The 22-year-old from China's heartland province of Henan became the
first Asian swimmer to win the blue riband event, roaring home to
edge Australian favorite Cameron McEvoy and clock an impressive
47.85 seconds in the Kazan pool.
"I didn't come here expecting any medal, not even dreamed of it,"
said Ning, who held his swimming cap aloft to show the red flag of
China to the terraces.
"When I touched the wall I didn’t think I could come first so it was
huge to see it on the board."
Ning's first world title came four years after he tested positive
for clenbuterol, a stimulant that has put an array of high-profile
athletes in hot water, including Tour de France-winning cyclist
Alberto Contador and Mexican boxer Erik Morales.
Many caught with it in their systems have claimed to have
unwittingly ingested it from eating contaminated meat from animals
fed the chemical to keep them lean.
Then an up-and-coming teenager swimming for a provincial team
affiliated with China's navy, Ning pleaded the same case but was
banned for a year.
"(The team's) conditions weren't especially good. I would often eat
instant noodles at night," he said in comments published by Chinese
magazine Life Week (www.lifeweek.com.cn) last month.
"It wouldn't be good to just eat noodles alone. I was still growing,
so I'd add some ham, some beef, salted duck egg to be kinder to
myself.
"I've said 10,000 times that this 'slip of the tongue' and my
greediness was to be a life-long lesson."
The clenbuterol issue is but one of a number of bitter pills Ning
has had to swallow in his rise to the pinnacle of world swimming.
He has long battled a stomach condition that saps him of strength
and spent most of 2013 seeing specialists and trying different
medicines to keep it under control.
He was also born with a chronic bone condition in his right knee,
which caused him to switch to freestyle earlier in his career after
having first trained as a breast-stroke specialist.
However, Ning's biggest torture was to wait out the year of his ban,
and though he never betrayed his depression to team mates, he told a
coach that he would often "shed tears in the water".
[to top of second column] |
His break-out moment came at China's 2013 National Games when he set
Asian records in both the 50 and 100m freestyle.
A year later he celebrated Asian Games gold at Incheon where he
became the first swimmer from the continent to break the 48-second
barrier in the 100m, while sweeping another three titles.
Named the Best Male Athlete of 2014 by state broadcaster CCTV, Ning
now has more than 1.5 million followers on his Weibo account,
China's Twitter-like social media platform, and has joined Olympic
and world 1,500m freestyle champion Sun Yang as a household name in
his home country.
With Russian swimming great Alexander Popov looking on, Ning gave a
naval salute on the winner's podium as China's national anthem rang
out over the pool.
In a 2013 interview, Ning said Popov was his idol, for returning to
the pool to win more titles after being stabbed in a dispute with
Moscow street vendors shortly after the 1996 Atlanta Games.
"He is a fighter and I need to learn from him," Ning said.
(Editing by Amlan Chakraborty)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|