China bags 2 more diving golds at worlds

China bags 2 more diving golds at worlds
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China bags 2 more diving golds at worlds
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Updated 23 July 2013
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China bags 2 more diving golds at worlds

China bags 2 more diving golds at worlds

BARCELONA: China captured both diving gold medals at the world championships on Monday, with Chen Ruolin and Liu Huixia winning the women’s 10-meter synchronized platform after Li Shixin retained his men’s 1-meter springboard title.
Chen and Liu built an unassailable points total of 356.38 by executing five nearly flawless dives to give China its seventh consecutive world title.
Chen’s fourth straight world title in this event added to her four Olympic gold medals.
Olympic bronze medalists Meaghan Benfeito and Roseline Filion of Canada took silver with 331.41 points.
Malaysia’s Pandelela Rinong and Mun Yee Leong were 0.27 points behind the Canadians to claim bronze, the same medal they won at the 2009 worlds.
Earlier, Li won China’s fourth straight world title.

Gianniotis retains world title in 10K open water
Spyridon Gianniotis of Greece defended his title in a grueling and combative 10-kilometer open water event at the swimming world championships Monday, surging ahead on the final lap to avoid a sprint with Olympic champion Oussama Mellouli of Tunisia.
Gianniotis clocked 1 hour, 49 minutes, 11.8 seconds in the waters of Barcelona’s harbor.
Five-time world champion Thomas Lurz of Germany finished second, 2.7 seconds behind, and Mellouli was third, 7.4 back.
Mellouli won Saturday’s 5K race with an impressive sprint finish and he was at or near the lead for much of this race but Gianniotis took the initiative on the final lap to gain a clear lead of two bodylengths ahead of his chasers.
“I wasn’t feeling so good but I picked it up and got in the first places the last lap and I said to myself, ‘That’s it, go in front and whatever happens happens,’” Gianniotis said. “I’m quite good on sprinting but not like Oussama. ... I knew that if it goes to the end, even if he’s more tired than me he’s got more speed than me, so I tried to stay in front.”
Having skipped the 5K, in which Lurz took bronze, Gianniotis appeared fresher than his rivals.
“I pushed a bit in the last 300 meters to make a bit of a (gap) in case he came really hard,” Gianniotis added. “The last 50 meters I’ve never felt so bad in my life. I was nearly fainting. ... My hands were (shaking).
“My heart was pumping so hard I couldn’t keep up with my blood,” Gianniotis added. “I just put my head down and swam hard.”
While the race began at noon under a searing sun with an air temperature of near 30 degrees Celsius (86 Fahrenheit), water conditions were ideal at 25 C (77 F).
Swimmers completed four laps over the 2.5-kilometer L-shaped course in Barcelona’s harbor, as fans watched from the shore.
Lurz lost time early on due to fighting around the buoys.
“It was very bad. And it’s always the guys not finishing in the first positions,” he said. “I want to swim and not fight. It just costs power. But that’s open water.”
Mellouli had to fend off some underwater kicks and jabs from Damien Cattin-Vidal of France, who finished fourth, in the final kilometer.
“Every time I tried to move he got super physical, so I couldn’t move,” Mellouli said.
Gianniotis enjoyed the combat.
“You’re going to get hit, you’re going to get pushed. It’s rough,” he said. “It’s really hard and hard is what I like.”
Olympic bronze medalist Richard Weinberger of Canada failed to swim around the buoy at the race’s midpoint and had to go back to do it correctly, dropping him nearly a minute behind the leaders. Still, he battled back and took the lead with 2.5K to go but finished fifth, 8.1 behind.
Gianniotis finished fourth at the London Games and wasn’t quite sure if the world title was redemption.
“It’s not the same,” he said. “But I came here with only 3 1/2 months training and I won. After the Olympics I was feeling very bad psychologically but this is sport and I said to myself I wanted to come back.”