Financial Mail and Business Day

Tatjana sends her rivals a warning

• Schoenmaker delivers much-needed impetus to Team SA after two mostly lacklustre days in Tokyo

David Isaacson

Tatjana Schoenmaker sounded a serious warning to her Tokyo Games rivals on Sunday evening as she broke the 100m breaststroke Olympic record in the heats. Schoenmaker went into the showpiece seeded fourth in this event and first in the 200m breaststroke, but she threw down the gauntlet as she powered into the lead and almost lost her green cap on her way to clocking 1 min 04.82 sec to win her heat.

Tatjana Schoenmaker sounded a serious warning to her Tokyo Games rivals on Sunday evening as she broke the 100m breaststroke Olympic record in the heats.

Schoenmaker went into the showpiece seeded fourth in this event and first in the 200m breaststroke, but she threw down the gauntlet as she powered into the lead and almost lost her green cap on her way to clocking 1 min 04.82 sec to win her heat.

And given how she floated into the wall, there is room to go even faster.

In her wake was one of her two main American opponents, Lydia Jacoby, who touched in 1:05.52. The other US competitor, world record-holder Lilly King, won the final heat in 1:05.55. King owns the 1:04.13 world mark and the 1:04.72 world lead.

Sweden’s Sophie Hansson was fourth fastest overall in 1:05.66.

Schoenmaker, who took nearly a second off the 1:05.74 African record she posted in April, said she was surprised and warned that the others would go faster. “I didn’t expect that at all. Obviously my 200 is always a little better, but it was a good swim Because it was my first race I gave it all from the start, I really just wanted to go out, get my pace up, but obviously didn’t expect that fast.”

Schoenmaker played down her effort, warning that the others were going to come at her.

“I think most of the girls are going to swim much faster tomorrow. I’m just trying to get into the final and just have a lane there. The 100’s not my best, but that’s why I was so shocked. I’m very excited to race the other amazing girls I didn’t race today.”

She insisted she was feeling no pressure, saying her main goal was to swim best times.

“I already did it so that means it’s off my shoulders.”

However she dresses it up, Schoeman has signalled a clear intent that she is on the hunt for two medals in Japan. Her performance also delivered muchneeded impetus to Team SA after two mostly lacklustre days of Olympic action.

Cyclist Ashleigh MoolmanPasio offered SA a chance in the women’s 137km road race, finishing a respectable 13th overall after the peloton misjudged the danger of an early breakaway, from which Austria’s unheralded Anna Kiesenhofer claimed the gold.

Moolman-Pasio, 17sec behind the bronze medallist, will launch another podium assault on Wednesday, this time in the individual time trial, an event where she can rely more on her own skills rather than the tactics of teams around her.

Surfer Bianca Buitendag battled her way into Monday’s third round of the women’s competition, where she was drawn to take on world No 5 Stephanie Gilmore of Australia.

Gymnast Caitlyn Rooskrantz scored a personal-best 49.933 points in the all-round qualification, while Naveen Daries recovered from a shaky start to finish with 46.365 points. At the top end, American star Simone Biles accumulated 57.731 points.

The men’s hockey team stunned the Netherlands with three early goals, but the world No 3-ranked nation fought back to win the encounter 5-3.

The Olympics are tough. The rowers learnt that in the morning as the men’s four, who went to Tokyo as contenders, were eliminated as they ended last in their repechage. They will race the B-final on Wednesday.

Brandon Valjalo, with his arm in a plaster cast after breaking his wrist a couple of days earlier, took a few spills as he ended third from bottom in skateboarding’s Olympic debut, in the men’s street discipline.

The men’s water polo team crashed to a 21-2 defeat to world champions Italy, the Olympic bronze medallists five years ago.

Schoenmaker’s training partner, schoolboy Pieter Coetzé, managed only 54.05 sec in the 100m backstroke heats, which placed him 24th in a field of 40.

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2021-07-26T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-07-26T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://timesmedia2.pressreader.com/article/281951725846657

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