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World Athletics introduces gender testing for female athletes
World Athletics introduces gender testing for female athletes

RNZ News

timean hour ago

  • Sport
  • RNZ News

World Athletics introduces gender testing for female athletes

Time is running out for athletes to take a once-in-a-lifetime gene test. World Athletics has introduced mandatory gender testing for all female athletes wishing to compete in the women's category in elite competitions. The deadline for the testing is September 1st - just in time for the world championships in Tokyo. Sports reporter Felicity Reid spoke to Lisa Owen. Tags: To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

Chris Smith shows his potential as he ends sixth in 50m breaststroke final
Chris Smith shows his potential as he ends sixth in 50m breaststroke final

The Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sport
  • The Herald

Chris Smith shows his potential as he ends sixth in 50m breaststroke final

Chris Smith did everything asked of him as he finished sixth in a personal best time in the 50m breaststroke final at the world championships in Singapore on Wednesday night. At 19 he was the youngest in the field, but Smith touched in 26.75sec — one-100th of a second behind fifth-placed German Melvin Imoudu and two-100ths behind Russian Ivan Kozhakin. The Centurion-based Smith would have needed to go 26.67 to share bronze with 100m breaststroke champion Haiyang Qin of China. To put that into perspective, Qin's time equalled the sixth-fastest effort by South Africa's former two-time world champion and multiple record-holder Cameron van der Burgh. Then factor in how much room for improvement there is in Smith's underwater work after the dive and it's clear he has huge potential and should be given full support in the build-up to the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. There are comforting similarities to freshly-minted 100m backstroke world champion Pieter Coetzé, who also had to work on his underwater technique and possesses great natural speed on top of the water.

Pieter Coetzé earns podium seeding after tight 100m backstroke semifinals
Pieter Coetzé earns podium seeding after tight 100m backstroke semifinals

The Herald

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • The Herald

Pieter Coetzé earns podium seeding after tight 100m backstroke semifinals

Pieter Coetzé bagged the third seeding position in Tuesday's 100m backstroke final at the world championships in Singapore after a pair of hard-fought semifinals on Monday night. The South African, who set a 51.99 sec world lead at the World Student Games in Germany just more than a week ago, touched second in the second heat in 52.29, behind Hungarian Hubert Kos, the Olympic champion in the 200m backstroke, in 52.21. Russian Kliment Kolesnikov won the first semifinal in 52.26, just nine-hundredths of a second ahead of the Olympic champion in this event, Italy's Thomas Ceccon, also owner of the 51.60 world record, who kept enough in reserve to clinch bronze in the 50m butterfly half an hour later. 'I just wanted to make it back for the final and I was happy with the time and the swim. And to get second in the semis is a good result,' said Coetzé, who is racing against Russian competitors, competing under the neutral banner, for the first time. 'I knew it was going to be fast ... I've swum with most of these guys, but the Russians are new to me. I haven't swum against them and they're also really fast, but I don't really focus on the people I'm racing against. I just focus on what I need to do.' Just 0.36 sec — or the blink of an eye — separated the eight fastest swimmers, who included Oliver Morgan of Britain (52.41), Apostolos Chrisou of Greece (52.44), Frenchman Yohann Ndoye-Brouard (52.47) and Russia's Miron Lifintsev (52.57).

Canada's McIntosh aces her 'biggest' night of world championships
Canada's McIntosh aces her 'biggest' night of world championships

CNA

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • CNA

Canada's McIntosh aces her 'biggest' night of world championships

Canadian Summer McIntosh was delighted to have made it through what she described as her toughest night at the world championships with a gold medal, saying her dominant showing on Sunday boded well for the remainder of the competition. McIntosh claimed gold in the women's 400 metres freestyle in three minutes and 56.26 seconds, nearly two seconds ahead of Chinese silver medallist Li Bingjie, with American great Katie Ledecky finishing in third place. The three-times Olympic champion did not have much time to savour her win, however, and exited quickly to prepare for the 200 individual medley (IM) semi-finals. Despite the tight schedule McIntosh was again in a class of her own, qualifying for the final more than a second ahead of her nearest rival. "While preparing mentally for this world championships, I thought tonight is my biggest night of the whole meet," the 18-year-old said. "So to come out with a gold medal and a really good, strong semi-final in the 200 IM, I'm really happy. "I've never done a double like that, and I think 400m free, at past world championships and Olympics, I haven't been at my best, and I haven't been where I wanted to be. "To finally stand in the centre of the podium is promising for the rest of the meet... I was very relaxed, just based off how I've been feeling this past couple of months, and especially in warm-up today, I felt really strong." McIntosh is coming into the competition on the back of a barnstorming Canadian trials last month, where she set world records in the 400 freestyle as well as the 200 IM and 400 IM.

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