logo
American swimming star Lilly King announces farewell season, final US competition

American swimming star Lilly King announces farewell season, final US competition

American three-time Olympic swimming star and world record holder Lilly King has announced the upcoming Toyota National Championships in Indianapolis will be her final meet on U.S. soil as she prepares to call it a career at the conclusion of the 2025 season.
The meet will run Tuesday through Saturday. A longtime breaststroke stalwart, King
announced her plans Saturday on Instagram
and said swimming her final race in the U.S. in her home state and a pool she's known since her youth 'has always been important to me.'
'Well, folks, my time has come. This will be my final season competing,' she wrote. 'I'm fortunate heading into retirement being able to say I have accomplished everything I have ever wanted in this sport. I feel fulfilled.'
The 28-year-old King holds the world record in the 100-meter breaststroke with a time of 1:04.13, set at the 2017 world championships. She won an Olympic gold medal in the 100 breast at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games and also captured Olympic titles on relays in Rio and at her final Olympics last year in Paris.
The U.S. women's 4x100 medley relay set a world record
in 3:49.63. Regan Smith, Gretchen Walsh and Torri Huske were her teammates in the Americans' victory over defending Olympic champion Australia.
'Just an awesome way to cap off the meet,' King said afterward.
At the delayed 2020 Tokyo Olympics, King earned silver medals in the 200 breaststroke and 4x100 medley relay and a bronze in the 100 breast.
She narrowly missed the medal stand
in the 100 breast in Paris, with one-hundredth of a second separating bronze medalist Mona McSharry of Ireland and the fourth-place tie between King and Italy's Benedetta Pilato in 1:05.60.
For King, being home in Indiana next week will mean so much.
It was also in Indianapolis last June during the U.S. Olympic swimming trials that
boyfriend and former Indiana University swimmer James Wells proposed
to her just off the pool deck — and she said yes.
'I have been racing in the IU Natatorium since I was 10 years old,' she wrote. 'From state meets, to NCAAs, Nationals, and anything in between, this pool has been my home. I didn't quite make it 20 years (only 18) of racing in Indy, but this is as close as I'm gonna get! I look forward to racing in front of a home crowd one last time.'
___
AP Summer Olympics:
https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Maddie May stays present for Hoosier Women's Am win on adopted home course
Maddie May stays present for Hoosier Women's Am win on adopted home course

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Maddie May stays present for Hoosier Women's Am win on adopted home course

With experience, Maddie May has found the kind of headspace that can produce a title-saving mid-round rally. Over 54 holes at the Hoosier Women's Amateur, May, who will be a redshirt senior at Indiana University this fall, built a five-shot lead with a record opening round, watched it dwindle, then pulled away for a nine-shot victory on what she now considers her home golf course, the Pfau Course. That kind of calm is truly learned. 'I definitely have learned that,' she said. 'There's been a couple tournaments – you go through it where you have those buffers or you have those leads, I've lost them plenty of times. I think you just learn that all you can control is yourself.' May hails from Christchurch, New Zealand, and first competed in the U.S. when she was 13 years old. She would annually travel to San Diego for the Junior World Championships and signed with Ole Miss in 2021. She joined that roster in the spring of 2022 but transferred to Indiana for the 2023-24 season. May now benefits from a home track in Bloomington, Indiana, that sharpens every tool in the bag. 'Around the Pfau, anything can happen,' May said after her victory. Truly. Her week began with a tournament - and personal (Pfau) - record 67 that included four birdies on the front nine. She lost ground with a 40 on the front nine the next day but held her five-stroke lead with a 2-under effort on the back nine. 'Keeping to my game plan and being able to stay in the present moment and hit shot by shot on that back nine really helped me to pull myself back into it and post a score that gave me that buffer heading into today,' she said. A final-round 74 left May with a nine-shot victory over Nicole Johnson of Edwardsville, Illinois. May felt so at peace at the start of the week that even her caddie, a friend who used to work at the Pfau Course, noticed. It led to the 67 that ultimately set her up for the victory. 'I was talking to my caddie on the first hole and I was just like, I feel this overwhelming sense of calmness today. And he was like, you look really calm,' she said. 'I think that I was just able to do what I was doing, just within that rhythm, and I never really lost touch with that rhythm.' This is the third year she has competed in the Hoosier Women's Amateur, with previous finishes of T-7 in 2024 and sixth in 2023. She has grown close to many Pfau regulars, and by the 13th hole, a growing number of locals and golf course staff had joined her gallery to watch her close out a win. Instead of returning home to New Zealand this summer (it would be winter there anyway, she noted), May remained in Bloomington to work on her game at the Hoosiers' facility and knock out a few more credits to make her upcoming season a bit more manageable. She is an accounting major, which follows in the footsteps of her parents Tim, the CFO of the Christchurch Airport, and Paula, a retired accountant. Paula was just in Bloomington a week ago, but before her daughter's Hoosier Women's Amateur victory, she headed a little farther west to visit Maddie's older brother Zach, a senior on the golf team at Iowa State. Maddie's younger brother Sebastian is a sophomore on the Sam Houston State golf team. In June, Maddie May won the Indiana Women's Open Championship. She tied for ninth at the Indiana Women's Amateur last month. Still, it wasn't an easy past year for May as she finished in the top 10 only one time in 10 starts with her Indiana team. She finished outside the top 50 six times. May credits her family, particularly Zach, for pulling her out of the slump. With a season of college golf left, May hasn't completely ruled out professional golf as a career, 'as long as I can stay enjoying the game and really playing because I enjoy it.' May has a road map, or at least a fair bit of inspiration, in fellow New Zealander Lydia Ko. When May was 9 years old, she competed in a Play with the Pros event and was paired with Ko for nine holes. That was in February 2013, a week before Ko, at 15 years old, won the New Zealand Open. May remembers being in shock most of the day, so much so that she can't remember a lot of details about the round. 'Just watching her success is really cool for all us girls who come out of New Zealand because it's such a small country,' May said. But if May doesn't choose Ko's route? There's always big-city life here in the U.S., where May would love to remain and work in a Big Four accounting firm. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Maddie May stays present for Hoosier Women's Am win on home course

Maddie May stays present for Hoosier Women's Am win on adopted home course
Maddie May stays present for Hoosier Women's Am win on adopted home course

USA Today

time15 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Maddie May stays present for Hoosier Women's Am win on adopted home course

With experience, Maddie May has found the kind of headspace that can produce a title-saving mid-round rally. Over 54 holes at the Hoosier Women's Amateur, May, who will be a redshirt senior at Indiana University this fall, built a five-shot lead with a record opening round, watched it dwindle, then pulled away for a nine-shot victory on what she now considers her home golf course, the Pfau Course. That kind of calm is truly learned. 'I definitely have learned that,' she said. 'There's been a couple tournaments – you go through it where you have those buffers or you have those leads, I've lost them plenty of times. I think you just learn that all you can control is yourself.' May hails from Christchurch, New Zealand, and first competed in the U.S. when she was 13 years old. She would annually travel to San Diego for the Junior World Championships and signed with Ole Miss in 2021. She joined that roster in the spring of 2022 but transferred to Indiana for the 2023-24 season. May now benefits from a home track in Bloomington, Indiana, that sharpens every tool in the bag. 'Around the Pfau, anything can happen,' May said after her victory. Truly. Her week began with a tournament - and personal (Pfau) - record 67 that included four birdies on the front nine. She lost ground with a 40 on the front nine the next day but held her five-stroke lead with a 2-under effort on the back nine. 'Keeping to my game plan and being able to stay in the present moment and hit shot by shot on that back nine really helped me to pull myself back into it and post a score that gave me that buffer heading into today,' she said. A final-round 74 left May with a nine-shot victory over Nicole Johnson of Edwardsville, Illinois. May felt so at peace at the start of the week that even her caddie, a friend who used to work at the Pfau Course, noticed. It led to the 67 that ultimately set her up for the victory. 'I was talking to my caddie on the first hole and I was just like, I feel this overwhelming sense of calmness today. And he was like, you look really calm,' she said. 'I think that I was just able to do what I was doing, just within that rhythm, and I never really lost touch with that rhythm.' This is the third year she has competed in the Hoosier Women's Amateur, with previous finishes of T-7 in 2024 and sixth in 2023. She has grown close to many Pfau regulars, and by the 13th hole, a growing number of locals and golf course staff had joined her gallery to watch her close out a win. Instead of returning home to New Zealand this summer (it would be winter there anyway, she noted), May remained in Bloomington to work on her game at the Hoosiers' facility and knock out a few more credits to make her upcoming season a bit more manageable. She is an accounting major, which follows in the footsteps of her parents Tim, the CFO of the Christchurch Airport, and Paula, a retired accountant. Paula was just in Bloomington a week ago, but before her daughter's Hoosier Women's Amateur victory, she headed a little farther west to visit Maddie's older brother Zach, a senior on the golf team at Iowa State. Maddie's younger brother Sebastian is a sophomore on the Sam Houston State golf team. In June, Maddie May won the Indiana Women's Open Championship. She tied for ninth at the Indiana Women's Amateur last month. Still, it wasn't an easy past year for May as she finished in the top 10 only one time in 10 starts with her Indiana team. She finished outside the top 50 six times. May credits her family, particularly Zach, for pulling her out of the slump. With a season of college golf left, May hasn't completely ruled out professional golf as a career, 'as long as I can stay enjoying the game and really playing because I enjoy it.' May has a road map, or at least a fair bit of inspiration, in fellow New Zealander Lydia Ko. When May was 9 years old, she competed in a Play with the Pros event and was paired with Ko for nine holes. That was in February 2013, a week before Ko, at 15 years old, won the New Zealand Open. May remembers being in shock most of the day, so much so that she can't remember a lot of details about the round. 'Just watching her success is really cool for all us girls who come out of New Zealand because it's such a small country,' May said. But if May doesn't choose Ko's route? There's always big-city life here in the U.S., where May would love to remain and work in a Big Four accounting firm.

Emma Meesseman will suit up for the Liberty against the Sun
Emma Meesseman will suit up for the Liberty against the Sun

Hamilton Spectator

time16 minutes ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Emma Meesseman will suit up for the Liberty against the Sun

UNCASVILLE, Conn. (AP) — Emma Meesseman knew it was time to come back to the WNBA. She felt most comfortable with New York, so the prized free agent decided to join the Liberty for the final two months of the season. The 2019 Finals MVP, who last played in the league in 2022, arrived in New York a few days ago after getting her visa and then came up to Connecticut for the Liberty's game Friday night against the Sun. 'I know people here. ... I was like okay, New York,' she said. 'Its a big city. Easy to reach. We'll see how I feel. We want to win. I think everyone knows in the W, you never know who's going to win. It's impossible to choose. It's a gamble. I'm the kind of person or player who just wants to be home because I like being home. I like to be around good people. Not saying that's not the case in other places as well.' Meesseman was also looking at joining Minnesota or Phoenix. She spent 30 minutes after shootaround ended working out with assistant Andrew Wade, who Meesseman knows from her time in Washington. She'll suit up for the game, but coach Sandy Brondello said that she'd only play in the case of an emergency. 'It's great to have Emma, she only just got here, we'll get her up to speed. I don't anticipate her playing tonight,' Brondello said. 'She'll dress. She just got off the plane, it's been a busy few days.' Meesseman has watched the WNBA's growth from afar while helping Belgium compete at the FIBA World Cup and the Olympics the last few years. 'It changed. I wanted to try it again and see with all these fans following the new players, new young players,' she said at shootaround. 'I love basketball so I was trying to play as much as I can.' After helping Belgium qualify for next year's World Cup in Germany earlier this summer, Meesseman decided it was time to return to the league. 'It's something I've been thinking about for a longer time, coming back to the W,' she said. 'I know the national team is a priority for me. I didn't sign (earlier) because I wanted to play for the (Belgium) Federation and focus on the EuroBasket. Then it was a matter of timing, visa, making a decision of how I felt. The past few days have been really fast.' Her arrival is a boost for the squad, which will be without Breanna Stewart for a few weeks while she recovers from a bone bruise in her right knee. New York also is without Nyara Sabally (knee) and Kennedy Burke (right calf strain). Meesseman and Stewart are both 6-foot-4 forwards. While she's played with Stewart, Jonquel Jones and Natasha Cloud before as well as was coached by Brondello, Meesseman said that they weren't big on recruiting her. 'I got some texts, but also am a person who doesn't like to be influenced by people,' she said. 'I want to be the one making the decision. Jonathan can confirm I am difficult to reach at times so it was more through my agent.' The Liberty (17-9) are in second place in the standings despite having lost three straight games. They are in the midst of a busy stretch with three games in the next five days, playing twice in Connecticut on Friday and Sunday and then hosting Dallas on Tuesday. Meesseman is a two-time All-Star and helped the Washington Mystics win the 2019 title. She has been focused on leading the Belgium national team since her last season in the WNBA, which she spent with the Chicago Sky. Meesseman played with Natasha Cloud, whom New York acquired in the offseason, in Washington when the Mystics won their championship six years ago. Even without Stewart for the immediate future, the Liberty still have a talented group around Meesseman with Sabrina Ionescu, Jones, Cloud and Leonie Fiebich leading the way. Meesseman has dominated overseas in her time away from the WNBA. She was named the EuroBasket MVP twice in the past three years. She helped Belgium reach the medal round at the Paris Olympics before it lost to France in overtime in the semifinals and then Australia in the bronze-medal game. The Liberty waived guard Jaylyn Sherrod to make room for Meesseman. 'Jaylyn Sherrod is a champion in every sense of the word. She embodies the passion, grit, and relentlessness that define the city of New York,' Kolb said. 'Her rise from undrafted free agent to WNBA Champion is one of the most remarkable stories I've had the good fortune to witness, a testament to perseverance, and a powerful reminder to always push the boundaries and to never give up.' ___ AP WNBA:

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