Every South African a Swimmer

Day 11 of the 18th FINA World Championships in Gwangju, South Korea

Day 11 of the 18th FINA World Championships in Gwangju, South Korea
Gwangju, Tuesday, 23rd July 2019 - Swimming sensation Tatjana Schoenmaker made a strong challenge for a podium place finishing sixth in the women’s 100m breaststroke at the 18th FINA World Long-Course Championships in Gwangju, South Korea on Tuesday.

The 22-year-old Schoenmaker came up against a world-class field which included world record holder Lilly King of the United States and the former Russian world champion Yuliya Efimova.

Schoenmaker hit the wall in sixth place with a time of one minute, 06.60 seconds (1:06.60) at her first senior world championships.

King raced to victory touching first in a time of 1:04.93 with Efimova finishing second behind her in a time of 1:05.49. Schoenmaker’s national record of 1:06.32 she posted at the recent World Student Games would have earned her a bronze medal.

The Commonwealth Games double gold medallist still has a shot at becoming the first South African woman to step onto the podium at the World Long-Course Championships.

“I was shaking already on the blocks and I was just hoping I don’t false-start,” Schoenmaker said. “I am excited about the 200m, it will be a different type of pacing,” concluded Schoenmaker.

Four-time Olympic medallist Chad le Clos will get to defend his 200m butterfly title for a shot at his fifth global title after finishing second in his semi-final with a time of 1:55.88.

Le Clos lead the race until the halfway mark before Hungarian Kristof Milak pulled ahead to win the race in a time of 1:52.96. “I am very happy, I just wanted to make the final, it is going to be tough tomorrow night, he (Kristof Milak) is far, far ahead of everyone - we’ll see, I’ve come for the fight, I’ve come to race,” said Le Clos.

Le Clos coasted into the semi-finals during the heats winning his heat in a time of 1:56.17 which was the fourth-fastest time of the morning.

Youth Olympics gold medallist Michael Houlie narrowly missed out on a spot in the semi-finals in his pet 50m breaststroke heats. The 19-year-old touched fifth in his heats with a time 27.41 seconds, more than half a second short of his personal best. Houlie missed the semi-final by one spot posting the 19th fastest time of the heats.

Rebecca Meder, the youngest member of the South African contingent, finished 30th overall in the women’s 200m freestyle with a time of 2:02.70, nearly two seconds slower than her personal best.

SA Swimming Team in Gwangju, Korea:

Men

Alaric Basson, Michael Houlie, Chad le Clos, Aryton Sweeney, Bradley Tandy, Christopher Reid, Eben Vorster.

Women

Emma Chelius, Kaylene Corbett, Dune Coetzee, Erin Gallagher Tayla Lovemore, Rebecca Meder, Tatjana Schoenmaker, Nathania van Niekerk, Mariella Venter.

ENDS

For further information please contact:

Swimming South Africa

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Swimming South Africa is the governing body of aquatics in South Africa.

Its objective is to encourage the practice of aquatic disciplines for all in South Africa with the purpose of promoting swimming as a life skill through Learn To Swim programmes; providing healthy exercise to South Africans of all ages and races; recruiting recreational swimmers to compete in the various competitions; and promoting competition and athlete development to the highest level. Swimming South Africa is kindly supported by SASCOC, National Lottery Distribution Trust Fund, Arena, Sport & Recreation SA and Rand Water.