Three world records broken on third day of FINA World Swimming Championship in Abu Dhabi

Siobhan Haughey (center) celebrates breaking the world record in the the 100m freestyle at Etihad Arena. (FINA)
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Updated 19 December 2021
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Three world records broken on third day of FINA World Swimming Championship in Abu Dhabi

  • Siobhan Haughey sets new championship record in the 100m freestyle at Yas Island’s Etihad Arena, while China’s Bingjie Li (women’s 800m freestyle) and the Netherlands (mixed 4x50 medley relay) also register new marks  

ABU DHABi: Three more world records have been broken on the third day of action at the FINA World Swimming Championships (25m) at Yas Island’s Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi. 

Hong Kong, China’s Siobhan Haughey (100m freestyle), China’s Bingjie Li (800m freestyle) and the Netherlands (mixed 4x50m medley relay) proved to be too good for their opponents, winning gold medals to record new marks in the prestigious global event. 

For the second time in three days, Haughey made history as she produced an impressive performance to win the world title in 50.98 seconds. Sweden’s Sarah Sjoestroem and US swimmer Abbey Weitzeil clinched silver and bronze, respectively.  

It was the second gold medal for Haughey in Abu Dhabi following her world record victory in the 200m freestyle on Thursday, meaning the 24-year-old becomes the first woman to complete the 100m/200m freestyle double at a single world championships in either long course or short course. 

“It’s amazing to win as this is my first short course world championship and to have two gold medals so far is really good. I’m really happy with how everything is going so far,” she said. 

Li came out on top in her 800m freestyle race, clocking 8:02.90, almost four seconds ahead of Russian Swimming Federation’s Anastasiia Kirpichnikova and Italy’s Simona Quadarella.  

Fans did not have to wait too long for another record to fall as the Netherlands (1:36.20) held off US and Italy in the mixed 4x50m medley relay. 

Matteo Rivolta became the fourth Italian man to win an individual world short course title after holding off South Africa’s Chad Le Clos and Russia Swimming Federation’s Andrei Minakov in the 100m butterfly. 

Speaking at a press conference, he said: “I’m very happy with the gold. It was my first final in the short course and I’m really happy to compete at a high level. I hoped I could have gone a little bit faster but I couldn’t expect nothing more than what I have done tonight.”  

Other winners on the day included American Nic Fink (men’s 200m breaststroke), with his compatriot Rhyan White coming out top in the women’s 200m backstroke.  


Irate Carlsen pushes away camera after World Blitz Championships loss

Updated 28 December 2025
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Irate Carlsen pushes away camera after World Blitz Championships loss

  • Carlsen, world champion between 2013 and 2023, had a frustrating second day at the championships in Doha on ‌Saturday

DOHA: Magnus Carlsen pushed away a camera after losing to Vladislav Artemiev at the FIDE World Rapid and ​Blitz Chess Championships in Qatar, the latest example of the former world champion letting his vexation boil over.
Carlsen, world champion between 2013 and 2023, had a frustrating second day at the championships in Doha on ‌Saturday, splitting ‌a point with ‌Maxime ⁠Vachier-Lagrave ​before he ‌was beaten by Artemiev.
When a photographer followed as Carlsen stormed out of the venue, the Norwegian pushed away the camera.
Carlsen attracted attention for slamming his fist on the table after losing to ⁠world champion Gukesh Dommaraju at the Norway ‌Chess 2025 tournament.
Also last year, ‍he briefly quit ‍the World Rapid and Blitz Chess ‍Championships in New York when governing body FIDE barred him from a round for wearing jeans.
FIDE does not plan any ​action against Carlsen for Saturday’s outburst but will review the incident if ⁠a complaint is launched, CEO Emil Sutovsky told Reuters.
Despite his defeat, Carlsen is still in contention for the title at the championships and sits in joint second with seven points alongside Alexey Sarana, Yagiz Kaan Erdogmus and Nodirbek Abdusattorov.
Artemiev and Hans Niemann share the lead in the open category ‌on 7.5.