Categories: OlympicsSports

Japan enjoy golden day, Tunisian swimmer stuns superpowers

By Sam Nussey, Takashi Umekawa and Mitch Phillips

The Tokyo Olympics delivered a day of high drama on Sunday with a stunning surprise in the pool, one of the great David v Goliath cycling victories and double sibling judo gold as Japan continued their golden start.

The host nation bagged skateboarding’s first gold medal courtesy of Yuto Horigome, then saw Uta Abe and her brother Hifumi make history as the first siblings to win gold medals in different events on the same day in any sport. With swimmer Yui Ohashi also victorious, Japan’s overall gold medal tally rose to five, one behind China and one ahead of the United States.

Tunisia are unlikely to add to their solitary gold but no medal of the Games will be celebrated more wildly than that earned via the astounding achievement of 18-year-old Ahmed Hafnaoui, who stunned the swimming superpowers with victory from lane eight in the men’s 400m freestyle.

“It’s a dream and it became true – it was my best race ever,” Hafnaoui said in an Olympic-level understatement after he held off heavily-fancied Australian Jack McLoughlin and American Kieran Smith despite qualifying slowest for the final.

Hafnaoui received the ultimate validation as American medal machine Michael Phelps, the greatest swimmer in history, labelled his performance as an “unbelievable swim”.

“The difference between these Olympics and the past is that every single person in the final has a chance of winning gold,” said Phelps.

Yuto Horigome of Japan in action.REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

Skateboarder Horigome, who grew up in the Tokyo ward where the event is being held, took gold at the Games debut of a sport once seen as a symbol of counter-culture and, ironically, still symbolized by the “no skateboarding” signs plastered on the outside walls of the venue.

“It felt significant to return to Koto ward, it meant so much more for me,” said Horigome, who moved to the United States after high school to follow his skateboarding ambitions.

The day the Abe family will never forget began when Uta triumphed in the women’s 52kg category. The 21-year-old had cruised through to the final but was then taken deep into Golden Score overtime before overcoming Amandine Buchard of France.

Hifumi, 23, won gold in the men’s 66kg final against Georgia’s Vazha Margvelashvili.

Ohashi had got things going for Japan with victory in the 400m women’s medley and the gold rush was a boost for organizers hoping to see a lift in enthusiasm for the delayed Olympics among the Japanese public, who are laboring under a state of emergency in the capital.

Five years ago in Rio, Annemiek van Vleuten suffered an horrific crash in the women’s cycling road race when she was on course to win and she contributed another memorable Olympic moment on Sunday – again for all the wrong reasons.

Little-known Austrian amateur Anna Kiesenhofer made an audacious solo breakaway and somehow stayed clear to cross the line looking absolutely incredulous. She was not alone, as the vastly-experienced four-woman Dutch team seeking a third successive title were somehow unaware she had escaped.

Cue an embarrassing air-punching celebration by Van Vleuten who crossed the line second but thinking she had won.

“Have I got that wrong?,” she asked the team masseur at the finish line. She had – spectacularly – leaving full-time teacher Kiesenhofer with something very special to tell come September.

“I am happy that I was not too scared and I just went for it,” said Kiesenhofer after winning Austria’s first cycling gold since the inaugural Games of 1896.

The first world record of the Games came in the pool as Australia’s women romped home in the 4x100m final.

Chase Kalisz delivered Team USA its first gold in the men’s 400m medley.

In tennis, Japan’s Naomi Osaka won her first-round match – her first since withdrawing from the French Open in May and two days after lighting the Olympic flame.

There was an upset, though, as Australia’s Wimbledon champion Ash Barty was beaten.

At least she made it onto the court. Britain’s double-defending champion Andy Murray withdrew from the men’s singles as an injury precaution and with another London and Rio champion Jade Jones suffering a shock first-round loss in taekwondo, it marked a poor day for the country that finished second in the medal table five years ago.

Reuters

Reuters

Recent Posts

How to be a ‘Fall Guy’: Stunt performers on their rough-and-tumble life

By JAKE COYLE AP Film Writer There are two things to keep in mind while…

31 mins ago

Where to nab your local Mother’s Day gifts in Philadelphia

Looking to surprise and celebrate that special lady in your life? Here are where to…

2 hours ago

6 wounded in weekend shootings across Philadelphia

Six people were injured by gunfire in separate incidents Saturday and early Sunday across Philadelphia,…

14 hours ago

Has Center City recovered from COVID? Or is that even the right question to ask?

Perhaps it is time to stop talking about Philadelphia’s downtown recovering from COVID-19 and getting…

14 hours ago

Center City Pretzel Co. reopens after blaze

If you ever doubted the connection that Philadelphians have to the mighty the soft pretzel,…

14 hours ago

PHA boss gives update on housing vouchers, timeline for waitlist

In 2023, the Philadelphia Housing Authority re-opened the Housing Choice Voucher program for two weeks,…

14 hours ago

This website uses cookies.