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The start of something extraordinary

FINA World 25m Swimming Championships - NZ Day 3 Wrap

New Zealand swimmer Lauren Boyle grabbed a bronze medal to go with her gold on the second day of finals at the FINA World Short Course Championships in Turkey today.

Boyle, who celebrated her 25th birthday in Istanbul today, finished third in the 400m freestyle a day after winning the 800m at the Sinan Erdem Dome.

The North Shore club swimmer, coached by Mark Regan, was edged out of a second gold medal by just 6/100ths of a second after leading from mid-race for all but the final 10m.

It is the 12th medal New Zealand swimmers have won over the last two decades at the world short course championships and Boyle joins Moss Burmester as double medallists behind Trent Bray who won three medals.

The 25 year old Boyle is the first News Zealand swimmer to win two medals at the same world short course championship.

Three New Zealand swimmers featured in finals tonight with Matthew Stanley fourth in the men’s 400m freestyle and Melissa Ingram sixth in the 200m backstroke.

Boyle began confidently, pushing past early leader Elena Sokolova (RUS) by the 200m mark in the 400m freestyle final and working her way to a handy advantage by the 300m mark. As the Russian faded, the 200m specialists Melanie Costa Schmid (ESP) and Chloe Sutton (USA) started to turn up the pace. The Kiwi led by more than a second with 50m remaining but the two sprinters powered home to tip Boyle for a second gold medal by the blink of the eye.

Boyle’s time of 4:01.24 bettered her own New Zealand record that she set yesterday during the 800m final.

“I didn’t actually realise how close it was until I looked at the result,” Boyle said. “The last 100 m wasn’t really good tonight but I am really stoked to be on the podium again. It’s a good result but there are always things to work on.

“It was a pretty hard back-up because the 800 takes a bit out of you. It was quite a short turnaround to the heats for the 400. But it’s been a good day and a half of hard racing.  I am looking forward to a day off tomorrow.”

She takes on the 200m freestyle along with Ingram on the final day.

“For the 200 my final will be the heat because my 200 is not one of my stronger events so I will have to swim really well to get a second swim.”

Stanley, 20, proved he will be a key component of New Zealand’s push to towards the podium in Rio with a strong performance in the 400m freestyle.

The Matamata swimmer swam faster with each outing in Istanbul, lowering his entry time of 3:42.17 to 3:41.59 in the heats and he cut a further half a second off in the final to 3:41.01.

But the London Olympian believed a medal was in his grasp tonight.

“Fourth is like first loser. I wish I had backed myself a little more and I could have come away with a medal may be,” Stanley said.

“I didn’t have the easy speed I needed through the first part of the race and I wasted a bit of energy and went out a little bit slow which was a shame.”

His best is 3:40.74 when he win the World Cup in Beijing recently and he now begins to circle on another Danyon Loader national record of 3:40.46 set in 1995 in UK which broke the world record at the time.

Ingram turned in another strong effort in a packed field with similar heat times. She made her trademark conservative start and powered home in 2:05.45 for sixth in the race won by Ukraine’s Daryna Zavina, who battled with the Kiwi in the recent World Cup series.

Ingram got the better of Zavina with five wins in that series but the 27 year old, coached by Scott Talbot, said it was probably her undoing tonight.

“The experience of the World Cup racing was beneficial in terms of how to execute a race plans. Unfortunately tonight I didn’t have the back end speed I needed which was a reflection that I hadn’t done the training I needed in the build-up because of all the racing.

“I knew it would be a risk but decided to do the World Cup and while the experience was great it didn’t quite work for this. You learn from it and move on.”

Earlier Howick Pakuranga’s Ewan Jackson was 22nd fastest in the heats in 3:46.00.

Tomorrow is a quiet day for the New Zealand team with Stanley and Cameron Simpson in action in the 100m freestyle, with Boyle and Ingram returning on the final day for the 200m freestyle, Corey Main in the 200m backstroke and Stanley in the 1500m freestyle.

Results:

Women 200m backstroke: Daryna Zavina (UKR) 2:02.24, 1; Bonnie Brandon (USA) 2:03.19, 2; Duane Da Rocha Marce (ESP) 2:04.15, 3. Also: Melissa Ingram (NZL) 2:05.45, 6.

Men 400m freestyle: Paul Biedermann (GER) 3:39.15, 1; Yun Hao (CHN) 3:39.48, 2; Mads Glaesner (DEN) 3:40.09, 3. Also: Matthew Stanley (NZL) 3:41.01, 4.

Women 400m freestyle: Melanie Costa Schmid (ESP) 4:01.18, 1; Chloe Sutton (USA) 4:01.20, 2; Lauren Boyle (NZL) 4:01.24, 3.

CAPTION: Lauren Boyle collects the bronze medal. Credit: Ianmacnicolimages.co.uk

FINA World Championships (25m)