Simone Manuel caps US Olympic swimming trials with 50m free win

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Simone Manuel of the United States reacting after the women's 50m freestyle final on the final day of the 2024 United States Olympic Team Swimming Trials at Lucas Oil Stadium on June 23 in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Swimmer Simone Manuel won the 2024 United States Olympic Team Swimming Trials on June 23.

PHOTO: AFP

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Simone Manuel will go for gold in the 50m freestyle at a third straight Olympics in Paris, after snatching victory at the United States swimming trials on June 23 by two-hundredths of a second.

Manuel, who won 100m freestyle gold and 50m free silver at the Rio Olympics but struggled in Tokyo as she battled the effects of over-training syndrome, clocked 24.13sec to edge out Gretchen Walsh, the top seed going into the final, who had opened her trials with a world record in the 100m butterfly.

As she checked the scoreboard, Manuel shook her head and smiled, as the crowd at Lucas Oil Stadium – home of the National Football League’s Indianapolis Colts – erupted in cheers.

“Yes and no,” she said when asked if she surprised herself. “I put in a lot of work to get to this point.

“I wasn’t feeling too confident after last night,” added the 27-year-old, who posted just the fourth-fastest time in the June 22 semi-finals.

“I spent a lot of time watching races where I won. I really wanted to channel that Simone, because I know I’m a winner and that’s what I did tonight.”

Manuel’s 100m free victory in Rio made her the first African-American woman to win an individual Olympic swimming medal.

But she struggled through the trials for the pandemic-delayed Tokyo Games, where she finished out of the medals in the 50m free.

Now, she is focused on getting faster, and having some fun with her US teammates.

“The last experience was tough for me, but I still had amazing teammates that got me through it and so I’m just looking for a really fun experience with Team USA this summer,” she said.

In the final event of the nine-day trials, Bobby Finke lined up a second title defence with a victory in the 1,500m freestyle in 14min 40.28sec – the second-fastest in the world in 2024.

Behind him, David Johnston held off the hard-charging Luke Whitlock to book his first trip to the Olympics, finishing second in 14:52.74.

Johnston erased the disappointment of third- and fourth-place finishes earlier in the meet, clocking a personal best that met the Olympic qualifying standard to ensure he is, indeed, on his way to Paris.

“It took everything I had to get to that wall,” Johnston said. “I mean, my legs at the 300 metre (mark) were completely gone and I just had to fight with everything I had to get there.

“I’m just glad I kind of saved my meet,” added Johnston, who called coming up empty in the 400m and 800m freestyle “devastating”.

“I feel like I’ve learnt a lot this week that I’m going to be able to take forward into the future,” he said.

Finke, who exploded on the international scene with surprise wins in the 800m and 1,500m free in Tokyo, will defend both titles in Paris and said he was looking forward to getting back to the sport’s biggest stage. AFP

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