Swimming legend Michael Phelps suffered a nervy start in his bid to become the greatest Olympian in history on Saturday while Chinese shooter Yi Siling claimed the first gold of the Games.
Phelps, the 27-year-old swimming legend, who has 16 Olympic medals, needs just three medals to surpass Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina’s record of 18.
However, the defending champion just scraped into Saturday’s 400m individual medley final by the skin of his teeth.
Photo: AFP
Phelps finished in 4 minutes, 13.33 seconds to grab the eighth and last spot in the final, which was to take place later yesterday, but sounded a defiant note afterward, despite his brush with disaster.
“A final spot is a final spot,” Phelps said, while acknowledging he had been caught cold. “I didn’t expect those guys to go that fast. I just wanted to try to get some good underwater, try to get some good times.
“You can’t win the gold medal from the morning,” he added.
US rival Ryan Lochte, who has established himself as a threat to Phelps in both the 200m and 400m medleys, was content to finish second in his heat behind South African Chad le Clos.
Le Clos’s 4:12.24 was second-fastest of the morning, and Lochte was third-fastest of the day in 4:12.35.
In a major shock at the Aquatics Centre, reigning Olympic champion Park Tae-Hwan of South Korea was disqualified in the 400m freestyle for a false start.
Park touched first in his heat, but left the pool stunned as the disqualification flashed on the scoreboard. China’s Sun Yang led the way into the final.
Chinese world No. 1 shooter Yi Siling had the honor of claiming the first of the Games’ 302 golds at the Royal Artillery Barracks in the women’s 10m Air Rifle.
Yi defeated Poland’s Sylwia Bogacka, with Yu Dan of China taking bronze.
“It’s very exciting. Very happy. I’m very grateful to China. And to my mother and father who I love very much,” Yi said.
However, yesterday also witnessed the first failed drugs test of the Games after Albanian weightlifter Hysen Pulaku was suspended for taking the banned steroid stanozolol — the same drug that cost Canada’s Ben Johnson his 100m athletics gold at the 1988 Seoul Games.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) said the case showed drug cheats will be found out.
“Of course, it is always a sad day when a cheating athlete is caught. We hope there will be no more, but the message is very clear: if you are doping we are going to catch you,” IOC spokesman Mark Adams said.
Just six days after playing a role in Bradley Wiggins’s historic Tour de France yellow jersey triumph, Mark Cavendish was the favorite for the 250km men’s cycling road race.
Cavendish, the world champion, was supported by David Millar, Wiggins, Chris Froome and Ian Stannard, the national champion, in a race set to finish in front of Buckingham Palace.
Meanwhile Roger Federer returns to Wimbledon, where he captured a record-equaling seventh title earlier this month.
The world No. 1 begins his campaign to add singles gold to the doubles title he captured in Beijing in 2008 with a first round tie against Colombia’s Alejandro Falla.
Elsewhere, legally blind archer Im Dong-Hyun, who set the first world record of the Olympics on Friday, and then added another as South Korea broke the team record, targets gold.
There are also golds on offer in the women’s weightlifting and men and women’s judo.
Meanwhile, Britain’s newspapers lavished praise on Friday’s spectacular four-hour long ceremony, watched by an estimated 1 billion TV viewers around the world.
The Times ran the headline “A Flying Start” on a souvenir wraparound photograph of the Red Arrows display team flying over the stadium, while Rupert Murdoch’s market-leading tabloid the Sun went simply with “Golden Wonder.”
A budget US$14.5 billion has been spent on bringing the Games back to London for a record third time.
Revelations of positive doping tests for nearly two dozen Chinese swimmers that went unpunished sparked an intense flurry of accusations and legal threats between the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and the head of the US drug-fighting organization, who has long been one of WADA’s fiercest critics. WADA on Saturday said it was turning to legal counsel to address a statement released by US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) CEO Travis Tygart, who said WADA and anti-doping authorities in China swept positive tests “under the carpet by failing to fairly and evenly follow the global rules that apply to everyone else in the world.” The
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