China’s Yu Zidi, 12, wins relay bronze at world swimming championships

16 hours ago 5

Chinese 12-year-old Yu Zidi has won a bronze medal at the swim world championships, an astounding feat for a girl who would be a sixth- or seventh-grade student depending on the school system.

Yu earned the medal by swimming in the prelims of China’s 4x200-meter freestyle relay team. She did not swim in the final on Thursday – China placed third behind winning Australia and the United States – but gets a bronze medal as a team member.

She’s been close to winning an individual medal, placing fourth in both the 200 butterfly and the 200 individual medley. She still has the 400 IM to swim.

Quick Guide

World Swimming Championships 2025

Show

The schedule

The swimming portion of the World Aquatics Championships takes place from 27 July through 3 August at the Singapore Sports Hub.

The heats start at 10am local time (2am GMT, 10pm ET). The semi-finals and finals start at 7pm local time (11am GMT, 7am ET). The full schedule is available in PDF format or on the World Aquatics website.

How to watch

In the United States, coverage will be available on NBC and streaming service Peacock.

In the United Kingdom, Aquatics GB holds the UK rights to stream events.

In Australia, the Nine Network will provide broadcast coverage throughout the championships.

In Canada, events will be broadcast live on CBC, with streaming options via CBC digital platforms.

For other countries and full international broadcast listings, visit the World Aquatics broadcast page.

Additionally, the World Aquatics Recast channel will re-air all sessions of the meet, heats and finals for a fee.

Brent Nowicki, the executive director of World Aquatics, said the governing body would look at its age-limit rules. The limit is now 14, but athletes can reach the worlds if they surpass a tough time standard.

“I didn’t think I’d have this conversation, but now I think we have to go back and say is this appropriate?” he said this week in Singapore. “Is this really the right way to go forward and do we need to do other things? Put other guardrails up? Do we allow it under certain conditions? I don’t know the answer.”

He called Yu “great”. He also said officials had to be “careful” about the age issue.

Friday’s session will be missing the two big stars of the meet so far – France’s Léon Marchand and Summer McIntosh of Canada. Both have no final swims.

Five finals were set for Friday. Some of the attention will go to Evgenila Chikunova, swimming as a Neutral Athlete. She holds the world record in the 200 breaststroke where has the top time entering the final. The top challenger is American Kate Douglass.

South African Pieter Coetze is the favorite in the men’s 200 backstroke. Yohann Ndoye-Brouard of France and Hurbert Kos of Hungary were the next quickest qualifiers.

The other finals are in the women’s 100 free, the men’s 200 breaststroke, and the men’s 4x200 relay.

McIntosh, Ledecky set up 800m world title showdown

McIntosh and Katie Ledecky set up a showdown for the ages in Singapore when both stars cruised into the 800m freestyle final on Friday.

American great Ledecky, 28, is the undisputed master in the event, having won the title at the last four Olympics and updating her own world record in May this year.

But McIntosh, 10 years Ledecky’s junior, is in the mood to snatch her crown as she looks to join Michael Phelps as the only swimmer to win five individual titles at a single world championships.

The 18-year-old Canadian has already bagged three golds from three events in Singapore and she clocked the third-fastest 800m freestyle time ever in June.

The other nine times on the top 10 all belong to Ledecky but McIntosh’s form suggests a changing of the guard could be on the cards.

Ledecky fired the first shots in Friday morning’s heats, qualifying for Saturday’s final fastest in a time of 8min 14.62sec, with McIntosh third in 8:19.88.

McIntosh said she felt in good shape after winning 200m butterfly gold the previous night, and she had the rest of the day and the following morning to recover before the final.

“I felt a lot better than I thought I was going to this morning,” McIntosh said after her heat.

“I’ve been recovering really well, probably the best I ever have in a big meet like this.

“We’re on day six so to feel like this is really promising.”

Ledecky made her international breakthrough in the 800m free, winning gold at the 2012 London Olympics at the age of 15.

She went on to dominate the event for more than a decade and showed that she still had plenty to offer in June when she smashed her own world record, which had stood since 2016.

McIntosh also headed to Singapore in red-hot form, breaking three world records in a matter of days at the Canadian trials in June.

McIntosh and Ledecky have already had their first head-to-head in Singapore, with McIntosh coming out on top to win gold in the 400m free.

The Canadian is a relative newcomer to the 800m free but she safely negotiated the heats with the minimum of fuss.

“My goal was just to win my heat to pretty much secure that I’ll get a lane for tomorrow night’s final and do that with the least amount of energy possible,” she said.

“I’m just trying to get through it because I’ve never really done 800 heats before so I don’t know what to expect.

“I’m just glad it’s over and done with now.”

Australia’s Lani Pallister and Italy’s Simona Quadarella will also hope to stand on the podium after Saturday’s race but all eyes will be on Ledecky and McIntosh in the battle for gold.

“Having all those girls around me will definitely push me to a really good time and I’m really excited to race Katie tomorrow night,” said McIntosh.

Read Entire Article
Infrastruktur | | | |