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Americans Have Half The Hardware Through Day 3 Than At 2017 World C’ships

2019 FINA WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS

Whereas yesterday the Americans shared the top of the medal standings with the nation of Australias, holding 2 golds and 5 total medals apiece, day 3 saw the U.S. take the edge. With Lilly King‘s gold medal in the women’s 100m breaststroke, the stars n’ stripes now own 7 medals, as does Australia, but the former has 3 golds in all.

China frog-hopped Australia to rank 2nd, courtesy of Xu Jiayu‘s gold medal swim in the men’s 100m backstroke and Sun Yang‘s gold in the 200m free. The nation also saw Wang Jianjiahe collect bronze in the women’s 1500m free to bring their total to 6 medals through 3 days.

Canada remains among the top 5, as does Great Britain, who saw Duncan Scott pull out a 200m free bronze, tied with Russia’s Martin Malyutin, after the disqualification of Danas Rapsys of Lithuania.

However, the U.S. historically has been able to depend on a medal in the men’s 100m back and the nation came up short, with Ryan Murphy settling for 4th place, just .01 off the podium. Additionally, with Katie Ledecky‘s unexpected withdrawal from both the 200m free heats and the 1500m final, the 2 medals she most likely would have garnered fell or will fall to other nations’ columns.

Through day 3 at the 2017 World Championships, the Americans held a huge lead in the medal table, having already snagged 14 medals in all. This time around, that figure is cut in half, with the U.S. having racked up 7 thus far.

On day 3 back in Budapest, Townley Haas had taken silver, Ledecky earned gold in the 1500m and Kathleen Baker reaped silver in the 100m back 2 years ago. Matt Grevers and Murphy also finished 2-3 in the men’s 100m back, while now-retired Katie Meili finished behind King in Budapest for 100m breast silver.

World Championships Swimming Medal Table Through Day 3

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  United States 3 2 2 7
2  China 3 1 2 6
3  Australia 2 2 3 7
4  Canada 2 0 2 4
5  Great Britain 1 1 1 3
6  Italy 1 0 2 3
7  Hungary 1 0 0 1
8  Russia 0 4 1 5
9  Germany 0 1 0 1
 Japan 0 1 0 1
 Sweden 0 1 0 1
12  Brazil 0 0 1 1
Totals (12 nations) 13 13 14 40

 

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12Volt
5 years ago

Didn’t the US team stink up the joint in 2015, too? Everyone seemed to forget that after Rio.

sscommenter
5 years ago

safe to say, they don’t really care about this meet. it’s a good tune up for the national mainstays & a place to prove themselves for some of the up-and-comers.

I’d just make sure nobody gets hurt/gets sick, get home safe, and I’d DFS any race that Sun Yang competes in

Siphiwe Baleka
Reply to  sscommenter
5 years ago

No you wouldn’t DFS. Do you even know what it takes to be among the best in the world? You wouldn’t throw away four, eight or ten years of training to make a political statement like that. Keep it real.

marley09
5 years ago

This medal table is stunning to me. Where’s France? Netherlands? Denmark? New Zealand? Norway? How about Ireland, Spain, Ukraine and Austria? Notwithstanding Rikako Ikee, I thought Japan would be trending upward as we approach 2020 instead of going the other way. What’s happening to these programs?

Texas Tap Water
Reply to  marley09
5 years ago

It’s still Day 3. Be patient

Bearly Breathing
5 years ago

Ewww. Awkwardly worded headline.

CRD
5 years ago

Title says 2015, must be 2017 right?

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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