Paris Olympics: China Finishes 1-2 in Dominating Womenâs 10-Meter Diving

Hongchan Quan of China competes in the Diving Women’s 10m Platform Semifinal during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at Aquatics Centre in Paris (France), August 05, 2024.
by Dan D’Addona â Swimming World Managing Editor
06 August 2024, 09:07am
Paris Olympics: China Finishes 1-2 in Dominating Womenâs 10-Meter Diving
China continued its diving dominance at the 2024 Paris Olympics with a 1-2 finish in the womenâs 10-meter platform competition.
The gold medal went to Quan Hongchan, who finished with a score of 425.60, leading from start to finish in the competition.
Teammate Chen Yuxi took the silver medal with a score of 420.70. She was second behind Quan in the preliminaries and semifinals and was the only other diver within striking distance of the top spot.
The bronze medal at the Paris Olympics went to Koreaâs Mi Rae Kim, who used a late rise to earn the third spot. After preliminaries, she was 10th only to rise to fourth after semifinals and finish third with a score of 372.10.
Canadaâs Caeli McKey just missed out on the podium with a fourth-place finish of 364.50.
Mexicoâs Gabriella Agundez took fifth with a score or 350.40 and teammate Alejandra Orozco Loza took eighth with a 320.60, giving Mexico two in the top eight.
Great Britainâs Andrea Spendolini Sirieix took sixth with a score of 345.50 and Australiaâs Ellie Cole was seventh with a 333.30.
There were 29 divers in the field at the Olympics, which was narrowed to 18 for the semifinals, then 12 in the finals.
USAâs Delaney Schnell finished 15th (270.95) and teammate Daryn Wright took 19th, just missing the semis.
Silent Auction items needed! ISHOF asking for your help!

It is that time of the year~the ISHOF 59th Annual Honoree Induction Ceremony is around the corner! We have a GREAT class of Honorees this year, as well as a Masters Class (MISHOF) of Inductees as well. This year’s event will be October 4-5, 2024 at the Westin Fort Lauderdale Beach ~ the old Yankee Trader.
As it is the biggest fund raiser of the year for ISHOF, we are looking for SILENT AUCTION ITEMS from any and all friends and fans of ISHOF, swimming, aquatics, diving, water polo, synchronized swimming, etc. Having just watched the Olympic Games, you know what great sports we have! Help us preserve the history and celebrate the stories of these incredible athletes!!! Without your support it is just not possible! Our Hall of Fame would just not survive.
I am looking for any type of items for our silent auction, hotel stays, restaurant gift cards, trips, sporting events, airline tickets, sporting memorabilia, you name it…if you would like to bid on it, so would someone else!
Contact me at: meg@ishof.org or call me at 570.594.4367
If you do not have an item, but would like to help, consider a donation, click here:https://ishof.org/donate/
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ISHOF inducts it’s first ever Relay Team: Women’s 1976 USA Gold Medal winning 4 x 100 Freestyle Relay ~ Sterkel, Boglioli, Peyton & Babashoff

The 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal featured a pair of dominant team performances. There was the excellence of the American men, who claimed victory in 12 of the 13 events. There was also the dominance of the women from the German Democratic Republic, who won 11 of the 13 events.
There was a distinct difference in how the U.S. men and East German women arrived at their success, however. While the American onslaught was fueled by hard work and pure talent, East Germany benefited â as official records eventually revealed â from a systematic-doping program.
Despite the illicit approach by the GDR, one U.S. womenâs relay was not going to be denied.
When the 400-meter freestyle relay rolled around as the final womenâs event of the Olympic program, few individuals believed Team USA had a chance at the gold medal. After all, East Germany had routed the competition for days, and boasted the gold and silver medalists from the 100 freestyle.
How could the United States possibly contend? It came down to a matter of belief.
Yet, the quartet of Kim Peyton, Wendy Boglioli, Jill Sterkel and Shirley Babashoff convinced itself that a magical moment was possible. The athletes were determined to end the competition on a high note.
The story ends with the United States beating East Germany by .68 and establishing a world record of 3:44.82, breaking the former mark by four seconds. One of the biggest upsets in Olympic history had been registered, and four women demonstrated what belief and teamwork can do.
Come join the 1976 Women’s Gold Medal Relay and find out just how “The Last Gold” actually happened! And share the stories of the rest of this yearâs Class of 2024 in Fort Lauderdale.
If you cannot join us, please consider making a donation.
To make a donation, click here: https://ishof.org/donate/
This yearâs International Swimming Hall of Fame Honorees include:
Honor Swimmers:
Lars Frölander (SWE)
Daniel Gyurta (HUN)
Dana Vollmer (USA)
1976 Womenâs 4Ă100 Freestyle Gold Medal Relay Team (USA)
(Includes Shirley Babashoff, Wendy Boglioli, Kim Peyton*, Jill Sterkel)
Honor Divers:
Alexandre Despatie (CAN)
Yulia Pakhalina (RUS)
Wu Minxia (CHN) 2023
Honor Artistic Swimmer:
Virginie Dedieu (FRA)
Honor Water Polo Players:
Carmela âLilliâ Allucci (ITA)
Vladimir Akimov* (USSR)
Honor Coach:
Dennis Pursley (USA)
Honor Contributor:
Dale Neuburger (USA)
ISHOF 59th Annual Honoree Induction weekend
~ HOTEL INFORMATION ~
Host Hotel: Westin Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort & Spa
To make reservations click here: https://book.passkey.com/e/50757008
321 North Fort Lauderdale Beach Blvd., Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33316 (954) 467-1111. Special ISHOF Guest Rate of $229 per night,
Additional Hotel Option:
Courtyard Marriott Fort Lauderdale Beach
Book your group rate for Honoree Ceremony
440 Seabreeze Blvd., Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33316 (954) 524-8733
Special ISHOF Guest Rate of $169 â $199 per night
~ TICKET INFORMATION ~
Friday, October 4, 2024: Includes:
The Masters International Swimming Hall of Fame (MISHOF) Induction Ceremony
The ISHOF Aquatic Awards presented by AquaCal and
The ISHOF Specialty Awards
Click here to purchase tickets: MISHOF/AWARDS
Saturday, October 5, 2024: Includes
The 59th Annual International Swimming Hall of Fame Honoree Induction Ceremony
The Al Schoenfield Media Award and
The 2024 ISHOF Gold Medallion Award
Click here to purchase tickets: INDUCTION
#ISHOF #WorldAquatics #CityofFortLauderdale #USASwimming #AquaCal #Olympics #SwimmingHallofFame #SwimmingWorld #2024Paris
FLASH! Bobby Finke Crushes 1500 Free World Record In 14:30.67; WJR For Kuzey Tuncelli

Bobby Finke: Photo Courtesy: Andrea Masini / Deepbluemedia
by Liz Byrnes – Europe Correspondent
04 August 2024, 10:02am
FLASH! Bobby Finke Crushes 1500 Free World Record In 14:30.67; WJR For Kuzey Tuncelli
Bobby Finke set a new 1500 free world record of 14:30.67, 12 years to the day since Sun Yang set the previous mark at London 2012.
The American was 0.94 inside Sunâs WR at 1450 and came home in 26.27 to take 0.35 off the Chinese athleteâs long-standing mark and defend the title he won in Tokyo three years ago.
Finke, coached by Anthony Nesty at the University of Florida, becomes the fourth man to win back-to-back titles in the longest race in the pool, joining fellow American Mike Burton (1968/1972) and Australian great Kieren Perkins (1992/1996) and Grant Hackett (2000/2004).
Vladimir Salnikov also won two titles but eight years apart in 1980 and 1988.
Gregorio Paltrinieri, Bobby Finke & Daniel Wiffen: Photo Courtesy: Andrea Masini / DeepbluemeidaÂ
Gregorio Paltrinieri was second in 14:34.55, adding silver to his Rio 2016 gold, with Daniel Wiffen adding bronze to his 800 title in 14:39.63.
David Betlehem of Hungary was fourth in 14:40.91 while also of note was Kuzey Tuncelli who lowered his WJR to 14:41.22, as the 16-year-old finished fifth.
The Turkish teenager demolished the previous record last month when he went 14:41.89 at the European Junior Championships to take 4.2secs off the previous standard of 14:46.09 held by Croatian Franko Grgic since 2019.
Ahmed Jaouadi of Tunisia was sixth in 14:43.35 followed by French pair David Aubry (14:44.66) and Damien Joly (14:52.61)
World Record: Sun Yang, CHN â 14:31.02 (2012)
Olympic Record: Sun Yang, CHN â 14:31.02 (2012)
Tokyo Olympic Champion: Bobby Finke, USA â 14:39.65
One reason Sunâs record stood the test of time was the Chinese athleteâs final 100 where he split 27.81/25.68 for an eye-watering 53.49.
To put that into some kind of context, Paltrinieri was 2.81 inside the WR at 1400 at the Budapest worlds in 2022 but his final 100 was 4.59secs slower as he finished 2.78secs outside in 14:32.80, a European record.
No other man had broken 14:32 until Ahmed Hafnaoui touched out Finke for the 2023 world title in 14:31:54 to 14:31.59.
Finke is noted for her trademark late charge but the 24-year-old struck out from the first stroke and seemed to take the rest of the field by surprise, such was his scorching pace and subsequent clear water.
He reached 400 in 3:50.38 ahead of Paltrinieri (3:52.05) and Wiffen (3:53.30) before the Italian ate into the deficit to move within 0.69 at the 600m mark with the Irishman more than a further 2secs adrift.
Paltrinieri reduced the deficit to 0.6 at the halfway mark as Finke reached 750 in 7:15.88 to 7:16.48.
The American picked up the pace again however and at 1000m was 1.38 inside WR pace. Paltrinieri attacked again but Finkeâs turns and underwaters gave him an advantage every time.
Come the 1400m mark and Finke turned in 13:35.33 â 1.16 ahead of Paltrinieri with Wiffen a further 4.68secs adrift â and 2.20secs inside the WR.
At 1450, that had been reduced to 0.94 and it appeared the record may elude Finke given Sunâs blistering final 50 of 25.68 in London all those years ago.
Finke, however, turned on the turbo to come home and consign Sunâs record to history.
Bobby Finke: Photo Courtesy: Deepbluemedia
As he broke the duck for the US male swimmers in Paris, they avoided the fate of being the first team to not have an individual male title since Athens 1896.
âI knew,â said Finke. âI was reading all the articles and all the comments and everything. I like reading that stuff. It kind of motivates me inside.
âThe worldâs getting faster, and I think itâs a really good thing. Itâs a really healthy thing for the sport. If one country is always dominating, I canât really sit there and say the sport is growing. As much as it sucks that weâre not dominating any more, I think itâs good for the sport, and it shows how far the sport has come. Like what Michael Phelps has been able to do for the sport and potentially what Leon Marchandâs going to be able to do for the sport.â
Going out fast, he said, enabled him to build up a lead that wasnât threatened.
âThat really was not my strategy to go into the race. I didnât know how the race was going to play out, so I kind of saw I had a pretty decent lead at the 300 and I knew I kind of just had to keep going and hopefully try and make the guys hurt a little bit trying to catch up to me. They started catching up to me, and I was getting a little worried, but I knew I just had to keep pushing him. As long as I could keep a little bit of a distance, I knew I was in good shape.â
He added:â I could see the world-record line on the board a couple of times, it wasnât like I was trying to see it, I just happened to see it.â
Paltrinieri now has five Olympic medals from the last three Games â one gold, two silvers and two bronzes including a third-placed finish in the 8 in Paris.
Paris 2024 was the Italianâs fourth Games, 12 years after making his Olympic debut at London 2012 where he finished fifth aged 17.
Up next is the open water in which he won bronze in Tokyo as well as world and European titles.
His is a career of longevity, but the hunger remains.
âIt will be always there,â he said. âIf I quit today, tomorrow I will miss it. I have always longed to compete. I started without feeling nervous. I feel the same every time I compete, for the European championships, the worlds, the Olympic Games.â
Neither is he looking too far ahead nor pondering retirement with the Italian turning 30 next month.
Gregorio Paltrinieri: Photo Courtesy: Andrea Masini/Deepbluemedia
âI tried not to think about it over the past months, because I was thinking about the present, the moment. These could have been my last events in the pool. The open water might allow me to keep going, but I am not getting my head around medals, I am thinking more about my desire. I might even carry on (swimming) in the pool.
âI could even try to get on other podiums, but I am thinking more about what I like doing. In this moment, the pool has become very tiring for me. Letâs see.â
Wiffen has had an astonishing 2024 so far with double gold at the Doha worlds followed by gold and bronze in the French capital.
The 23-year-old has almost single-handedly pulled Irish swimming out of the shadow that had been cast by Michelle Smith, who won triple gold at Atlanta 1996 only to be banned for tampering with a doping sample two years later.
Wiffenâs time was his fourth-fastest and matched the time that secured Ryan Cochrane silver behind Sun 12 years ago.
Wiffen, who is coached by Andi Manley at Loughborough Performance Centre, had mixed feelings, saying: âTo get a bronze medal in this, Iâm sure if I said it at the start of the week, people would be very happy with it. But obviously, becoming an Olympic champion on the third day then finishing it off on the ninth day, itâs a little bit sad.â
After qualifying first from the prelims, Wiffen set his sights on the WR although he âknewâ that Finke would change his tactics and instead it was the American who wrote a new line in the history books.
âI said to Gregorio before the race that I knew that was going to happen,â he said. âAnd the only problem was I didnât see it. I was looking that way, but I got body-blocked by Greg. Maybe that was the same what happened to Bobby in the 800 but I didnât see Bobby go and by the time I noticed, I saw this leg kick, and I was like, oh, okay, now with this itâs going to be a very painful 1,500 for me.â
He added: âI was trying to dig deep, trying to push it on. I was catching in the middle. And then, to be honest, I just got blew up because it was probably a bit too much today to catch.â
Wiffen had studied Sunâs 2012 race many times and in an interview with Swimming World last year, he identified Finke as the only swimmer who could possibly come back in a 53, adding somewhat prophetically: âIâm not going to lie, I think you just have to hold a pace thatâs way under the WR so youâve got that leeway on the last 100 so you probably need to be three seconds faster than him going into the last 100.â
He said in Paris: âIâm happy for it to go. It was a record that needs to be off the books. And Iâm very pleased with Bobby. Heâs a great competitor, and everybodyâs very friendly in the field, which maybe you donât get in a lot of events. And Iâm very happy that all three of us shared the podium again, maybe different order this time than the 800, but itâs going to be a long, long couple of years of battling it out for who gets the top spot.â
Paris Olympics: Au Revoir Emma McKeon As Aussie Girls Make One Final Splash After Record Breaking Week

ONE LAST SPLASH: Australia’s silver medal-winning 4x100m medley relay team (L-R) Mollie O’Callaghan, Emma McKeon, Jenna Strauch and Kaylee McKeown Photo: Delly Carr (Swimming Australia).
by Ian Hanson – Oceania Correspondent
05 August 2024, 01:31am
Paris Olympics: Au Revoir Emma McKeon Aussie Girls Make One Final Splash After Record Breaking Week In The Pool.
In an emotionally charged finale, Australiaâs women have swum their way into the Olympic record books, celebrating with a collective âbombâ to finish off a spectacular week in the pool at the Paris La Defense Arena.
After collecting their silver medals in the 4x100m medley relay and with a typical show of Aussie larrikinism, and with our greatest Olympic larrikin, golden girl  Dawn Fraser in the grandstand, the Aussie girls, Kaylee McKeown, Emma McKeon, Mollie OâCallaghan and Jenna Strauch launched themselves into the pool â with a flying leap, tracksuits and all.
FINAL DUNKING: Emma McKeon and the AUS 4x100m medley relay team Photo Courtesy Delly Carr (Swimming Australia)
Urged on by McKeown the spur of the moment plunge, was not only to let off some steam after a pressure-cooker week that saw the Australian girls with a Midas touch, but also to celebrate the career of Australiaâs greatest Olympic medal winner, McKeon.
The 30-year-old triple Olympian from Rio, Tokyo and Paris swam her final laps in the butterfly leg of the medley relay â the silver taking her overall medal tally to 14 (six gold, three silver and five bronze) â the most by any Australian athlete in the history of the Games â adding gold, silver and bronze from her Paris campaign.
And the smile said it all on McKeonâs face as she celebrated her stellar career alongside backstroking golden girl McKeown who finished the Games with five medals (two gold, one silver and two bronze) taking her overall Games tally to eight medals (five gold, one silver and two bronze).
McKeown sitting on top of the most individual gold medal list with four from her 100-200m backstroke double-double from Tokyo and Paris â ahead of fellow swimmers Ariarne Titmus, Ian Thorpe, Shane Gould, Dawn Fraser and Murray Rose, kayaker Jess Fox and track athlete Betty Cuthbert all with three each.
Titmus carving her own slice of history defending her 400m freestyle crown from Tokyo, winning her second gold with OâCallaghan, Lani Pallister and Bri Throssell (Shayna Jack and Jamie Perkins) in the womenâs 4Ă200 and silvers in the 200 and 800m freestyles â taking her overall Olympic individual medal tally to six â three gold and three silver and her overall medal tally to eight.
OâCallaghan joined Titmus, Gould and Susie OâNeill when she won the 200m freestyle from world record holder Titmus â chiming in with golds in the 4x100m and 4x200m free relays;, silver in the 4x100m medley and bronze in the 4x100m mixed medley -a total of five medals in Paris from three gold, one silver and one bronze.
The 20-year-old has an overall Olympic medal total of eight adding in her three relay medals as a heat swimmer (two gold and one bronze) from Tokyo.
And it was OâCallaghanâs anchor leg with a sizzling split of 51.83, swimming the Australians past China and Canada, that took the girls from fourth into the silver medal position â maintaining Australiaâs podium record in the relay for the last eight Games since Atlanta in 1996 with three gold and five silver v the USA five gold and three silvers.
The US taking Paris gold in a new world record with China the bronze âbreaking the gold medal deadlock, taking the USA to eight gold after Bobby Finkeâs amazing world record in the 1500m levelled the two teams on seven golds a piece.
The Americans saving their best till last after the Australians had given the worldâs No 1 team something to chase â and the fright of their lives.
And in one of the most inspiring individual medal swims of the meet, Queenslander, Meg Harris, legally deaf after a childhood accident, produced the swim of her life to take the silver in the 50 metres freestyle behind world record holder, Swedenâs Sarah Sjoestroem.
WHEN SILVER IS GOLD: Meg Harris after her silver medal-winning  50m freestyle Paris 24. Photo Courtesy Delly Carr (Swimming Australia)
Harris clocking her personal best time of 23.97 â historyâs 11th fastest performer with Cate Campbell,McKeon, and Libby Trickett the only Australians ever to swim faster, admitting because of her deafness, sheâs had to improve her starts.
McKeon won gold in 2020 in Tokyo, Campbell the bronze in Beijing in 2008 and Trickett the bronze in 2004 in Athens.
âIâve always had to work on my start -I have a stronger finish so I had to make sure I was actually focusing on my race â about a great break out, a great swim and it all came together in the moment and I felt pretty good in the water,â said Harris, who also told Eddie McGuire on Channel 9 how she manages her starts with her hearing impairment.
âI have learnt for a while now, swimming for so long, Iâve had to train myself and listen to âtake your marks and the goâ and with an incredible crowd like that itâs always hard but they have âtake your marksâ coming from the speaker in the blocks and I have trained my self to go and I have a pretty good reaction, when (the field goes). I was very happy with the start and my time which was the first time under 24 secondsâŠ.â
SHOW MEDALS: Meg Harris of Australia, silver, Sarah Sjoestroem of Sweden, gold, Yufei Zhang of China, bronze show the medals after competing in the swimming 50m Freestyle Women Final during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at the Paris La Defense Arena. Photo Courtesy (DeepBlueMedia)
AU REVOIR FROM PARIS 2024: Kaylee McKeown, Jenna Strauch, Emma McKeon and Mollie OâCallaghan with one final Au Revoir after winning silver in the 4x100m medley relay at Paris La Defense Arena. Photo Courtesy (DeepBlueMedia)
Paris Olympics, Day 9 Finals: American Women Blast World Record in 400 Medley Relay to Finish Meet With Gold

Regan Smith, Lilly King, Gretchen Walsh and Torri Huske crushed the world record in the women’s 400 medley relay — Photo Courtesy: Andrea Masini / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto
by David Rieder – Senior Writer
04 August 2024, 10:51am
Paris Olympics, Day 9 Finals: American Women Blast World Record in 400 Medley Relay to Finish Meet With Gold
The United States womenâs team has largely impressed in Paris, winning medals in 11 out of 14 individual events and missing the podium by one hundredth in two others. Torri Huske (100 butterfly) and Kate Douglass (200 breaststroke) won individual gold medals while Regan Smith claimed silver in three individual races. Only Australian might in freestyle and backstroke and the presence of Canadian teenage star Summer McIntosh prevented an even-higher output of gold.
Australia was unbeatable in the freestyle relays earlier this week, but the Dolphins did not have the balance across the 100-meter events to match up with the U.S. in the womenâs 400 medley relay. Consider the first three swimmers in American lineup: 100 backstroke world-record holder Smith, 100 breaststroke world-record holder Lilly King and 100 butterfly world-record holder Gretchen Walsh.
Walsh was actually not the top-performing American in the 100 fly this week, with Torri Huske edging her out for gold, but Huske was needed on the freestyle leg in this event after blasting a time of 52.29, the fastest time by an American in five years, to win silver in the individual event this week. And with those four elite legs, the world record set by an American team five years that included Smith and King was definitely under fire.
Indeed, the team led wire-to-wire, creating an insurmountable, three-second advantage on Kingâs breaststroke leg. The foursome smashed the global standard by three-quarters of a second, with Huske powering to the wall in 1:49.63.
World Record: United States (Smith, King, Dahlia, Manuel) â 3:50.40 (2019)
Olympic Record: Australia (McKeown, Hodges, McKeon, Campbell) â 3:51.60 (2021)
Tokyo Olympic Champion: Australia (McKeown, Hodges, McKeon, Campbell) â 3:51.60
Regan Smith â Photo Courtesy: Deepbluemedia
On the opening leg, Smith faced Kaylee McKeown, the swimmer who beat her out for individual gold in the 100 back. This time, though. Smith got the better of the Aussie, completing her 100 meters in 57.28 to break the Olympic record McKeown set on the way to gold five days earlier. The time ranks No. 2 in history, behind the 57.13 Smith clocked at the U.S. Olympic Trials last month.
King dove in for what she professes to be her final Olympic swim and came through with a 1:04.90 split, the quickest in the field and a whopping 2.41 seconds clear of Australiaâs Jenna Strauch. Walsh fired off a 55.03 split, tying the fastest-ever for the 100 fly, allowing Huske to cruise home in 52.42 to secure gold and the first-ever performance under three minutes, 50 seconds.
âI was thinking what was that record before we broke it,â King said, harkening back to her presence on record-breaking squads in both 2017 and 2019. âWe brought the record down a lot. Itâs really cool to continue be a part of that relay and watch it get faster and faster and faster with pretty much the same people. It was an awesome way to cap off the meet.â
Australiaâs team of McKeown, Strauch, Emma McKeon and Mollie OâCallaghan took silver in 3:53.11, with OâCallaghan anchoring in 51.83 to move the Aussies from fourth to second place. Chinaâs Wen Letian, Tang Qianting, Zhang Yufei and Yang Junxuan secured bronze in 3:53.23, leaving a valiant Canadian team in fourth place (3:53.91).
The gold medal was the Americansâ eighth in the pool at the Olympics, the teamâs lowest total since 1988, but a late surge of four golds in the final two days of competition allowed them to overtake and pass Australia, been stuck at seven since the conclusion of Friday nightâs finals.
Smith and King both said they did not know the teamâs medal count prior to the relay, but Walsh admitted, âI knew that Bobby (Finke) had tied the gold medal count,â referring to the American distance aceâs world-record-setting swim in the 1500 free. âBobbyâs swim was electric. It got my energy going,â Walsh said.
Following the race, Smith stood on the top step of the podium for the first time in her career. Her first six Olympic medals, three in Tokyo and three individual races in Paris, included five silvers and one bronze. She claimed her first gold medal by virtue of her prelims leg on the mixed 400 medley relay, and this win brought a second gold, this time with Smith playing a much more central role.
âIt feels amazing,â Smith said in an NBC Sports post-race interview. âThese three have done incredible. Theyâve had such great careers and been amazing at these Games. Theyâve all heard the anthem on the podium, and I havenât yet, so Iâm so excited to up there with them this time.â
Huske finished as the highest-performing American this week, winning 100 butterfly gold and 100 freestyle silver while also claiming three relay medals (two gold and one silver). âThis week was absolutely amazing, and thereâs no better way to end a week,â Huske said in her NBC interview. âThese girls had such a big lead. It kind of took the pressure off me. I would have had to mess up real bad. Iâm just so thankful for Team USA and for these ladies next to me.
Walsh claimed her second relay gold medal and fourth overall medal of the week, which included an individual silver in the 100 fly behind Huske and a 50 free finals appearance where she missed the top-three by one hundredth. Among the American foursome, King was the only swimmer who had yet to win a medal this week, finishing fourth in the 100 breast by one hundredth and eighth in the 200 breast, and she blasted by far her best swim of the meet.
Australiaâs team featured the swimmer who edged out Smith for Olympic gold in the 100 and 200 back, McKeown, leading off the squad while 200 free gold medalist OâCallaghan would anchor. McKeon, one of the greatest relay swimmers ever, was expected to vastly out-perform her individual times on the butterfly leg. But breaststroke would doom the Australians, with Strauch having finished 22nd in the 100 breast in 1:07.27. Strauch tried to stick with King in the first half of her swim but faded badly down the stretch.
Notably, the silver medal marked the 14th podium finish of McKeonâs career. In her final Olympic swim, she moved into a tie with Katie Ledecky for the most medals career medals among female swimmers.
China also had a dynamite group, with individual medalists in Tang and Zhang while Yang was coming off a 51.96 split anchoring the countryâs mixed 400 medley relay Saturday, but backstroke would put the Chinese team more than two seconds behind the Americans and Australians, a deficit the last three swimmers could not overcome.
Canada brought in McIntosh for her 13th swim of the week, and after winning three individual gold medals and a silver, she dove in with Canada holding down second place following Maggie Mac Neilâs 55.79 butterfly split, but McIntosh could only manage a 53.29 split as OâCallaghan and Yang sprinted ahead.
Olympic Womenâs Water Polo: Maddie Musselman Helps U.S. Pound France

Photo Courtesy: Andrea Staccioli / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto
by Matthew De George – Senior Writer
03 August 2024, 07:40am
Olympic Womenâs Water Polo: Maddie Musselman Helps U.S. Pound France
Maddie Musselman scored four goals and added an assist as the U.S. dominated France, 17-5, in group play of the Olympic womenâs water polo tournament Friday.
The win makes the U.S. 3-1 in group play and books a quarterfinal spot, giving them an extra off day.
Musselman added an assist. The U.S. led 7-3 at half and outscored France 10-2 after the break. Ashleigh Johnson made 10 saves, and a dogged defense held France to 5-for-29 (17 percent) shooting.
Jenna Flynn tallied a hat trick. Maggie Steffens paired a goal with five assists. Rachel Fattal and Ryann Neushul scored twice each.
Most of the games in Round 4 of the tournament proved lopsided. The closest was a 10-7 affair won by Australia over Canada behind hat tricks from Bronte Halligan and Alice Williams. Halligan had two of the three Australia assists. Williams required 10 shots to get her hat trick. Gabriella Palm made six saves.
Olympic Womenâs Water Polo Group Stage Day 1 Recap
Olympic Womenâs Water Polo Group Stage Day 2 Recap
Olympic Womenâs Water Polo Group Stage Day 3 Recap
Emma Wright paced Canada with three goals. Jessica Gaudreault turned aside 11 shots in net.
Valeria Palmieri scored four goals to lead Italy to a 12-8 win over Greece. Dafne Bettini scored two goals and two assists, and Roberta Bianconi, Guilia Viacava and Claudia Marletta scored twice apiece. Caterina Banchelli made eight saves in goal.
Nicoleta Eleftheriadou and Vasiliki Plevritou scored three times each for Greece.
Hungary trailed after one quarter but eventually pulled away from China, 17-11, behind seven goals on nine shots from Rita Keszthelyi.
Dorottya Szilagyi scored three goals to go with three assists. Vanda Valyi had two goals and three helpers. Kamilla Farago and Krisztina Garda scored twice apiece.
Yiwen Lu and Zewen Deng scored three goals each for China.
The quarterfinals begin on Aug. 6. Because there are 10 teams in the womenâs tournament, as opposed to 12 for the men, each team gets one day off in the group stage. Quarterfinals will be set after the last round of games.
The U.S. will finish no worse than second in Group B. Spain, which beat the U.S., can win the group by defeating Italy on Sunday.
Australia can win Group A if it beats Hungary on Saturday.
Paris Olympic Diving: Despite Push from Mexican Pair, China Stays Perfect in Menâs 3-Meter Synchro

Photo Courtesy: Andrea Staccioli / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto
by Matthew De George – Senior Writer
03 August 2024, 08:25am
Paris Olympic Diving: Despite Push from Mexican Pair, China Stays Perfect in Menâs 3-Meter Synchro
For the first time at the Paris Olympic diving competition, a Chinese team showed weakness on the boards. That wasnât enough, though, to disrupt their quest for a medals sweep in Paris.
Long Daoyi and Wang Zongyuan were the first Chinese divers to be outside of first place at the end of a round in this Olympics, but they rallied to gold with a score of 446.10 in the menâs 3-meter springboard synchro on Friday at the Paris Aquatics Centre.
It was a close battle, with less than eight points separating the three podium finishers. Juan Celaya Hernandez and Osmar Olvera Ibarra of Mexico secured silver in 444.03. Great Britainâs Anthony Harding and Jack Laugher were third with a score of 438.15 points.
Long and Wang found themselves second after the fourth round. Itâs the first time in 21 rounds in Paris that a Chinese pair hasnât been in first place in a final. The deficit was 0.24 points to the Mexican duo.
But the Chinese pair rallied with the best dive of the fifth round (85.68 points) and the best dive of the sixth round (95.76) to win the title and help China start 4-for-4 in diving golds.
âI encouraged myself,â Long said. âThis competition wasnât easy for us, and this contest was tight.â
Mexican silver medalists Juan Celaya Hernandez and Osmar Olvera Ibara; Photo Courtesy: Andrea Staccioli / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto
The medal is Longâs first at the Olympics. Wang won silver in 3-meter menâs springboard at the Tokyo Games three years ago and paired with Xie Siyi to win gold on synchro. This pair won world titles in this event in 2023 and 2024.
Celaya and Olvera rode the roller coaster. They were fifth after two rounds and shot up to third after tying Great Britain for the best dive of the third round. They had the best dive of the fourth, getting 85.68 on their 407C to take nearly eight points from China.
Though they couldnât keep pace late with China, a silver medal remains a massive result for the country. Itâs just the third in any sport in Paris for Mexico.
âThis is what weâve been working (for) all day, all night,â Celaya said. âWeâve been sleeping, weâve been dreaming about this moment, and being able to make it reality, being able to feel the cheer of the people, our support of the whole country behind your backs is amazing.â
Laugher and Harding were in the mix the whole way, helping Great Britain win medals in all four synchro events. Theyâve already surpassed their total from each of the last two Olympics before the individual events even begin.
Itâs Laugherâs fourth career Olympic medal, including gold on this event in 2016 with Chris Mears. Harding, 24, is an Olympic medalist for the first time, after silvers with Laugher at Worlds in 2022 and 2023.
âNow with four around my neck, I donât want to start ranking each one, but for me and Anthony, our story and our journey, Iâm just so proud of what weâve done,â Laugher said. âWe knew the pressure was on. Three diving events have gone so far (before ours) and weâve had three British medals. It was just a wonderfully fun competition. It was all so close.â
Italyâs Lorenzo Marsaglia and Giovanni Tocchi were fourth, nearly 35 points off the podium. Fifth was Jules Bouyer and Alexis Jandard of France.
Americans Tyler Downs and Greg Duncan finished last in eighth. They never recovered from the worst dive of the fourth round, their 5154B yielding just 37.74 points. They scored 346.08.
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Passages: Carolyn Schuler Jones, Two-Time Olympic Gold Medalist Dies at 81

by Dan D’Addona â Swimming World Managing Editor
31 July 2024,
Passages: Carolyn Schuler Jones, Two-Time Olympic Gold Medalist
The current Olympics are a time to look back on Olympians of the past, especially those the sport has recently lost.
Carolyn Schuler Jones was a two-time Olympic gold medalist at the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome.
She died on July 22, 2024, at age 81.
Schuler Jones won the gold medal in the 100 butterfly in Rome and was on the gold medal winning medley relay for the United States at age 17.
She had the reputation for coming up big in the biggest moments. Heading into 106-, she was part of an AAU National Championship team from the Berkeley Y Team, which won the national crown with just five swimmers â so dominant they set the American record on the medley relay at nationals.
Schuler Jones edged the nationâs best, including her teammate to get second place in the 100 butterfly at the 1960 Olympic Trials, then surge to the gold medal in Rome, holding off compatriot Carolyn Wood.
Jones made her presence known immediately in Rome, qualifying first out of the preliminary heats (1:09.8), then won the gold by nearly a meter over Mariane Hemmskerk and breaking the Olympic record in the process in a time of 1:09.5.
Then it was on to the medley relay, where she gave Chris Von Saltza a sizeable lead after beating the world record pace as the U.S. went on to claim the gold medal and broke the world and American record (4:41.1), along with Lynn Burke and Patty Kempner. Her split was 1:08.9.
She was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame (ISHOF) in 1989.
Paris Olympics: Historic Day For Cam McEvoy and Kaylee McKeown on Australian Swim Team Doused in Parisian Gold

SWIMMING IN A POOL OF JOY: Cam McEvoy celebrating Australia’s first ever Olympic medal in the men’s 50m freestyle – and a gold at that. Photo Deep Blue Media.
by Ian Hanson – Oceania Correspondent
02 August 2024, 07:54pm
Paris Olympics: Historic Day For Cam McEvoy and Kaylee McKeown on Australian Swim Team Doused In Parisian Gold
Like the worldâ fastest man on water, Cam McEvoy, Australia held its collective breath for 21.25 seconds in the early hours of Saturday morning.
A nation then catching its breath, before its âlittle fishâ Kaylee McKeown made her own history-making splash with a fourth individual Olympic gold medal â over two Games â in the 200m backstroke, 37 minutes later.
BUNDLE OF JOY: Cameron Mcevoy of Australia celebrates after winning the gold medal in the swimming 50m Freestyle Men Final during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at La Defense Arena in Paris (France), August 02, 2024. Photo: DeepBlueMedia.
Back-to-back golds for an Australian team basking on top of the swimming medal tally with seven gold and sending celebrations into overdrive in the Paris La Defense Arena (and the Irish pub down the road) and lightning up loungerooms and coffee machines back home.
The two Queenslanders added gold medals No. six and seven for a spectacular week (so far) and created two special pieces of history for this swimming mad country.
Self-made new-age sprinter, McEvoy won Australiaâs first ever medal in that helter-skelter 50 freestyle final.
McEvoy out-touched the brave Brit, Ben Proud, by 0.05 (21.30) and French legend 33-year-old Florent Manaudou (21.56) won a remarkable fourth medal from his fourth Olympic final.
McEvoy said in his poolside interview on Channel 9 that his win was âLiterally just pure joyâŠitâs amazing to win and that entire 21.25 seconds was bliss.
âThe way my stroke moved through the water; I never thought Iâd ever be able to experience that.
âThe joy of the moment I just had and to get a gold medal with itâŠ.itâs unreal.â
Dissecting his race, McEvoy said: âFor about 48 meters it was amazing, before the last two meters knowing âIâve got to get this touch as good as I can, with only a bit of a glide.
âThinking âoh noâ â fingers crossed. Then I turned around and saw the first and I was pretty pleased about that.
âIt was very hard to contain myself. I donât think Iâve ever celebrated that much after a race ever â thatâs a first for me tooâŠâ
McEvoy, now 30, won Australiaâs first ever medal in an event first swum in Seoul in 1988 and in a racing schedule that covered 3x50s (heat, semifinal and final) that took him a total of 63.95 seconds (21.32, 21.38 and 21.25). He didnât draw breath â until it was all over!
SHOW MEDALS: Benjamin Proud of Great Britain, silver, Cameron Mcevoy of Australia, gold, Florent Manaudou of France, bronze show the medals after competing in the swimming 50m Freestyle Men Final during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at La Defense Arena in Paris (France), August 02, 2024. Photo Deep Blue Media.
McEvoy heaped praise on his coach Tim Lane, his girlfriend Maddi Bone, his team at the Queensland Academy of Sport and his family and friends.
In the city where the pioneer of Australian Olympic swimming, Sydneyâs Freddie Lane, won our very first gold medals in 1900 â both won in the River Seine in the 220 yards freestyle â swum with the current â and the one off, discontinued Obstacle Race.
And in 1924 when the Games returned to Paris with Manlyâs Andrew âBoyâ Charlton setting a new world record to win Australiaâs first gold medal in the 1500m freestyle.
Itâs fitting that the Class of 2024 can celebrate that 100th anniversary of Charltonâs feats, writing its own record-breaking chapter in Australiaâs stellar swimming history.
Charlton, at just 16 when he surged to his historic Olympic 1500m gold, which took him 20 minutes 06.6 â a new world record time.
Twenty-three-year-old McKeown also booked her place in swimmingâs annals in an Olympic record time of 2 mins 03.73 secs (breaking American Missy Franklinâs 2012 time from London) to become Australiaâs greatest ever individual gold medalist, with four golds after completing the 100/200m backstroke double defense from Tokyo.
Before the 200m final, McKeown, with her 100 and 200m golds from Tokyo and her 100m victory in Paris, had joined fellow Australian swimmers, the legendary Dawn Fraser (cheering on from the Paris Arena), Murray Rose, Shane Gould and Ian Thorpe, current kayak golden girl Jess Fox and former track sprinting legend, the late Betty Cuthbert and her current Dolphins teammate Ariarne Titmus all with three individual gold medals.
McKeown now stands alone, for the moment, with four individual gold â a tally that is very much a moveable feast with McKeown (200IM), Titmus (800m freestyle), and kayaker Fox, already the winner of a whitewater double in Paris, up in the new canoe cross event â all chasing the next chapter.
Itâs been 20 years since the last swimmer, Ukraineâs Yana Klochkova (2000 and 2004) created her own double-double act defending her Sydney IM double over 200 and 400m, in Athens.
HISTORY MAKER: Kaylee McKeown of Australia has won four individual Olympic gold medals.Two during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at La Defense Arena in Paris (France), July 30, 2024. Photo Deep Blue Media.
On her history making feats, a humble McKeown said: âThat is a pretty cool thing to have next to my name and I have looked up to so many cool people growing up in this sport and to be amongst them is amazingâŠand I would never in a million years have thought I could have achieved what I have done. And I have so much more to give in this sport and I think itâs all down to my coach Michael Bohl and my teammatesâŠâ
There was hardly time to celebrate for McKeown, who draped her third gold medal around the neck of her reluctant coach Bohl, before rushing off for her 200IM semifinal.
While a nation and her family and supporters continued to celebrate her history-making feats, her night in the pool wasnât finished. It was back to business for âthe little fishâ as sheâs known in the McKeown household.
Itâs been a nonstop first six days for the Aussie Swim Team â a week (thatâs not quite done) doused in gold as the Dolphins continue to make a huge splash in a city that holds so much history.