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2018 Youth Olympic Games Day 1 Finals: Live Recap

Braden Keith
by Braden Keith 12

October 07th, 2018 News

2018 YOUTH OLYMPIC GAMES

The 1st finals session of the 2018 Youth Olympic Games kicks off at 4pm Central Time. Kaylee McKeown will look to impress after an 8th place finish in this morning’s 200 IM, as well as defending her top-seeded time in the 1st semifinal in the 100 back.

Men’s 400 Free – Finals

  1. Kristof Milak (Hungary) – 3:48.08
  2. Marco De Tullio (Italy) – 3:48.55
  3. Keisuke Yoshida (Japan) – 3:48.68

In an incredibly tight 400 free race, Kristof Milak came out victorious in his 1st of 9 races at the Youth Olympic Games. Milak swam a conservative first half of the race, settling for staying comfortably in range of the leaders. He made a push on the 2nd half, where at the same time Huy Hoang Nguyen (Vietnam) burst out the front of the pack. Nguyen ended up getting run down on the final 50 by Milak, Marco De Tullio, and Keisuke Yoshida, finishing 4th in a final time of 3:48.85. Milak posted a very speedy 26.76 on the final 50 to get the job done, claiming the 1st Gold medal of the meet.

 

Women’s 50 Breast – Semifinal

  1. Agne Seleikaite (Lithuania) – 31.41
  2. Weronika Hallmann (Poland) – 31.49
  3. Chelsea Hodges (Australia) – 31.62
  4. Niamh Coyne (Ireland) – 31.80
  5. Tina Celik (Slovenia) – 31.89
  6. Mona McSharry (Ireland) – 32.01
  7. Nina Kucheran (Canada) – 32.17
  8. Avery Wiseman (Canada) – 32.18

Lithuania’s Agne Seleikaite took the 2nd semifinal to establish herslef the top-seed going into final, taking .14 seconds off her prelims time. Her time marked the 2nd fastest 50 breast in history at the Youth Olympic Games, behind only Ruta Meilutyte, who is also Lithuanian. Weronika Hallmann came in just behind her in Heat 2, touching in 31.49 to earn the 2nd seed for tomorrow’s final. Ireland advanced a pair of swimmers, with Niamh Coyne and Mona McSharry earning 4th and 6th place finishes respectively. Canada got a pair of swimmers into finals as well, with Nina Kucheran and Avery Wiseman rounding out the top 8.

 

Men’s 100 Back – Semifinal

  1. Kliment Kolesnikov (Russia) – 53.80
  2. Daniel Cristian Martin (Romania) – 54.08
  3. Tomoe Hvas (Norway) – 54.93
  4. Thomas Ceccon (Italy) – 55.48
  5. Guanbin Wang (China) – 55.77
  6. Gabor Zombori (Hungary) – 56.19
  7. Manuel Martos Bacarizo (Spain) – 56.20
  8. Lewis Blackburn (Australia) – 56.27

Kliment Kolesnikov unsurprisingly came out on top in the semifinals, earning the top seed for tomorrow’s final with a 53.80. Daniel Cristan Martin finished just behind Kolesnikov, with the pair establishing themselves as the clear top 2 favorites going into finals. Kolesnikov has a best time of 52.53, which he swam en route to claiming Gold at the European Championships in August. No country had 2 qualifiers into the final, with Australia’s Lewis Blackburn rounding out the top 8. 3rd place finisher Tomoe Hvas touched laees than half a second off the Norwegian Record, taking 2 seconds off his seed time of 56.93.

 

Women’s 100 Back – Semifinal

  1. Polina Egorova (Russia) – 1:00.92
  2. Rhyan White (United States) – 1:00.94
  3. Daria Vaskina (Russia) – 1:01.41
  4. Kaylee McKeown (Australia) – 1:01.51
  5. Madison Broad (Canada) – 1:01.66
  6. Tatiana Salcutan (Moldova) – 1:02.04
  7. Xuwei Pang (China) – 1:02.12
  8. Tamara Frias Molina (Spain) – 1:02.17

Rhyan White nearly came out on top again like she did this mroning, but Polina Egorova got her hand on the wall first after swimming side-by-side with White on the 2nd 50. Kaylee was off her time from this morning, going .3 seconds slower to finish 4th overall. Molodova qualified its first swimmer to a final at this meet. White and Egorov have set up a fun race to look forward to tomorrow eveing.

Russia got a 2nd qualifier into the final, with Daria Vaskina coming in 3rd, giving RUssia a shot at having 2 medalists in this event.

Men’s 100 Breast – Semifinals

  1. Michael Houlie (South Africa) – 1:00.23
  2. Jiajun Sun (China) – 1:00.61
  3. Dens Petrashov (Kyrgyzstan) – 1:01.95
  4. Yu Hanagguruma (Japan) – 1:01.99
  5. Taku Taniguchi (Japan) – 1:02.08
  6. Vladislav Gerasimenko (Russia) – 1:02.15
  7. Jan Kalusowski (Poland) – 1:02.23
  8. Caspar Corbeau (Netherlands) – 1:02.29

Michael Houlie, a Univwersity of Tennessee commit from South Africa, took the race out in an incredibly fast 27.44. He fell off that pace by quite a bit, however, finishing in 1:00.23. That time comes in as a Youth Olympics Best. Jiajun Sun established himself as the 2nd seed for tomorrow, setting himself up to take a run at beating Houlie.

Women’s 200 IM – Final

  1. Anastasia Gorbenko (Israel) – 2:12.88
  2. Anja Crevar (Serbia) – 2:13.98
  3. Cyrielle Duhamel (France) – 2:14.15

Just 15 years old, Anastasia Gorbenko took Gold with a very quick 2:12.88. She split the race very well posting splits of 29.31, 34.12. 38.06, and 31.39 respectively, claiming Israel’s first medal of the meet. Anja Crevar gave Serbia its first medal by getting her hand on the wall just ahead of Cyrielle Duhamel, who picked up France’s first medal of the meet. Kaylee McKeown moved up a place from this mroning, touching in 7th overall.

 

Mixed 4 x 100 Free Relay – Final

  1. Russia – 3:28.50
  2. Brazil – 3:30.13
  3. China – 3:30.45

Kliment Kolesnikov got Russia out to a stellar start, and there was no stopping them after that. Kolesnikov split a lifetime best 48.17, taking nearly half a second off his lifetime best. Kolesnikov has been as fast as 47.39 with a relay start. Kolesnikov was followed by Andrei Minakov (49.60), Polina Egorova (55.71), and Elizaveta Klevanovich (55.02).

 

 

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Superfan
6 years ago

It seems to me there are more international opportunities for elite juniors then elite seniors. (Especially compared to 15-20 years).

nuotofan
6 years ago

Well done Marco De Tullio (new Italian Junior record for him), classy freestyler.
And his younger brother Luca (promising Imer, distance freer and breastroker) is arriving.

Yabo
6 years ago

Does America not compete in these games

Swimming4silver
Reply to  Yabo
6 years ago

we have our d team…

Dee
Reply to  Swimming4silver
6 years ago

Count yourself lucky; Some of us have national federations who don’t even bother 😉

torchbearer
Reply to  Yabo
6 years ago

The top countries can only send 4M and 4W….so it is a chess game who you send for what events- and each participant has lots (ie all) of the relays too.

choosy
6 years ago

Well done Kristóf! He won’t compete in nine events, as we saw, he skipped the 100 backstroke, besides he won’t swim the 50 back and 50 free, either. Bravo for Zombori Gábor, he turned 16 today, it’s nice to see him in the final (the other guys are all around 18).

JustKeepSwimming
6 years ago

Kolesnikov with the 48.17 leadoff leg 👀

Bear drinks beer
Reply to  JustKeepSwimming
6 years ago

Second fastest junior of all time behind King Kyle.

Old Man Chalmers
Reply to  Bear drinks beer
6 years ago

Third fastest.* Jack Cartwright was 18 when he went 47.97 in budapest.

Bear drinks beer
Reply to  Old Man Chalmers
6 years ago

Cartwright was born in 1998, according to Fina rule, he is considered to be a junior only by the end of 2016. Kolesnikov also won’t be considered a junior anymore since next January, although his 19th birthday is in the summer.
This rule is kind of ridiculous and unfair to swimmers born in December, but it is just how they define junior.

Swimmer
6 years ago

2.12.88 for Gorbenko in the 200 IM! She is only 15

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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