Swimming World Championships, Quadarella in the final

Pilate advances with Castiglioni in the 100 breaststroke. Waiting for Martinenghi at 5pm

Stefano Arcobelli

Frog Monday at the Doha World Championships. Waiting for Nicolò Martinenghi’s final (from 5pm on Rai 2), in the women’s 100 breaststroke, Benedetta Pilato and Arianna Castiglioni reach the semi-finals while learning of the sensational elimination of the outgoing Olympian and world champion, the Lithuanian Ruta Meilutyte, seventeenth and first of the excluded in 1 ’07″79. An incomprehensible end to the match for the expert Ruta, who will therefore leave the scepter. The nineteen-year-old from Taranto and European champion, a policewoman from Aniene, who is now training in Turin with Antonio Satta and won the world gold in Budapest 2022 and did not swim this race in Fukuoka (only bronze in the 50). Benny is tenth in 1’07″24 swimming in progression; Thirteenth is the twenty-seven year old Italian record holder from Varese (now based in Imola with Cesare Casella) who clocks in 1’07″48. The best is the Chinese Tang Qianting in 1’06″16. Benny’s words: “I didn’t feel terrible in the water, the sensations are all different. The race takes place this afternoon but I expected a start without so much effort. The first time isn’t slow, the Chinese Tang swam in 1′ 06″16, I don’t think we can win the world championship with this time. However, I have to go back to swimming my time. Let’s see.” Castiglioni adds: “It went well and let’s also say that I was lucky, because the level of these batteries was absolutely not high. We entered the semi-final with 1’07″7 and when I saw my time I said to myself I’m out, but Ruta Meilutyte was excluded and this is a positive point. Today I tried to make a slight transition ‘ more aggressive than my standard and evidently at the moment I don’t have such a fast passage that I can handle. This afternoon I will try to have a slightly more balanced race; rather than the passage, swimming a little easier in my comfort zone The goal is the Olympic qualifying time and reaching the final.”

go Simona

It’s a Quadarella launched in the 1500m: the former 2019 world champion feels she can do an encore, in the absence of the American Ledecky, and after the silver in 2023 she’s looking to make the most of this pool: in fact she’s already first in 16’02″96 (2’05″46, 4’13″63, 8’29″48, 12’48″65) after having dominated the German in the first part and having pulled ahead of the German Gose (16’10″60), one of the rivals with Li Bingjie (China) 16’13″61, Gough (Aus) 16’14″48 and Kirpichnichova (Fra) 16’14″76. For the Roman it was “a fairly calm approach, I wanted to see the time without doing too much fatigue”.

back

Francesca Pasquino, one of the 9 Italian debs, born in 2002, advances to the semi-final with the 14th time in 1’01″54. It’s 100 backstroke without the Australian Kaylee McKeown and the American Regan Smith: the golden opportunity is for the American Claire Curzan, now first ten hundredths in 59″72, on the Canadian Ingrid Wilm. The same theme applies to the men’s 100m backstroke without the champion and world record holder, the American Ryan Murphy and the Italian Thomas Ceccon: it will be the other American Hunter Armstrong, already on the world podium, who will take advantage of it, while Michele Lamberti (who trains with the Vicenza native) has the big opportunity. The twenty-three-year-old from Brescia, a son of art, swims in 53″73 (return in 27″70), which earns him the fifth entry time and an improvement from 53″76 in Riccione. The fastest is the South African Pieter Coetze in 53″32: absent in Fukuoka, Coetze is expected to be on the rise.

here’s bread again

The Chinese Pan Zhanle returns dazed in the 200 freestyle after the world record in the 100 freestyle (46″80), author of a modest 1’51″03 (38th time). Also out were the Italians Matteo Ciampi (24th in 1’47″65) and Marco De Tullio (29th in 1’48″46). A race that still has to develop in the semi-finals, where the real selection will take place in the afternoon: for now the German Lucas Martens (1’45″74) leads his compatriot Rafael Miroslaw (1’45″89), third Rapsys (Lit, 1′ 45″95) and fourth was the Scot Duncan Scott (1’46″09). Marco DeTullio tries to find himself: “I want to have fun again.” Matteo Ciampi: “I don’t understand this weather.” All that remains for both of them is the 4×200.



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