logo
Twelve-year-old Chinese swimmer Yu Zidi qualifies for world championships

Twelve-year-old Chinese swimmer Yu Zidi qualifies for world championships

The Guardiana day ago
A 12-year-old swimmer has qualified for the world championships in Singapore after her performance at China's nationals placed her times among the world's elite this season.
Yu Zidi's 200m butterfly time was one of the fastest globally and would have narrowly missed out on an Olympic medal last year. She also posted a competitive time in the 400m individual medley, close to an Olympic podium pace.
Yu's times are quicker than Canadian swimmer Summer McIntosh at the same age. McIntosh, now 18, holds the world records in both medley events and won three Olympic gold medals last year.
Yu began training at the age of six and is based at the Hebei Taihua Jinye Swimming Club, south of Beijing. She specialises in longer, technical events such as the medley and butterfly.
Speaking to China's Xinhua news agency, Yu said: 'My age is currently an advantage. I hope to grow and develop more strength in the future.' She added: 'I really want to experience the world-class competition.'
World Aquatics competition regulations typically require swimmers to be at least 14 years old to compete, unless they achieve qualifying times that meet elite performance standards. Yu met those times, allowing her to bypass the age threshold.
Teenage standouts have long been a feature of international swimming. American Katie Ledecky was 15 when she won gold in the 800m freestyle at London 2012. Japan's Kyoko Iwasaki remains the youngest swimmer to win Olympic gold in an individual event, taking the 200m breaststroke title at 14 during the 1992 Barcelona Games.
In 2015, Bahrain's Alzain Tareq competed at the world championships aged 10, though she did not advance past the heats. Since then, qualification standards have been tightened, ensuring that any young swimmer competing at the highest level has met rigorous performance benchmarks.
Sign up to The Recap
The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action
after newsletter promotion
The World Aquatics Championships, which began on 11 July and continue until 3 August, is being held at the OCBC Aquatic Centre in Singapore. With three events – 200m and 400 medley and 200m butterfly – on her schedule, the 12-year-old will make her international debut against some of the sport's biggest names.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Arsenal sign £48m Noni Madueke — but Viktor Gyokeres deal delayed
Arsenal sign £48m Noni Madueke — but Viktor Gyokeres deal delayed

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Arsenal sign £48m Noni Madueke — but Viktor Gyokeres deal delayed

Arsenal have signed Noni Madueke for an initial £48million but are not expected to finalise a deal for Viktor Gyokeres before the squad leave on Saturday for their pre-season tour to Asia. Madueke signed a five-year contract and will be given time off after appearing for Chelsea at the Club World Cup in the United States. The England winger, 23, can play on both flanks although he mostly appeared on the right for Chelsea. Arsenal remain interested in signing a left winger if Leandro Trossard leaves, and Crystal Palace's Eberechi Eze as an attacking midfielder. But the proposed signing of Gyokeres, the Sporting Lisbon striker, for an initial £54.6million has been held up by a dispute over the how the add-ons of about £8.4million should be paid. Mikel Arteta was keen to have all his signings on board for the tour and Gyokeres, the Sweden forward, could still join the squad, who play friendlies against AC Milan on Wednesday followed by Newcastle United on Sunday, both in Singapore, and Tottenham Hotspur in Hong Kong a week on Thursday. Arsenal then play two home friendlies before starting their league campaign away to Manchester United. Madueke becomes the club's fourth summer signing, joining Kepa Arrizabalaga, the goalkeeper, and the midfielders Martín Zubimendi and Christian Norgaard. Madueke was a key player for Chelsea last season, starting 27 of his 32 league matches, scoring seven goals and providing four assists. Chelsea paid £30million for him from PSV Eindhoven in January 2023 and he has been capped seven times by England since his debut last summer. Cristhian Mosquera is due to sign from Valencia for £13million but the centre back might not be on the plane on Saturday. Ethan Nwaneri has signed a five-year deal and follows Myles Lewis-Skelly, his fellow academy graduate, in committing to the club. The midfielder signed his professional contract when he turned 17 in 2024. Walker-Peters heading to West Ham after Turkish U-turn Kyle Walker-Peters, the versatile full back, has accepted a three-year deal at West Ham United after his proposed move to Besiktas collapsed (Gary Jacob writes). The 28-year-old was released by Southampton after their relegation from the Premier League last season, having made 202 appearances for the club after joining from Tottenham Hotspur in 2020. Besiktas issued a statement that suggested the defender had reneged on an agreement to join the Turkish club. 'It is publicly known that the arrival of professional football player Kyle Walker-Peters, with whom we previously announced an agreement in principle and invited him to Istanbul for a medical examination, has been postponed,' they said. 'Today, Kyle Walker-Peters notified us, requesting an extension. Consequently, our club has withdrawn its transfer.' Sunderland sign Sassuolo forward Sunderland have agreed a £17.5million deal to sign Armand Lauriente, the Sassuolo forward who has agreed a five-year deal. He scored 18 league goals to help Sassuolo to promotion last season from Serie B and worked under Regis Le Bris, the Sunderland head coach, at Rennes.

Josh Kerr sets sights on record-breaking performance in London
Josh Kerr sets sights on record-breaking performance in London

STV News

time2 hours ago

  • STV News

Josh Kerr sets sights on record-breaking performance in London

Josh Kerr wants to light up the London Stadium with a record-breaking performance on Saturday. The 27-year-old from Edinburgh will bid to break his own British 1500m record of three minutes 27.79 seconds at the Wanda Diamond League meeting. However, even though Kerr's great rival, Norway's Jakob Ingebrigtsen, may be absent through injury, he still faces stiff domestic competition just to win the race with fellow Brits George Mills Jake Wightman and Neil Gourley in the field. 'What would satisfy me? A win, number one,' said Kerr, who as the top-ranked competitor will pick the pace set by a pacemaker. 'But I think I can run pretty fast so I would say go out, be aggressive and see what we can come up with. 'We're coming through the 800m in about one minute 51. That's the idea. A British record would be a great way for me to run this meet. 'But at the end of the day when you have a race like this, when it's so packed with a load of great athletes, the number one priority is to win and you're going to get a good time from that. But I'm not here for a slow race.' Kerr is building up his preparations to defend his world title in Tokyo in September and is in confident spirits. 'If I can keep training the way I've been training I'm going to be in a great spot,' he said. 'I've got the British Championships coming up in a couple of weeks, that's an important meeting, and from there we'll see what we're going to do. 'Maybe stay with the training, don't fight the body too much and let the races come to me.' Double heptathlon world champion Katarina Johnson-Thompson will compete at the long jump at the scene of her Olympic debut and her disappointing fifth-place finish at the 2017 worlds. 'It's a very special place, a very special stadium, and I've got such fond memories of competing here,' said the 32-year-old. 'Highlights for me have been the two championships here, even though at the first one I was 19 and not expected to do much, and the 2017 one was a bit upsetting, but I only have good memories of this place. 'I want to come here and put down a good mark, to give me confidence going into the heptathlon. 'I feel like training has been going well and I'm 100 per cent healthy, and that's the most important for me.' Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

‘So unpredictable' – Snooker fans baffled as ‘one of more confusing players on the tour' knocks in staggering 147 break
‘So unpredictable' – Snooker fans baffled as ‘one of more confusing players on the tour' knocks in staggering 147 break

The Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Sun

‘So unpredictable' – Snooker fans baffled as ‘one of more confusing players on the tour' knocks in staggering 147 break

CHINESE snooker star Fan Zhengyi scored the first maximum break of the new 2025 season - after a disappointing year. The world No.48 shocked fans when he hit an incredible 147 at the Championship League in Leicester on Thursday. 2 2 Fan became only the 38th player in the modern history of the sport to compile multiple maximums, scoring his first at the English Open in 2024. The perfect break came in the second frame of the match which finished 2-2. The highlight of the 147 was a tough cutback yellow to a blind pocket on 120, as he hit the white off three cushions to come back for the green in baulk. David Hendon on commentary said: "First of the season, but we know with the quality of players, it won't be the last. Fantastic from Fan Zhengyi." But his opponent Xu did not let Fan's effort get to him, as he recovered from 2-0 behind to earn a 2-2 draw in finishing the day unbeaten. However, supporters couldn't believe Fan's achievement after the disappointing year he's had, failing to make it past the last-32 of any competition. One posted on X: "Fan is one of the more confusing players on tour. Looks unbelievable sometimes but really unpredictable. "He's not won a match yet this season, but made a 147. Also lost a frame to Highfield who needed 3 snookers. Tough to predict." While another added: " Definitely in the top-10 of most confusing players!" It was the 218th 147 in professional snooker history and first of the 2025/26 season. But Fan, who has won just three matches this calendar year, was dumped out of the competition with a haul of just two points. Xu Si instead topped Group 29 with a record of two wins and a draw, beating Michal Szubarczyk and Liam Highfield before securing a tie with Fan to safeguard his spot in the last 32. The Championship League runs between June 30 and July 23, with 32 groups of four producing 32 winners, who are then split into eight groups of four. Two final groups of four will determine who contests the final on July 23, with the winner earning £33,000 and a place in the Champion of Champions event in Leicester in November. Ronnie O'Sullivan, who Fan defeated 10-9 in the 2022 European Masters final, remains the most prolific maximum maker of all time with 15. List of all-time Snooker World Champions BELOW is a list of snooker World Champions by year. The record is for the modern era, widely considered as dating from the 1968-69 season, when the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) took control of the sport. The first World Championships ran from 1927 - with a break from 1941-45 because of World War II and 1958-63 because of a dispute in the sport. Joe Davis (15), Fred Davis and John Pulman (both 8) were the most successful players during that period. Stephen Hendry and Ronnie O'Sullivan share the record for the most titles in the modern era, with seven each. 1969 - John Spencer 1970 - Ray Reardon 1971 - John Spencer 1972 - Alex Higgins 1973 - Ray Reardon (2) 1974 - Ray Reardon (3) 1975 - Ray Reardon (4) 1976 - Ray Reardon (5) 1977 - John Spencer (2) 1978 - Ray Reardon (6) 1979 - Terry Griffiths 1980 - Cliff Thorburn 1981 - Steve Davis 1982 - Alex Higgins (2) 1983 - Steve Davis (2) 1984 - Steve Davis (3) 1985 - Dennis Taylor 1986 - Joe Johnson 1987 - Steve Davis (4) 1988 - Steve Davis (5) 1989 - Steve Davis (6) 1990 - Stephen Hendry 1991 - John Parrott 1992 - Stephen Hendry (2) 1993 - Stephen Hendry (3) 1994 - Stephen Hendry (4) 1995 - Stephen Hendry (5) 1996 - Stephen Hendry (6) 1997 - Ken Doherty 1998 - John Higgins 1999 - Stephen Hendry (7) 2000 - Mark Williams 2001 - Ronnie O'Sullivan 2002 - Peter Ebdon 2003 - Mark Williams (2) 2004 - Ronnie O'Sullivan (2) 2005 - Shaun Murphy 2006 - Graeme Dott 2007 - John Higgins (2) 2008 - Ronnie O'Sullivan (3) 2009 - John Higgins (3) 2010 - Neil Robertson 2011 - John Higgins (4) 2012 - Ronnie O'Sullivan (4) 2013 - Ronnie O'Sullivan (5) 2014 - Mark Selby 2015 - Stuart Bingham 2016 - Mark Selby (2) 2017 - Mark Selby (3) 2018 - Mark Williams (3) 2019 - Judd Trump 2020 - Ronnie O'Sullivan (6) 2021 - Mark Selby (4) 2022 - Ronnie O'Sullivan (7) 2023 - Luca Brecel 2024 - Kyren Wilson 2025 - Zhao Xintong Most World Titles (modern era) 7 - Stephen Hendry, Ronnie O'Sullivan 6 - Ray Reardon, Steve Davis 4 - John Higgins, Mark Selby 3 - John Spencer, Mark Williams 2 - Alex Higgins

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store