'Being undefeated is pretty cool' - Le Clos

Chad le Clos Photo: David Gray

Chad le Clos Photo: David Gray

Published Oct 31, 2016

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Hong Kong - Chad le Clos says he is proud to complete an undefeated season in the short versions of butterfly following his gold medal in the 100m at the FINA/airweave Swimming World Cup in Hong Kong on Sunday.

The 100m fly was one of the most keenly contested finals of the Hong Kong meet, with less than half a second separating silver from sixth. Le Clos' showed his class though, the South African touching in 49.52 seconds.

Shinri Shioura (Japan) placed second in 50.97, while third went to Pavel Sankovich (Belarus). “I'm undefeated for the whole season in the 50m and 100m fly so that's pretty cool to say,” Le Clos said.

“It's easier said than done, and you still have to get up and do it. I'm happy with the 200m fly last night; that was the most important for me to try and beat (Daiya) Seto because he beat me three in a row. I got him twice, then he beat me three in a row so I had to even the score.”

Hungarian superstar Katinka Hosszu, meanwhile, enjoyed a golden night of competition in Hong Kong. She capped a brilliant series with a further five gold medals on the second day of competition on Sunday, equalling her record for 10 gold medals at a single World Cup meet.

The Iron Lady took out the 100m backstroke, the 200m butterfly, the 400m freestyle, the 100m IM and the 400m IM on the second day of competition. The haul took her tally for the weekend to 10, equal best for a single meet, and the 27-year-old was pleased to finish the World Cup on a high. “I'm definitely really happy. It has been a long tour, a lot of stops, but I was able to keep it together and I came away with 10 golds,” she said.

So dominant was Hosszu this year that she had the overall title sewn up heading into the Hong Kong meet, the fifth consecutive year she has finished the series on top. “I'm just really excited that I was able to win overall for the fifth year in a row, I don't think anyone has ever done that before,” she said.

Vladimir Morozov (Russia) also came to Hong Kong knowing the World Cup title was his and he continued his solid form with victory in the 50m free, while Jeanette Ottesen (Denmark) scored two golds.

The opening event on the card was the women's 100m freestyle, with Hosszu looking to add to her day-one haul of five gold. A slow start hampered Hosszu but she soon found her groove, but not before Ottesen touched in 52.46. Hosszu and Kelsi Worrell (USA) finished in second and third.

The men's 200m freestyle saw Pieter Timmers (Belgium), 1:44.57, touch out James Guy (Great Britain), 1:44.59. World Record holder Alia Atkinson (JAM) pulled away in the final 25m of the women's 50m breaststroke, touching in 29.20.

Atkinson finished considerably slower than her 28.64 world mark but the effort was enough to earn her 959 ranking points. Molly Hannis (USA) and Yuliya Efimova (Russia) rounded out the placings.

A competitive men's 100m breaststroke final went to the fast-starting Felipe Lima (Brazil) in 57.32, with place-getters Marco Koch (Germany) and Yasuhiro Koseki (Japan) more than a second behind and unable to match him. Hosszu found another gear in the 100m backstroke final, leaving it until the final lap to power home over Emily Seebohm (Australia) and Daryna Zevina (Ukraine) in 57.92.

The crowd could sense Hosszu had more gold to come in what was another special meet for the Hungarian. She battled hard in the 200m fly, saluting comfortably over her countrywoman Zsuzsanna Jakabos (Hungary) in 2:06.09, before again digging deep in the final 100m of the 400m free.

Her fourth win came in a high-quality 100m IM. She overcame Atkinson and Seebohm in 58.21, with Atkinson second in 58.76 and Seebohm third in 59.11. Fittingly, the world record holder, Hosszu, blitzed the field in the women's 400m individual medley, winning in 4:28.50.

Hosszu led from the start, swimming powerfully to claim the record-equalling 10th gold in the penultimate event of the programme.

African News Agency

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