The Olympic champion Adam Peaty claimed an expected title before proving the inspiration for his Great Britain
Anthony Castonzo Womens Jersey team-mate Ben Proud to secure a surprise gold medal at the world championships in Budapest on Monday night.
Peaty bettered his own championship record to finish in 57.47sec but his own world record of 57.13, set last August in winning Olympic gold in Rio, was beyond him.
Moments after Peaty had received his second successive 100m breaststroke world title Proud won the 50m butterfly. Proud had qualified fourth fastest but built on a superb start to touch the wall first in 22.75sec.
Peaty was 1.32sec clear of the field and was happy with his performance after a first length
http://www.indianapoliscoltsauthorizedstore.com/adam-vinatieri-jersey which was 0.11sec under world record pace. “The way I swam it is very encouraging for me for the future,” he said.
Proud and Peaty are both 22 and both won gold medals at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. It has taken the Plymouth swimmer a little longer to take a global title, in his third world championships, but he paid tribute to his trailblazing team-mate.
“He has really taken Britain a step forwards,” Proud said. “It’s made it easier for that next person to go up and win gold. We saw it two years ago with James Guy. Britain’s a force to be reckoned with right now.”
Guy won the 200m freestyle title in Kazan, Russia in 2015 and qualified second-fastest in defence of his title. Fastest was his team-mate Duncan Scott.
Peaty won Britain’s first gold medal of the Rio Olympics, 1.5sec ahead of his nearest rival. But the 22-year-old Uttoxeter swimmer is determined to build on that performance. His long-term goal is ‘Project 56’, clocking under 57sec, and another gold at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics. Peaty clocked 56.59sec in claiming medley relay silver in Rio, but relay takeovers result in faster times.
So brilliant has Peaty been in recent years that a world record is expected of him whenever he steps on to the starting block. Yet he was thrilled to win by a handsome margin from Kevin Cordes of the United States, who finished in 58.79sec. Bronze went to Kirill
Adrian Wilson Authentic Jersey Prigoda of Russia in 59.05, while Britain’s Ross Murdoch was eighth in 59.45.
“I went out there with a lot of guts tonight,” said Peaty, who is now hoping to win the 50m breaststroke title he claimed in 2015 as well. “It’s not the time, it’s the way I did it. If you want to go 56, you’re going to have to do stuff you’ve never done before and I was out in a 26.5 – that was very, very easy. It’s great to find areas where I can improve and that was the turn tonight.”
Proud won the non-Olympic 50m butterfly by 0.04sec ahead of Nicholas Santos of Brazil, who finished in 22.79sec, with Ukraine’s Andrii Govorov taking bronze in 22.84. Proud said: “As soon as I nailed that start I let my body take over and switched my mind off. And it took me a while to realise I’d won.
“I was waiting for somebody else to start
http://www.arizonacardinalsauthorizedstore.com/ celebrating. And as no one did I looked at the scoreboard and saw my name was on top. This is something I’ve dreamt of ever since I started swimming. I was never going to give up on that dream. I was going to keep going until my mid-30s until I was the 50 fly world champion. For it to happen in my third world champs is a true blessing.”
There was disappointment for Siobhan O’Connor, the Olympic silver medallist, as she had to settle for seventh behind the home favourite Katinka Hosszu in the 200m individual medley. The Olympic champion Hosszu was roared on by a partisan crowd to win in 2min 07.00sec. O’Connor finished in 2:10.41.
Sarah Vasey and Kathleen Dawson advanced to the 100m breaststroke and 100m backstroke
finals, respectively, in eighth place.
Guy and Scott will be optimistic of adding to Britain’s medal tally on Tuesday. Guy won the first 200m freestyle semi-final in 1min 45.18sec and Scott won the second in 1:45.16, ahead of the Olympic champion, Sun Yang of China.