logo
Red-hot Pieter Coetzé gives South Africa medal hope in Singapore

Red-hot Pieter Coetzé gives South Africa medal hope in Singapore

A team of 14 South Africans will dive into action as the swimming programme gets underway at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore on Sunday.
Leading the way for the South Africans will be young Pretoria swimmer Pieter Coetzé, who travelled directly to Singapore from Germany, where he was representing the country at the World University Games.
The TUKS psychology student left the Games with a haul of three medals after taking gold in the 50m and 100m backstroke and silver in the 100m freestyle.
He was particularly pleased with the times he swam, dipping under 48 seconds for the first time in the 100m freestyle and under 52 seconds in the 100m backstroke.
Coetzé's African record time of 51.99 seconds to take the 100m backstroke gold is the fastest in the world this year, boosting not only his confidence but also his chances of reaching the podium in Singapore.
'I was very happy with how Berlin went and with my performances there,' he said after touching down in Singapore.
'It wasn't really expected at all. I didn't really know what to expect to be fair, but to swim a 51 in the 100m backstroke was definitely unexpected and definitely boosted my confidence.
'It's also good to see the freestyle coming along. To go sub-48 was pretty cool and a big PB as well. So it was all a good sign for Singapore. It is quite close after Berlin, but I think things are looking good.'
Coetzé was the only South African to medal at the last World Championships in 2024, claiming bronze in the 200m backstroke and faces a tough task to repeat that feat in a competitive field.
'There have been some very fast times from all over and the field is very bunched up, but I think that's just going to bring the best out of all of us, and we'll push each other so I'm pretty excited to race all these guys who have put up fast times this year,' he said.
Also hoping for a great showing in Singapore is Coetzé's Pretoria team-mate Erin Gallagher, who will compete in the 50m and 100m butterfly and the 100m freestyle.
'The 100m fly I'm excited to see what I can do and see where I am and what improvements I can make, but I've put a lot of my energy and focus onto the 50m fly and 100m free,' she explained.
The 26-year-old was disappointed to miss out on an Olympic final in Paris last year but seems to be in a much better place heading into this competition.
'I feel much better in my body and much better in training, so I'm really looking forward to world champs because I feel like it's going to be a way better reflection of what I'm capable of doing in the pool.'
In the absence of four-time Olympic medallist Tatjana Smith, who retired after the Paris Games, Kaylene Corbett and Rebecca Meder will be hoping to keep the country's flag flying high in the 200m breaststroke.
Corbett is eager to see how a different approach to her training, to fit around her Honours studies this year, will translate in the pool.
'It's different and I'm excited to see how the difference has changed things – whether it's going to be really great. That's the exciting part,' said the two-time Olympic finalist.
'A happy swimmer is a fast swimmer and I'm definitely a lot happier, so I'm really excited to see where this goes.'
Meder will also compete in the 200m individual medley and the 100m breaststroke. She will be in action on Sunday in the 200m individual medley along with USA-based Aimee Canny.
It will be former Youth Olympic champion Michael Houlie and young gun Chris Smith who will be looking to make a mark in the men's breaststroke events.
Also in the mix for South Africa in Singapore is 21-year-old Matt Sates, who, after a training stint in Switzerland, is looking to bounce back from a disappointing Olympics with a solid showing at the World Championships.
The former world short course champion is down to compete in the 200m and 400m individual medley, 200m freestyle and the 100m and 200m butterfly.
The swimming programme at the World Aquatics Championships runs from 27 July to 3 August.
Matthew Caldwell, Aimee Canny, Pieter Coetzé, Kaylene Corbett, Caitlin de Lange, Erin Gallagher, Michael Houlie, Rebecca Meder, Georgia Nel, Olivia Nel, Hannah Robertson, Matthew Sates, Chris Smith, Catherine van Rensburg
Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1
Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pieter Coetzé wins 50m backstroke heat on quest for third medal
Pieter Coetzé wins 50m backstroke heat on quest for third medal

TimesLIVE

timean hour ago

  • TimesLIVE

Pieter Coetzé wins 50m backstroke heat on quest for third medal

Pieter Coetzé embarked on his quest for a record-equalling third medal at the world championships in Singapore in convincing fashion on Saturday morning by winning his 50m backstroke heat. The 21-year-old, who misjudged his pace in the 200m backstroke heats where he only just squeezed into the semifinals in the final 16th spot, made no mistake in the one-lap sprint. He stormed into the lead soon after the halfway mark and he never looked like surrendering it before touching in 24.36 to match the personal best he had posted in 2023. His time, just two-100ths of a second off Gerhard Zandberg's 2009 national record, ranked him second overall heading into the evening semifinals behind Russian Kliment Kolesnikov in 24.08. Kolesnikov holds the 23.55 world record he set in 2023. Australia's defending champion Isaac Cooper, whose national mark stands at 24.12, made it through in 14th place in a comfortable 24.80. A third medal for Coetzé, who has won the 100m backstroke gold and 200m silver, would see him join Roland Schoeman as the only South Africans to win three medals at a single world championships. Schoeman won the 50m freestyle and 50m butterfly golds as well as the 100m freestyle silver at the 2005 edition in Montreal. Caitlin de Lange finished seventh in her 50m freestyle heat in a 24.95 personal best, which ranked her 18th overall, just two spots and six-100ths of a second short of a place in the evening semifinals. Kaylene Corbett, the bronze medallist in the 200m breaststroke, won her 50m breaststroke heat in 31.43, but that wasn't enough to get her through to the semifinals. The mixed 4x100m freestyle relay team of Matthew Sates, Matthew Caldwell, Olivia Nel and Aimee Canny finished fifth in their heat in 3min 31.65sec. To qualify for the evening final they would have needed to take nearly four seconds off the 3:28.51 national record that was set at the recent World University Games by the student outfit comprising Nel, Guy Brooks, Ruard van Renen and Michaela de Villiers.

China's Qin takes 'miracle' second breaststroke gold at swim worlds
China's Qin takes 'miracle' second breaststroke gold at swim worlds

eNCA

time11 hours ago

  • eNCA

China's Qin takes 'miracle' second breaststroke gold at swim worlds

SINGAPORE - China's roaring Qin Haiyang won his second breaststroke gold of the Singapore swimming world championships on Friday as he edged a 200m nail-biter. World record holder Qin surged to the wall in 2min 07.41sec, ahead of Japan's Ippei Watanabe (2:07.70) and Caspar Corbeau of the Netherlands (2:07.73). The 26-year-old Qin won the 100m breaststroke earlier in the week but he celebrated his second victory as if it were his first. He punched the air before whipping up the delighted Chinese fans in the arena, who screamed him on to a thrilling victory. Qin started the race in lane eight after qualifying slowest from the semi-finals but it made no difference as he regained the world title he won in 2023 in style. "Amazing," said Qin. "Have you heard of the lane eight miracle? "I did not know if I was second or third, I just heard 'whoo', so I knew I had won." The lead changed hands several times, with American AJ Pouch and Russian Kirill Prigoda also challenging. In the end it was Qin who got the decisive touch ahead of Watanabe, giving the Chinese swimmer his fourth medal of the championships in Singapore. Qin is returning to form after flopping at last year's Paris Olympics, where he did not even make the final of the 200m breaststroke. His preparations for the Games were thrown into turmoil when he was implicated in a major doping scandal months before the Games. A report named Qin among 23 Chinese swimmers who had tested positive for a prescription heart drug ahead of the pandemic-delayed 2021 Tokyo Olympics. They were not sanctioned after the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) accepted the argument of Chinese authorities that the positive tests were caused by contaminated food. The flamboyant Qin, who won bronze in the 50m in Singapore, gave his overall performance at the competition full marks. "In the past I always felt there's room for improvement. Now I'm better at encouraging myself," he said. "I can give myself 100 out of 100. I should rest well after this." Qin, who clinched all three individual breaststroke crowns in Japan in 2023 to announce himself to the world, feels there is still room for improvement. The Los Angeles 2028 Olympics are already on his mind. "What I've done best here is take this pressure on well," he added. "That was truly the hardest thing I faced here.

Coetze denied another gold medal in pulsating backstroke final as Corbett snatches bronze
Coetze denied another gold medal in pulsating backstroke final as Corbett snatches bronze

IOL News

time13 hours ago

  • IOL News

Coetze denied another gold medal in pulsating backstroke final as Corbett snatches bronze

Piter Coetzé finishied second in the 200m backstroke final at the World Aquatic Championships in a time of 1:53.36. Pieter Coetzé narrowly missed out on a second gold medal at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore in Friday's 200m backstroke final, while Kaylene Corbett took bronze in the women's 200m breaststroke final. Coetzé eventually had to settle for silver behind Olympic champion Hubert Kόs of Hungary. The Pretoria swimmer went out hard in the final, turning first at both the 50m and 100m marks under world record pace, but was hunted down in the second half of the race by Kόs. South Africa's newly crowned 100m backstroke world champion came back at Kόs in the final metres of the race. He touched the wall in a time of 1:53.36, just 0.17 seconds slower than Kos (1:53.19). Yohann Ndoye-Brouard of France took the bronze in 1:54.52. Coetzé's time took almost a second off the African record he set in the semifinals and is the seventh-fastest time in history. Both Kόs and Coetzé's times beat Kόs' gold medal-winning time from last year's Olympic Games in Paris. 'Coming into this, I didn't really expect to go that fast. This has exceeded all my expectations and it's just a big honour to be in a race like that,' said an elated Coetzé afterwards. 'I kind of expected to be out very fast. I could feel that I was moving at a high pace, and I knew that I would feel it in the end, and I did. But it's a big PB for me so I'm super-happy with the time.'

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