logo
‘It's a huge upset': Beating the USA in a relay is sweet. Australia's underdog swimmers just did it twice in 15 minutes

‘It's a huge upset': Beating the USA in a relay is sweet. Australia's underdog swimmers just did it twice in 15 minutes

The Age9 hours ago
There were nerves. Mollie O'Callaghan, tasked with the opening leg, fumbled her goggles on the blocks. No Cate Campbell. No Emma McKeon. No Shayna Jack. This was one of the least experienced quartets Australia had fielded in years, having won Olympic gold in 2012, 2016, 2021 and 2024.
O'Callaghan (52.79), an individual 100m freestyle world champion in 2023, fired off a great first leg before Meg Harris (51.87 split) held the lead.
From there, it was down to newcomers Milla Jansen and Wunsch — both highly rated but no one really knew if they really had it in them to propel Australia home.
That they did as Jansen (52.89 split) kept Australia in front before Wunsch (53.05), channelling Ian Thorpe on Gary Hall Jr, surged past the USA's Torri Huske in the final strokes to secure gold in 3:30.60 — 0.44 seconds clear of the Americans.
The Australian coaches' area erupted at the sight of a young team digging deep when it mattered.
'It was very daunting,' O'Callaghan said. 'All of us were quite nervous. I'm very confident in these girls.'
Wunsch added: 'I just wanted to power home and give it all I had. And it's really exciting to be able to stand up with the gold medals.'
The Americans declined to detail the impact of illness in their camp, but butterfly world record holder Gretchen Walsh withdrew an hour before the race.
'I don't really want to speak on how much it's affected us or who it's affected,' Huske said. 'But we've done a really good job staying resilient and staying positive.'
The Australian men have often lived in the shadow of their female counterparts, despite winning the same event at the 2023 world titles in Fukuoka. This time, their task was even tougher on paper.
At their staging camp in Darwin, Flynn Southam, Kai Taylor, Max Giuliani and Chalmers sat down to plot a path to victory. They knew it would take something special.
They did it in 2023 at the world championships but had to settle for silver at last year's Olympics.
Southam (47.77) set the tone before Taylor unleashed a sizzling 47.04 split in front of his mother, Australian Olympian Hayley Lewis, in the stands.
Giuliani (47.63) got Australia into third, and then came Chalmers who delivered a devastating final split of 46.53 to motor the Dolphins home over a highly fancied American team.
As Chalmers sliced through the water, his teammates smashed the starting blocks with their hands and willed the veteran to the wall. This was swimming theatre at its finest.
Australia finished in 3:08.97, just 0.73 seconds outside the USA's world record from 2008. Italy (3:09.58) pipped the USA (3:09.64) for bronze.
Then came even more celebrations, as Dean Boxall and head coach Rohan Taylor mobbed those around them in jubilant scenes.
Australia weren't expected to come close but landed a 1-2 blow on their American rivals.
'The goal for us was just to give Kyle a puncher's shot,' Southam said. 'That was what we did. We all did our job extraordinarily well.
'The girls are so incredibly deep and strong, so we wanted to be part of that. We may not be the most talented on paper ... but we get in there and we have the underdog mentality. That was so awesome.'
Loading
Asked if he thought the USA were shocked by the result, Chalmers said: 'I think it's a huge upset and we prove that time and time again. Every year you read the articles and people write us off.
'We have a point to prove and swim with a chip on our shoulder a little bit, to be honest with you.
'It's not just about the US, but it was nice to get a hand on the wall first tonight and hear the Australian anthem is so special.'
The Americans, meanwhile, were licking their wounds after failing to win a gold medal on night one — a rare sight for the swimming powerhouse, who last year also endured their worst Olympic gold haul in the pool since 1988.
'We're tough,' US swimmer Chris Guiliano said. 'We've got some dogs on this team.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Power hitters shaping Aussie T20 future
Power hitters shaping Aussie T20 future

Perth Now

time43 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

Power hitters shaping Aussie T20 future

The injection of big-hitting powerhouses Cameron Green and Mitch Owen into the batting order alongside Tim David could turn Australia into an unstoppable T20 powerhouse according to veteran star Glenn Maxwell. Australis is undefeated in four games in the West Indies having twice chased down totals of more than 200 to win, with David's freakish 37-ball century in the third game a standout performance. But Green, who has come in at No.3 in all four games in a new move, is his team's leading run-scorer with 173 runs, including three half-centuries, at an average of 86 and a strike rate above 160. His 12 sixes is the most of any teams and Maxwell, who opened the batting but said he was only warming the seat for absent Travois Head, said the emergence of the new crop of power hitters, including Owen, who made a half-century on debut in the opener, was exciting for Australian cricket. 'It's been great to see the growth of some of the guys and 'Greeny' in this series has been absolutely outstanding (with three half-centuries in four innings),' Maxwell said. 'We're seeing him turn into a really consistent and solid T20 player and it's just so exciting for Australian cricket to see these guys with this sort of power and it's going to be dangerous for a lot of teams heading forward.' Maxwell said the sort of hitting provided by the likes of Green and David, who has 11 sixes in just two innings in the series, plus Owen and even Josh Inglis, could be the missing link to significant Australian success in the format with Head to return. 'I think the way we're probably going to set up our T20 side heading forward is you've got Travis up the top, you've got Mitch Marsh who is captaining us brilliantly at the moment. ''Ingo' (Josh Inglis) is doing a great job at No.3 and the rest of the order falls into place around that. 'We've got some unbelievable power hitting at the moment, we've seen some guys really put their hand up – Tim David, Mitch Owen and Cameron Green – throughout the middle. Josh Inglis of Australia hits 4 during the second Twenty20 (T20) international cricket match between West Indies and Australia at Sabina Park in Kingston, Jamaica, on July 22, 2025. (Photo by Randy Brooks / AFP) Credit: RANDY BROOKS / AFP 'They're three pretty big blokes with big reach and they hit the ball an absolute mile, so it's great to have those guys with that extra bit of power in the middle order. 'It's not something we've had an abundance of over the years and to have that at our disposal at the moment is pretty exciting.' Australia will look to complete a 5-0 clean sweep in the final game in St Kitts on Tuesday.

Glenn Maxwell says Australian T20 team has never had power hitters like Cam Green, Tim David
Glenn Maxwell says Australian T20 team has never had power hitters like Cam Green, Tim David

West Australian

time43 minutes ago

  • West Australian

Glenn Maxwell says Australian T20 team has never had power hitters like Cam Green, Tim David

The injection of big-hitting powerhouses Cameron Green and Mitch Owen into the batting order alongside Tim David could turn Australia into an unstoppable T20 powerhouse according to veteran star Glenn Maxwell. Australis is undefeated in four games in the West Indies having twice chased down totals of more than 200 to win, with David's freakish 37-ball century in the third game a standout performance. But Green, who has come in at No.3 in all four games in a new move, is his team's leading run-scorer with 173 runs, including three half-centuries, at an average of 86 and a strike rate above 160. His 12 sixes is the most of any teams and Maxwell, who opened the batting but said he was only warming the seat for absent Travois Head, said the emergence of the new crop of power hitters, including Owen, who made a half-century on debut in the opener, was exciting for Australian cricket. 'It's been great to see the growth of some of the guys and 'Greeny' in this series has been absolutely outstanding (with three half-centuries in four innings),' Maxwell said. 'We're seeing him turn into a really consistent and solid T20 player and it's just so exciting for Australian cricket to see these guys with this sort of power and it's going to be dangerous for a lot of teams heading forward.' Maxwell said the sort of hitting provided by the likes of Green and David, who has 11 sixes in just two innings in the series, plus Owen and even Josh Inglis, could be the missing link to significant Australian success in the format with Head to return. 'I think the way we're probably going to set up our T20 side heading forward is you've got Travis up the top, you've got Mitch Marsh who is captaining us brilliantly at the moment. ''Ingo' (Josh Inglis) is doing a great job at No.3 and the rest of the order falls into place around that. 'We've got some unbelievable power hitting at the moment, we've seen some guys really put their hand up – Tim David, Mitch Owen and Cameron Green – throughout the middle. 'They're three pretty big blokes with big reach and they hit the ball an absolute mile, so it's great to have those guys with that extra bit of power in the middle order. 'It's not something we've had an abundance of over the years and to have that at our disposal at the moment is pretty exciting.' Australia will look to complete a 5-0 clean sweep in the final game in St Kitts on Tuesday.

Grieving Aussie swimmer Sam Short dedicates 400m freestyle silver medal to late auntie
Grieving Aussie swimmer Sam Short dedicates 400m freestyle silver medal to late auntie

7NEWS

time43 minutes ago

  • 7NEWS

Grieving Aussie swimmer Sam Short dedicates 400m freestyle silver medal to late auntie

Australian swimmer Sam Short has dedicated his 400m freestyle silver medal to his late auntie after tapping into her fight at the world championships. The 21-year-old, the 2023 world champion who finished fourth at the Paris Olympics, couldn't hide his disappointment upon touching the wall. He had lost by just two hundredths of a second. Short overcame an early deficit to hit the lead with less than half the race remaining and still led by a fingernail with 50m to go. Neck-and-neck with Lukas Maertens right until the end, it was the Olympic champion Maertens who came up trumps. Maertens posted 3:42.35 to narrowly beat Short (3:42.37) while South Korea's Kim Woomin (3:42.60) finished third. Afterwards Short revealed the grief he had been carrying in the lead-up to the world championships in Singapore. 'I won two years ago by 0.02 and today I just lost by 0.02,' Short said. 'I'm happy to be back on the podium after a hard last year. So, you know, I can't complain. 'I just want to dedicate that performance there to my auntie who passed away a couple weeks ago. 'As bad I was hurting there, it's nowhere near as bad as her battling cancer for 10 years. So I had to toughen up and get it done.' In the stacked women's 400m freestyle field, Lani Pallister produced a personal-best 3:58.87 to finish fourth. Canadian world record holder Summer McIntosh (3:56.26) blitzed the field to win gold and China's Li Bingjie surged late to finish second, while the legendary Katie Ledecky had to be content with bronze. Australia's 400m Olympic champion Ariarne Titmus didn't feature after extended her post-Paris break from the pool. The relay events proved to be Australia's saviour on the opening night of the championships, propelling the nation to the top of the medal standings. First, Olivia Wunsch pulled off a huge late comeback to fire Australia to an upset victory over the US in the women's 4x100m freestyle relay. Then Kyle Chalmers achieved the same result for Australia's men, reeling in a sizeable lead from the US to snare gold. The Australian coaching staff celebrated wildly upon each victory. Australia entered Sunday night's 4x100m women's relay with a new-look team featuring Mollie O'Callaghan, Meg Harris, Milla Jansen and Wunsch. The US were hot favourites to win, but Australia threw a spanner into the works by clawing their way into the lead by the time Wunsch dived into the water for the final leg. American Torri Huske quickly re-took the lead and held a half-length margin with 50m remaining before Woods came storming home to snatch victory. 'I definitely can't believe it,' Jansen told Nine. 'This is something that I wanted growing up. I was feeling very nervous coming into this, but it's just a dream come true.' Australia finished in a time of 3:30.60, with the US (3:31.04) in second. The Australian men followed suit, with the quartet of Chalmers, Flynn Southam, Kai Taylor and Maximillian Giuliani posting a world championship-record time of 3:08.97 to defeat Italy (3:09.58) and the fading US (3:09.64). 'I've kind of lost my voice already from cheering so hard,' Southam said. 'I'm just so happy to be here, and we all swam out of our skin, and we did it for the country, and we're so proud of ourselves.'

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