SW Biweekly August 7, 2021 Issue

Page 28

[ Photo Courtesy: Robert Hanashiro/USA TODAY Sports ]

major events contested in an Olympic Games from opposite sides of the pool and not from the centre lanes – but these are no ordinary times, and these are turning out to be no ordinary Games. Hafnaoui told NBC: “I just can’t believe it, it’s amazing…I felt better in the water this morning (than) yesterday and that’s it – I’m Olympic champion now!” He later added his reaction to winning the gold, saying: “”I just can’t accept that – it is too incredible.”

Ahmed Hafnaoui Shocks By Winning Gold From Lane Eight BY IAN HANSON

Tunisian teenager Ahmed Hafnaoui caused the first major upset of the Tokyo 2020 Games – winning an extraordinary Olympic gold in the 400 metres freestyle from lane eight. The 18-year-old, swimming in his first major international long course competition, only just scraped into the final but produced the swim of his life at the Tokyo Olympic Aquatic Centre. It was a special Olympic performance made in heaven – a second coming for Tunisia – following in the footsteps of his idol and Tokyo team mate – the great 2008 and 2012 Olympic champion Oussama Mellouli – who won the first of his Olympic golds in Beijing in the 1500m freestyle.

And on whether he is inspired by three-time Olympic medallist Mellouli?….Hafnaoui replied: “Oussama is a legend. I wish I could become like him.” And on his coach cheering for him in the stands: “He is so supportive. I have two coaches, they have worked (so) hard.” And there was not only an immediate flash back to Beijing and the final session of the 2008 Games when Mellouli caused a major upset – beating Hackett – and stopping the Aussie’s crack at a three-peat but also to 1996 when another Australian Kieren Perkins defended his 1500m freestyle gold – swimming from lane eight. Hafnaoui wasted no time in launching his celebrations, jumping on the lane rope and thrusting his arms in the air – what a moment for a youngster who has written his way into the Olympic annals. McLoughlin said he normally wears glasses so he was pretty far out of it. When I saw what I came in the heats I was, like, this is perfect, because that was going to be my race plan.

Hafnaoui grabbed his gold by just 0.16secs in 3:43.36 from Australia’s Jack McLoughlin (3:43.52) with the USA’s Kieran Smith taking bronze in 3:43.94.

“I knew those boys had real big back ends (latter part of the race) so I was trying to get out in front and just say, ‘chase me’ and it almost paid off.”

And it’s a pool of dreams for Hafnaoui, dreams that can be won and lost in milliseconds – the Tunisian making the final by just 0.14seconds and winning it by 0.16 – in a personal best of over two seconds – pointing to his coach and his followers in the grandstand.

“I couldn’t really see all the way over (to lane eight). I could see some splashes and I could see the middle of the pool moving at me (during) the last 100m, but I was just trying to hold on.

It was an Olympic moment to behold, only Tunisia’s second gold medal in the pool and third in swimming and joins the country’s legendary six-time Olympian Mellouli who beat Australia’s Grant Hackett to win that memorable gold in the 1500m in Beijing in 2008 – and added his second over 10km in London – putting Tunisian swimming on the Olympic map. And Hafnaoui of course also beating an Australian in McLoughlin, who led the race from lane two through 200m until the final turn. Hafnaoui in lane eight and McLoughlin in lane two, swimming stroke for stroke, but six lanes apart, so rare to see 28

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“I didn’t really breathe the last 10m and I was kind of sinking at the end, so got there in the end.” “I knew I’d be up there. I just knew they were coming at me, so I was just hoping I could put my hand on the wall. “I am super stoked for second, a little annoyed I didn’t get the win.” Hafnaoui started to make his mark on the pool in 2018 – at the Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires – finishing 7th in the 800m and 8th in the 400m after standing out at the African Championships winning two bronze medals over 800 and 1500m. ◄


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Articles inside

PARTING SHOT

0
pages 41-399

HOW THEY TRAIN: MILES SIMON

2min
page 40

BEHIND OUTSTANDING ASHLEIGH JOHNSON, U.S. WOMEN’S WATER POLO CLAIM THIRD STRAIGHT GOLD

5min
pages 38-39

WITH RELAY MEDALS, CHINA ANNOUNCES NEW ERA OF SWIM PROWESS

4min
pages 36-37

BY ANY MEASURE, A HISTORICALLY SUCCESSFUL TOKYO OLYMPICS FOR SWIMMING CANADA

6min
pages 34-35

SARAH SJOSTROM SILVER MEDAL A SILVER LINING FOR HER & EUROPEAN WOMEN

2min
pages 30-31

MEN’S MEDLEY RELAY LINEUP WAS RIGHT ONE—AND GOLD MEDAL PROVED IT

4min
pages 32-33

KATIE LEDECKY HAS NO RETIREMENT PLANS; LOOKING AHEAD TO PARIS...AND MAYBE LOS ANGELES

2min
page 29

AHMED HAFNAOUI SHOCKS BY WINNING GOLD FROM LANE EIGHT

3min
page 28

IT’S A THREE-PEAT AND WORLD RECORD FOR AUSTRALIA IN WOMEN'S

6min
pages 26-27

IN LONG-AWAITED SHOWDOWN CAELEB DRESSEL SEIZES 100 FREESTYLE CROWN FROM KYLE CHALMERS

6min
pages 24-25

IN EPIC SHOWDOWN, ARIARNE TITMUS DISPATCHES KATIE LEDECKY TO BECOME AUSSIE GOLDEN GIRL

5min
pages 16-17

KATIE LEDECKY POWERS TO GOLD IN INAUGURAL WOMEN’S 1500 FREESTYLE; ERICA SULLIVAN RALLIES FOR SILVER

5min
pages 18-19

GOLDEN DAYS RETURN WITH A HEADLINE PERFORMANCE FROM AUSTRALIA’S DOLPHINS

5min
pages 22-23

PEATY, GREENBANK, GUY & SCOTT DON’T WANT SILVER LINING AS TEAM GB ENJOYS RECORD HAUL

4min
pages 20-21

U.S. WOMEN: LOTS OF MEDALS, YOUTH AND POTENTIAL FOR FUTURE BRILLIANCE

10min
pages 12-15

RYAN MURPHY AND TEAM USA CAPTAINS PROVIDED MAJOR IMPACT THROUGH THEIR LEADERSHIP

6min
pages 10-11

GRIND OF TOKYO OLYMPICS PRODUCES LESS GOLD, BUT STILL GRAND MEDAL HAUL FOR TEAM USA

6min
pages 8-9
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