
Roundup: China bags two diving golds, Li Bingjie adds swimming silver at Singapore Worlds
Paired up just a little more than a month, Zhu Yongxin and 15-year-old Xie Peiling finished atop the podium with 298.86 points in their championship debut, edging DPR Korea duo Choe Wi Hyon and Jo Jin Mi by a razor-thin margin of 0.06 points. Neutral athletes Aleksandr Bondar and Anna Konanykhina claimed bronze.
"This wasn't an easy win; it was a tough battle, and in the end, we won by just a tiny margin," said Zhu. "Looking back, I felt a bit nervous about how close it was. But ultimately, I'm really glad we managed to secure the victory."
In the men's one-meter springboard final, China's Zheng Jiuyuan delivered a consistent and composed performance to take gold with 443.70 points, fending off Mexico's Osmar Olvera Ibarra. China's Yan Siyu earned the bronze.
China's first medal in the swimming pool came courtesy of Li, winning silver in the women's 400-meter freestyle. Canada's Summer McIntosh claimed gold in three minutes 56.26 seconds, American legend Katie Ledecky took bronze in 3:58.49.
Li, 23, clocked 3:58.21, breaking her own Asian record and finishing ahead of Ledecky for the first time in a major international competition.
"I was really surprised - I didn't expect to beat her (Ledecky)," Li said. "Even though she may not be in peak form right now, this victory means a lot to me - it's truly significant."
The youngest swimmer of the tournament, China's 12-year-old Yu Zidi qualified seventh overall for the women's 200-meter individual medley final with a time of two minutes 10.22 seconds.
"I'm really happy. I made the final in my first world championships," Yu said after the race. "That's pretty exciting. I'll keep working hard in the future. I hope this competition helps me break through and really show my true level."
Qin Haiyang topped the men's 100-meter breaststroke semifinals in 58.24 seconds to advance to Monday's final.
Team Australia dominated the 4x100m freestyle relays, claiming gold in both men's and women's events, with their men's quartet setting a new championship record.
Earlier in the day, 30-year-old James Lichtenstein produced a clutch final-round performance to capture gold in the men's 27-meter high diving, earning the United States' first gold in Singapore.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
8 hours ago
- The Star
Swimming-'Dirty gold! Let's Go!' Australia's Turner stunned by 200 butterfly bronze
Swimming - World Aquatics Championships - Men 200m Butterfly - Finals - World Aquatics Championships Arena, Singapore - July 30, 2025 Australia's Harrison Turner in action during the final REUTERS/Hollie Adams (Reuters) -Harrison Turner had to pinch himself to believe he won bronze in the 200 metres butterfly at the world championships in Singapore on Wednesday, the euphoric Australian yelling "Dirty gold! Let's go!" into the cameras after his surprise podium swim. Turner, who finished behind American Luca Urlando and Poland's Krzysztof Chmielewski, became Australia's first medallist in the event at the world championships and his time of one minute and 54.17 seconds was a national record. "I'm lost for words. Being in lane eight, I just snuck in and I thought, I've got a lane, I've got a chance. Yeah, I never would have imagined to sneak in a bronze there," Turner said. "It's unbelievably special for me. I still can't believe it. When I didn't see really anyone to the side, I was like 'jeez, I might actually have a chance here' and then I saw the boys coming at the last 50 meters, I just dug as hard as I could. "I can't believe it ... Yeah, Dirty gold! Let's go!" Turner was first called up to the Australian squad after Kaylee McKeown opted out of the short course world championships in December and the 21-year-old has made steady progress ever since. He made a splash with a swim of 1:54.90 at the Australian trials in Adelaide last month and his time at the Singapore Sports Hub bettered the country's previous mark of 1:54.46 set by Nick D'Arcy in 2009. "It's just that fire that burns deep within your heart," Turner added. "It's why you rock up, do the early mornings, late nights, you're feeling sore, you're feeling shattered through the week and you pick yourself up because you know you've got a job to do. I'm just so stoked to be here representing Australia. "I love it so much. It's an honour to represent the green and gold." (Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Bengaluru; Editing by Peter Rutherford)


The Star
8 hours ago
- The Star
Swimming-Marchand smashes 200 individual medley world record at world championships
Swimming - World Aquatics Championships - Men 200m Medley - Semifinals - World Aquatics Championships Arena, Singapore - July 30, 2025 France's Leon Marchand in action during semifinal 2 REUTERS/Edgar Su (Reuters) -France's Olympic champion Leon Marchand obliterated the men's 200 metres individual medley world record with a stunning swim of 1:52.69 in his semi-final at the world championships in Singapore on Wednesday. Marchand shaved nearly one-and-a-half seconds off Ryan Lochte's 2011 mark (1:54.00) set at the world championships in Shanghai to set the Singapore pool alight on day four, the Toulouse native shaking a fist and punching the water in celebration. Exhausted after the Paris Games where he won four individual titles, Marchand skipped the short course world championships in Hungary last December and suffered injuries that delayed his return to the pool until the TYR Pro Series in Florida in May. But swimming a reduced programme in Singapore, focusing on the 200 and 400 IM alone for individual events, he has returned to the global stage with a bang. (Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Peter Rutherford)


New Straits Times
8 hours ago
- New Straits Times
Olympic champ Pan crashes out again in second worlds flop
SINGAPORE: China's Olympic champion and world record holder Pan Zhanle said he "wasn't in good shape" after crashing out in the semi-finals of the 100m freestyle at swimming's world championships on Wednesday. Pan, who stunned the world by winning gold in Paris in a new record time of 46.40sec a year ago, finished 10th in the semi-finals in Singapore, missing out on the eight-man final. His time of 47.81 was a full second behind the fastest qualifier, American Jack Alexy. "To put it plainly, I just wasn't in good shape today," said the 20-year-old Pan. "I'll continue to work hard." Pan also flopped in the 200m freestyle in Singapore, going out in the heats. Australia's Kyle Chalmers, who qualified for the 100m final from the same semi-final as Pan, said his Chinese rival was "probably struggling a little bit." "He said to me this morning after the heat, 'I am tired' after we touched the wall, so I'm assuming he's not at his best," said Chalmers. "He had such a successful Olympic year last year. A lot of Australian Olympic athletes like myself have struggled the year after the Olympics, historically. "I'm sure he's probably even more famous than I ever was in Australia." Pan's win in Paris turned heads in the swimming world, with Australian Olympian-turned swimming coach Brett Hawke questioning its legitimacy. Hawke, an Australian Olympic sprint freestyler himself who went on to mentor Brazil's Cesar Cielo, the first man to break 47 seconds, claimed the world record time was "not humanly possible."-AFP