Gyurta snatches surprise breaststroke gold
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Last Updated: Saturday, August 1, 2009, 08:47
  
Gyurta snatches surprise breaststroke gold
Rome: Hungary`s Daniel Gyurta surged from behind to snatch a surprise gold medal in the men`s 200 metres breaststroke final at the world championships on Friday.
Gyurta was trailing in last place at the halfway point and sixth at the final turn but he pulled off a sizzling last 50 to clinch a tight race by a fingernail`s length in two minutes 7.64 seconds.



Cancer survivor Eric Shanteau of the United States was only 0.01 of a second back in second place.



"When I was 10 metres from the wall I saw Shanteau was still in front of me and at five I started to concentrate on my technique and put all my power into my strokes," Gyurta told reporters.



"You can see that it worked."



Australia`s Christian Sprenger, who set a world record of 2:07.31 in Thursday`s semis, and Lithuania`s Giedrius Titenis both picked up the bronze medal.



Sprenger`s compatriot Brenton Rickard had his nose in front in the middle but ended up off the podium in fifth.



"You tend to tighten up a little in the breaststroke. You go from swimming like you`re 10 feet tall to swimming like you`re three feet tall," Shanteau said. "That`s kind of what happened to me in the last 10-15."




Bureau Report
Gyurta snatches surprise breaststroke gold
Rome: Hungary`s Daniel Gyurta surged from behind to snatch a surprise gold medal in the men`s 200 metres breaststroke final at the world championships on Friday.
Gyurta was trailing in last place at the halfway point and sixth at the final turn but he pulled off a sizzling last 50 to clinch a tight race by a fingernail`s length in two minutes 7.64 seconds.



Cancer survivor Eric Shanteau of the United States was only 0.01 of a second back in second place.



"When I was 10 metres from the wall I saw Shanteau was still in front of me and at five I started to concentrate on my technique and put all my power into my strokes," Gyurta told reporters.



"You can see that it worked."



Australia`s Christian Sprenger, who set a world record of 2:07.31 in Thursday`s semis, and Lithuania`s Giedrius Titenis both picked up the bronze medal.



Sprenger`s compatriot Brenton Rickard had his nose in front in the middle but ended up off the podium in fifth.



"You tend to tighten up a little in the breaststroke. You go from swimming like you`re 10 feet tall to swimming like you`re three feet tall," Shanteau said. "That`s kind of what happened to me in the last 10-15."




Bureau Report

First Published: Saturday, August 1, 2009, 08:47


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