Chalmers ends drought
Australia's really young gun Kyle Chalmers won the Olympic 100m freestyle gold in Rio on Wednesday to end his country's 48-year drought in swimming's prestige event.
The 18-year-old, who was swimming in his school carnival earlier this year, stormed home to win in a junior world record of 47.58sec, 22-tenths of a second ahead of Belgian silver medallist Pieter Timmers' 47.80 with 2012 gold medallist Nathan Adrian of the United States third in 47.85.
Adrian said he'd never heard of Chalmers until he finished second at the Australian trials.
Chalmers said that suited him just fine.
"I think I definitely flew under the radar," said Chalmers who won't be able to stay out of the spotlight now after an electrifying Olympic debut that saw him duck under the 48-second mark for the first time in Tuesday's heats.
He became the first Australian to win 100m free gold since Mike Wenden in 1968. Since then three Australians had finished second -- Mark Stockwell in 1984, Eamon Sullivan in 2008 and James Magnussen in 2012.
Chalmers made his move along with Timmers, who was fifth at the turn, to seize the win in a mass finish.
As Chalmers put Australia back where they've long felt they belonged on the podium, Dmitriy Balandin was putting the swimming on the map in his home country -- making Kazakhstan's first Olympic medal in the sport a gold in the 200m breaststroke.
Balandin, swimming in lane eight, overhauled early pacesetter Yasuhiro Koseki of Japan at the final turn to win in 2min 07.46sec.
American Josh Prenot, who came into the Games atop the 2016 world rankings, was second in 2:07.53 and Russia's Anton Chupkov was third in 2:07.70.
"I'm very proud to win Kazakhstan's first medal and make history for my country," said the 21-year-old from Almaty.
Spain's Mireia Belmonte-Garcia rallied to win the 200m butterfly, improving on the silver she earned in London.
Katie Ledecky anchored the United States to gold in the 4x200m freestyle relay, overtaking Australia's Tamsin Cook to bring her team home in 7:43.03.
Ledecky, who teamed with Allison Schmitt, Leah Smith and Maya DiRado, claimed her third gold of the Games while Australia's Leah Neale, Emma McKeon, Bronte Barratt and Cook earned silver in 7:44.87.
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