Tokyo 2020, Europe Day 2: Peaty Is First British Swimmer To Repeat Olympic Gold

2020 TOKYO SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

Europe scored four medals on day two of the Tokyo Olympics and three of them came in the men’s 100 breaststroke final.

Adam Peaty became the first British swimmer to ever defend an Olympic title by winning the men’s 100 breast with a time of 57.37.

In 2016, Peaty won the race with a significant lead of 1.56 seconds over 2nd place finisher Cameron Van Der Burgh of South Africa. Peaty posted a 57.17 in that race.

On day 2 of the Tokyo Olympics, he came within half a second of his World Record from 2019 but only had a .63 lead over the field.

Europe swept the podium in the men’s 100 breast final where the Netherlands’ Arno Kamminga took 2nd place (58.00) and Italy’s Nicolo Martinenghi placed 3rd (58.33).

Martinenghi and Kamminga both broke National Records in the semifinals, and Martinenghi was just .05 off his National Record and Kamminga came within .20 of his National Record.

The 100 breast was Peaty’s only individual Olympic medal in 2016, alongside a silver medal in the men’s 400 medley relay.

Europe’s 4th Olympic medal of the day came in the men’s 400 free relay where Italy took 2nd place with a National Record time of 3:10.11, crushing the previous record from prelims set by the three of the same men who swam it in prelims by .18.

Quick Hits

  • Italy won their first-ever Olympic medal in the 400 free relay. Their finals team of Alessandro Miressi, Thomas CecconLorenzo Zazzeri, and Manuel Frigo won silver with a National Record-setting time of (3:10.11).
  • In prelims, Italy’s team of Miressi, Santo Condorelli, Zazzeri, and Frigo set the National Record with a time of 3:10.29. Miressi led-off the relay with a time of 47.46 to come within .01 of his Italian National Record.
  • In the women’s 100 breast, Mona McSharry became Ireland’s first woman to make an Olympic final since 1996. She placed 8th with a time of 1:06.59, about .30 off of her Irish National Record set earlier this year.

Continental and National Records on Day 2

  • Anastasia Gorbenko broke the 100 back National Record with a time of 59.30 to place 8th in semifinals
  • 19-year-old Isabel Gose broke the German National Record in the 400 free prelims race with a time of 4:03.21, taking down Sarah Kohler’s record from 2017 by about .7.
  • Italy’s men’s 400 free relay of Miressi, Condorelli,  Zazzeri,  and Frigo  set a National Record with a time of (3:10.29) to be the fastest team in prelims and they smashed it again in finals (3:10.11)

Europe Medal Table Through Day 2

Nation Total Medals Gold Silver Bronze
Italy 2 0 1 1
Great Britain 1 1 0 0
Netherlands 1 0 1 0

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Koen
2 years ago

random factoid: as far as I can tell Arno Kamminga is only the 3rd Dutch man to ever win an individual Olympic medal. The only gold medalist being PVDH (ofc), and Wieger Mensonides having won a bronze in 1960 (in the 200 breast).

Texas Tap Water
Reply to  Koen
2 years ago

Wow. I would have thought a lot more judging by the success of Dutch female swimmers

Koen
Reply to  Texas Tap Water
2 years ago

I know! For some reason I thought there were more too. The Dutch women do tend to carry most of the medal tally in all sports for the Netherlands though 😉

Boknows34
Reply to  Koen
2 years ago

Seems to be the same too with the women for Denmark and Sweden.

Coach Rob
2 years ago

It’s a lot harder to repeat Olympic Gold than people think. You have to be the fastest in the world 4 years apart. In this case, 5 years apart. That’s a big age gap in terms of wear and tear on the body.

Philip Johnson
Reply to  Coach Rob
2 years ago

People think it’s common with the big names like Ledecky or Phelps doing it, but it’s so so hard and we take it for granted.

Jamie5678
2 years ago

On the basis of his reaction, Peaty seemed to really value that win much more than in Rio. In interview dropped multiple F-bombs on BBC. Fabulous stuff.

The unoriginal Tim
Reply to  Jamie5678
2 years ago

Nice. Haven’t seen the interview but pleased for him and it sets him apart as the best British swimmer of all time.

And yes he is the best 100 Breastroke swimmer of all time. It seems like the days of guys doing 100/200 at the the highest level are over. The sprint Breastroke technique has changes so much but can’t last for 200m.

Joe
Reply to  The unoriginal Tim
2 years ago

Over until it isn’t over

There's no doubt that he's tightening up
Reply to  The unoriginal Tim
2 years ago

Kamminga 57/2:06 has entered the chat

anonymous
Reply to  The unoriginal Tim
2 years ago

lets wait until Kamminga’s 200 before saying the days of high level 100/200 guys are done

Philip Johnson
2 years ago

Greatest 100 breast swimmer of all time.

Philip Johnson
Reply to  Philip Johnson
2 years ago

Whoever downvoted this, who is better than him? SMH

Joe
Reply to  Philip Johnson
2 years ago

Michael Andrew

Bud
2 years ago

Anastasia Gorbenko set an Israeli record of 59.30 to qualify for the 100 back final, haven’t seen that mentioned in either Europe or Asia so thought I’d point it out.

About Annika Johnson

Annika Johnson

Annika came into the sport competitively at age eight, following in the footsteps of her twin sister and older brother. The sibling rivalry was further fueled when all three began focusing on distance freestyle, forcing the family to buy two lap counters. Annika is a three-time Futures finalist in the 200 …

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