5 different countries take gold medals on a wide-open day at the swim world championships

Clockwise, from top left: Kate Douglass of the US, Marrit Steenbergen of The Netherlands,; China's Haiyang Qin, and Hungary's Hubert Kos. (AFP/AP/Reuters/AFP)
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Updated 01 August 2025
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5 different countries take gold medals on a wide-open day at the swim world championships

  • China’s Qin Haiyang, who holds the world record, won the men’s 200 breaststroke in 2:07.41
  • Kate Douglass got the US its fifth individual gold in these championships, taking the 200 breaststroke

SINGAPORE: The gold medals were spread around on Friday at the swimming world championships, thanks to the absence of stars Léon Marchand of France and Canadian Summer McIntosh from any finals on Day 6 in Singapore.
Marchand, who has already broken the world record in the 200-meter individual medley, will try to break his own 400 IM record on Sunday, the final day.
McIntosh has won three individual gold medals already and will chase two more on Saturday and Sunday as she tries for five individual golds. Only Michael Phelps has managed that at the worlds.
The biggest race of the championships might be Saturday’s 800-meter freestyle with McIntosh and American Katie Ledecky – the world-record holder – the favorites.
The Netherlands, China, Hungary and the United States picked up individual golds Friday as the meet continues to spread them around. Britain also won its first gold and first medal in Singapore, taking the men’s 4x200 relay.
Through six days the United States and Australia top the gold-medal table with five each. The Americans have won 20 overall to 13 for Australia.
Marrit Steenbergen of the Netherlands powered through the last 50 meters to win the women’s 100-meter freestyle. Steenbergen won in 52.55 seconds, with silver for Mollie O’Callaghan (52.67) of Australia and bronze to Torri Huske (52.89) of the United States.
Steenbergen won this event at the 2024 worlds in Doha, but those championships were lightly attended. This race had a tough field. Both O’Callaghan and Huske are Olympic individual champions, but not in this event.
“It feels so crazy,” Steenbergen said. “In Doha, it was like, ‘OK, this is crazy to win.’ But in this field, I don’t know what to feel. I’m just so happy.”
It was the first gold medal for the Netherlands in Singapore.
Qin wins again
China’s Qin Haiyang, who holds the world record, won the men’s 200 breaststroke in 2:07.41 with second for Ippei Watanabe (2:07.70) of Japan and bronze to Caspar Corbeau of the Netherlands (2:07.73). Haiyang also won the 100 breaststroke in Singapore.
Haiyang swam from Lane 8 and called winning from that far outside position “a miracle.” He set the world record two years ago in the worlds in Fukuoka, Japan (2:05.48).
Hubert Kós of Hungary repeated his gold medal from a year ago at the Paris Olympics, winning the men’s 200 backstroke in 1:53.19. Pieter Coetze of South Africa, who won the 100 back, took silver (1:53.36) with bronze for Yohann Ndoye-Brouard of France (1:54.62).
Kate Douglass delivers
American Kate Douglass got the US its fifth individual gold in these championships, taking the 200 breaststroke in 2:18.50, the second fastest in history. Evgeniia Chikunova of the Neutral Athletes was second (2:19.96). Kaylene Corbett of South Africa and Alina Zmushka of the Neutral Athletes tied for bronze (2:23.52).
The Americans have been slowed through the championships with dozens of members of the team having picked up “acute gastroenteritis” at a training camp in Thailand before arriving in Singapore. Head Coach Greg Meehan said the “overall majority” of the team had been affected.
In the men’s 4x200 freestyle relay, Britain won its first gold and first medal with a time of 6:59.84.
China took silver (7:00.91) with bronze for Australia (7:00.98). The United States was fourth in 7:01.24.
In Friday’s semifinals, Cameron McEvoy of Australia was fastest in the men’s 50 free (21.30) and Noè Ponti of Switzerland led qualifying in the men’s 100-meter butterfly in 50.18. Gretchen Walsh of the United States was quickest in the women’s 50 fly (25.09) and Peng Xuwei of China was quickest in the 200 backstroke (2:07.76).
12-year-old Yu gets a medal
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.
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.
 


Abu Dhabi Knight Riders snap Desert Vipers streak in one-run thriller

Updated 5 sec ago
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Abu Dhabi Knight Riders snap Desert Vipers streak in one-run thriller

  • Potent spells from Andre Russell (2/16), Ajay Kumar (2/47) and Jason Holder (1/28) prevented the Vipers from securing the seventh consecutive win at the DP World ILT20 Season 4
  • A blistering half-century from Livingstone guided the Knight Riders to 181/5

ABU DHABI: The Desert Vipers finally met their match on Tuesday night as the Abu Dhabi Knight Riders handed the table-toppers their first loss of the season, at the Zayed Cricket Stadium. The thrilling one-run victory was set up by Liam Livingstone’s knock of 76 runs before the Knight Riders’ bowling attack held their nerve to defend their total of 181/5.

A crucial opening stand between Fakhar Zaman (44 off 32) and Max Holden (52 off 43) kept the Vipers in the fray for a long time, but potent spells from Andre Russell (2/16), Ajay Kumar (2/47) and Jason Holder (1/28) ensured a narrow victory.

In response to a daunting target, Fakhar Zaman and Max Holden (52 off 43) steered the Vipers through an impactful powerplay of 53/0.

The pair rotated the strike with ease and found timely boundaries even after the fielding restrictions as Max Holden brought up a 40-ball half-century. Holden struck six boundaries on his way there.

The Vipers were at a canter until Andre Russell got the vital breakthrough, removing Holden in the 12th over. With only one boundary since the 11th over, the mounting pressure saw Andre Russell strike again to remove Zaman at 114/2 in 14 overs. Sunil Narine was also instrumental in turning up the pressure, conceding only 23 runs in his four overs.

Hasan Nawaz broke the drought with two consecutive sixes off Ajay Kumar in the 16th over but holed out on the next delivery. Sam Curran (11 off 10) and Shimron Hetmyer (7 off 4) also perished in quick succession to leave the equation at 19 runs needed in 12 balls.

A cameo from Khuzaima Tanveer (16 off 9) almost brought the Vipers home, but his knock came to an end in the final over as Ajay Kumar defended the 12 runs needed.

Batting first, the Abu Dhabi Knight Riders stumbled out of the blocks, slumping to 9/2 inside two overs. Khuzaima Tanveer struck on the opening delivery, claiming Phil Salt as his 11th victim of the season, before Lockie Ferguson trapped Michael Pepper (4 off 3) LBW to leave the Knight Riders reeling. Alex Hales (25 off 18) counterattacked inside the powerplay with two fours and two sixes but fell to Ferguson in the fifth over as the Knight Riders finished the powerplay at 48/3.

Liam Livingstone (76 off 48) and UAE’s Alishan Sharafu (39 off 35) endured a difficult phase, steadying the ship with a 50-run stand in 46 balls. Just as the pair looked to step on the accelerator, Sharafu fell to Sam Curran in search of his fourth six of the night.

The Knight Riders recovered well to pass the 15-over mark at 112/4, and Livingstone and Sherfane Rutherford (24* off 14) ensured the side plundered another 69 runs in the final five overs. Livingstone launched Qais Ahmad for two successive sixes to bring up a 36-ball fifty and finished the night with six fours and three sixes to his name.

Rutherford took down Noor Ahmad in a 19-run over before Livingstone became Ferguson’s third scalp of the night in the final over. The partnership of 68 runs in 30 balls propelled the Knight Riders to 181/5.

Player of the match, Liam Livingstone said: “It was very much needed for us tonight. Today was a very important game for us so I am glad we could get the win. Pretty happy with the way I paced the innings, getting 25 off 25 and then pressing on the gas accelerator. Most pleasing thing is being able to get a score and contribute.”

Reflecting on the loss, captain of the Desert Vipers, Lockie Ferguson said: “It is not a great result, obviously, but it was a great game of cricket. The boys will obviously be hurting, but we’ll take the dividends from tonight.”

Brief Scores

Abu Dhabi Knight Riders beat Desert Vipers by one run

Abu Dhabi Knight Riders 181/5 in 20 overs (Liam Livingstone 76, Alishan Sharafu 39, Sherfane Rutherford 24 not out, Lockie Ferguson 3 for 34)

Desert Vipers 180/6 in 20 overs (Max Holden 52, Fakhar Zaman 44, Hasan Nawaz 23, Andre Russell 2 for 16, Ajay Kumar 2 for 47, Jason Holder 1 for 28)