2017 SEA Games: Schooling Perfect 6-for-6, Quah Siblings Deliver

2017 SEA GAMES

Swimming at the 2017 Southeast Asia (SEA) Games concluded tonight in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, but not before the nation of Singapore topped the overall aquatic medal count in historic fashion. Aided by top guns Joseph Schooling and the Quah siblings of Zheng Wen, Ting Wen and Jing Wen, Singapore collected a total of 46 gold medals as a team, surpassing their previous best-ever medal haul at an ‘away’ SEA Games of 43 back in 2007.

It was fitting that Olympic champion Schooling was a part of the 46th and final medal tonight, as the men’s 4x100m medley relay rocked a new Games and Singaporean national record-setting time of 3:37.46 to close out the meet. Teamed up with Zheng Wen, Darren Lim and Lionel Khoo, this relay medal marked Schooling’s 6th gold of this year’s Games, giving him a perfect 6-for-6 record in wins. As part of the relay, Zheng Wen also earned an incredible 6 golds, as well as a silver in the 50m backstroke.

Sisters Quah Jing Wen and Quah Ting Wen were also on the podium today, with a 1-3 finish in the 100m butterfly event. Jing Wen took the top prize in a time of 59.38, the only sub-minute outing of the field, while sister Ting Wen captured bronze in 1:00.69. Splitting the Singaporean sisters was Thai athlete and Texas A&M swimmer Kornkarnjana Sapianchai who earned silver in 1:00.45.

Ting Wen was also in action in the women’s 50m freestyle, where she clocked a time of 25.46 to take silver. That brought her individual total to 7 medals in all, including a trio of golds in the 100 free, 50 fly and 4×200 free relay on the same night.

Winning the women’s 50m free tonight, however, was Singapore’s Amanda Lim, who notched her best time since 2009. The 24-year-old touched in 25.41 to win the event .05 ahead of Ting Wen. With the victory, Lim earned her 5th consecutive SEA Games gold in this event.

Additional winners on the day include Vietnam’s Nguyen Huy Hoang with a victory in the 1500m freestyle. He earned a mark of 15:20.10 to register a new Games Record time.

Teammate Nguyen Thi Anh Vien grabbed her 10th medal of the Games with a gold in the 200m freestyle. Notching a time of 1:59.24, Vien Nguyen brought her historic Games to conclusion, one in which she earned gold across the 200/400/800 freestyle, the 50/100/200 backstroke and the 200IM/400IM events, as well as silver in the 100 free and 200 breast.

Indonesia’s Indra Gunawan took the 50m breaststroke in a time of 28.25 to put his nation on the board tonight.

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Buona
6 years ago

Next year is the Asian Games. If no surprise, he will at least get gold for 50 and 100 fly.

jelly
Reply to  Buona
6 years ago

He probably will. I however will be surprised if he doesn’t win those two in Jakarta next year

Buona
Reply to  jelly
6 years ago

Yah agree. He is the Asian record holder in 50 fly and the fastest in Asia in 100 fly for now. His threat will come from Li Zhuhao from China.

Swimmer?
6 years ago

Well of course an Olympic American swimmer will dominate Asian games.

SchoolingFTW
Reply to  Swimmer?
6 years ago

This is SEA Games.
Asian Games is next year.

Swimmer?
Reply to  SchoolingFTW
6 years ago

Southeast Asia. Sorry I don’t follow Asian meets so I was being very broad.

crooked donald
Reply to  Swimmer?
6 years ago

He’s not American. He just trains there most of the time.

Swimmer?
Reply to  crooked donald
6 years ago

My point exactly. He’s has American training, and his performances easily blow away everyone else at this meet.

jelly
Reply to  Swimmer?
6 years ago

There are many swimmers in Southeast Asia who have American training, he’s not the only one

Pvdh
6 years ago

Just watched the race video of the medley relay. Announcers said that nobody can go with Joe in the 100 fly on the Olympic level…..dude might have missed a thing or two

Philip
Reply to  Pvdh
6 years ago

Quiet a few people can go with him actually. The gap has shrunk.

crooked donald
Reply to  Pvdh
6 years ago

Or five.

ice
Reply to  Pvdh
6 years ago

Do forgive him. The announcer tends to get very excited about the Singapore swimmers so sometimes he over-exaggerates slightly.

jelly
Reply to  Pvdh
6 years ago

Didnt seem to catch that. Which race video did you watch? Was it the one posted by Sport Singapore?

jelly
Reply to  jelly
6 years ago

Oh found it. Think what he meant to day was that during the Olympics he finished way ahead of everyone and should too during the SEA Games

Ice
6 years ago

Splits for the singapore team were:

Quah Zheng wen: 55.10
Lionel Khoo: 1:01.75
Jospeh schooling: 50.90
Darren Lin: 49.71

crooked donald
Reply to  Ice
6 years ago

Schooling will go faster in practice between sessions.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  crooked donald
6 years ago

always do lol

Dylab
Reply to  crooked donald
6 years ago

That joke isn’t funny anymore

crooked donald
Reply to  Dylab
6 years ago

It’ll never get old.

Buona
Reply to  Ice
6 years ago

Wow. Schooling split 50.90? How u manage to get the splits?

ice
Reply to  Buona
6 years ago

Literally recorded the races and rewatched it to manually count the split times from the split times shown on the TV. They’re not available anywhere else

About Retta Race

Retta Race

Former Masters swimmer and coach Loretta (Retta) thrives on a non-stop but productive schedule. Nowadays, that includes having just earned her MBA while working full-time in IT while owning French 75 Boutique while also providing swimming insight for BBC.

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