Olympics-Swimming-American teen Jacoby pulls off surprise win in 100m
breaststroke
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[July 27, 2021]
TOKYO (Reuters) -Lydia Jacoby
would likely have been watching the Tokyo Games as a spectator had
the event not been postponed by a year but on Tuesday the Alaskan
teenager upstaged Olympic and world champions to win gold in the
women's 100m breaststroke.
The 17-year-old pipped Tatjana Schoenmaker to gold, touching in a
time of 1:04.95 with the South African 0.27 behind. Jacoby's team
mate, Rio Olympic champion and world record holder Lilly King, was
in the bronze medal position in 1:05.54.
Jacoby accelerated over the final 25 metres to push ahead of her two
rivals, who had been expected to battle it out for gold. After
touching the wall she looked stunned as she looked up at the
scoreboard.
Jacoby, the first Alaskan native to win an Olympic swimming gold
medal, said she had been planning to come to Tokyo last year with
her family to watch the Games before they were postponed due to the
COVID-19 pandemic as she had little chance of making the team.
The extra year has been a gift for her to mature in the sport, she
said, adding that she remembered watching King in Rio when she was
12-years-old.
"It has been incredible," she said. "Having this extra year ...
being a part of the world coming together, it means a lot."
Jacoby, whose parents are both boat captains and take visitors on
whale watching tours in Alaska, started swimming aged six and
initially took lessons as a child because of the amount of time her
family spent on the water.
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Lydia Jacoby of the United States
celebrates after winning the gold medal REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
She will finish her last year of high
school before going to study at the University of Texas, Austin.
Defending champion King and Schoenmaker, both 24, joked at their
news conference that Jacoby made them feel "so old".
"Today it wasn't my day to win, it was Lydia's day to win," said
King.
"She just had the swim of her life today so we should celebrate
that."
Two Russian swimmers touched the wall after King, with 16-year-old
Evgeniia Chikunova finishing fourth and Yuliya Efimova, a six-time
world champion, in fifth.
(Reporting by Farah Master in Hong Kong; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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