De Bruxelles - Walsh, Smith and Hobson continue American record binge at short-course worlds

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Walsh, Smith and Hobson continue American record binge at short-course worlds
Walsh, Smith and Hobson continue American record binge at short-course worlds / Photo: Ferenc ISZA - AFP

Walsh, Smith and Hobson continue American record binge at short-course worlds

Gretchen Walsh set two more world records Sunday on the final evening of competition to take her tally to 10 at the short-course swimming World Championships in Budapest.

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She opened the evening with a world record in the 50 metre freestyle and ended it as part of the American 4 x 100m medley team alongside two more swimmers who set multiple records during the week: Regan Smith, who also set an individual world record leading off in the backstroke leg, and Kate Douglass.

Smith had earlier set another world record as she won the 200m backstroke.

Luke Hobson set his second world record of the week in the men's 200m free.

Four Russians, swimming as "Neutral Athletes", closed the competition by breaking the men's 100m medley relay record.

Walsh, a 21-year-old American collected her sixth gold of the week when she won 50m freestyle in 22.83 seconds to shave 0.04sec off the record she set in Saturday's semifinals.

"I'm just happy to prove to myself that I'm capable of doing stuff like this. I've just had a really great week," said Walsh after the race.

She won her seventh gold when the American women, with Lilly King swimming breaststroke, won their relay in 3 minutes 40.41 seconds, almost four seconds inside the world record of 3:44.35 set by an American quartet that included King and Douglass in Melbourne in 2022.

The six records took the tally in six days of competition to 30. Each record brings a 25,000 dollar (23,800 euro) bonus cheque from World Aquatics. Walsh has been cleaning up - although two records were in relay teams.

Smith, who broke the 50m backstroke record on Friday, edged Canadian Summer McIntosh, who has set three world records in Budapest, in the women's 200m backstroke.

Smith won in 1:58.04, to break the record she set in November by 0.80. She completed the sweep of backstroke events in Budapest by finishing 1.91 ahead of McIntosh, racing backstroke for the first time at a major competition.

"I was aiming for that world record tonight," Smith said. "If I need to pick my favourite event, I'd choose this one."

Home swimmer Hubert Kos won the men's 200m backstroke.

Hobson took 0.30 off the record he set on Friday leading off the American 4 x 200m freestyle relay when he won the individual event in 1:38.61.

The Russian quartet won the men's medley relay in 3:18.68 to beat the old mark of 3:18.98 set by Australia in 2022.

Jordan Crooks was unable to improve on the 50m free record he set twice on Saturday, in the heats and then, with a time of 19.90, in the semis, but the Cayman Islander still collected gold in 20.19.

Lithuanian Ruta Meilutyte continued her late-career renaissance with victory in the women's 50m breaststroke.

Qin Haiyang rebounded from a disappointing Olympics under the shadow of a doping controversy that engulfed the Chinese team in Paris, to win the men's breaststroke sprint.

Siobhan Haughey of Hong Kong won her third women's 200m freestyle short-course world title.

The Americans topped the medal table with 18 golds and 39 total medals. The Neutral Athletes were a distant second with six golds for 10 in total.

W.Lievens--JdB