Phelps new record Olympic medals winner
LONDON:
Michael Phelps became the most decorated Olympian of all time on
Tuesday, winning a record 19th medal in the pool as China's swimming
sensation Ye Shiwen grabbed her second gold of the Games.
Phelps
anchored the US team to a convincing victory in the 4x200m freestyle
relay to secure gold and beat the record of 18 medals amassed by Soviet
gymnast Larisa Latynina between 1956 and 1964.
The
American had earlier had his bid for a 200m butterfly Olympic treble
thwarted by Chad le Clos of South Africa, but the silver allowed him to
match the record medal haul before the relay sealed his unprecedented
achievement.
Phelps, 27, won six golds and two bronze
medals at the 2004 Athens Games, then brought home a spectacular eight
golds from Beijing.
He has suffered a testing Games in
London, slumping out of the medals in the 400m individual medley and
then having to settle for silver in the 4x100m freestyle relay.
But
Phelps' record 19th medal was never in doubt in Tuesday's relay as he
took over the final leg with a healthy lead and powered home to leave
France trailing in silver and China with bronze.
Ye, just
16, is likely to fuel more speculation about her remarkable performances
after she added the 200m individual medley title to the 400m individual
medley crown.
The Chinese girl was lagging behind the
leaders at the turn in the Aquatics Centre, but produced a powerful
final 50m to overhaul Australia's Alicia Coutts in an Olympic record
time of 2min 7.57sec.
Her swim came just days after her lightning freestyle leg in the longer medley propelled her to a new world record.
Ye's
emergence has raised unproven suspicions of doping, with John Leonard,
executive director of the World Swimming Coaches' Association,
describing her display in the 400m medley as "impossible."
But Chinese authorities went on the offensive, saying it was unfair to point the finger at their swimmers.
"The
Chinese athletes, including the swimmers, have undergone nearly 100
drug tests since they arrived here," Jiang Zhixue, the head of
anti-doping at China's General Administration of Sport, told Xinhua news
agency.
"Many were also tested by the international
federations and the British anti-doping agency. I can tell you that so
far there was not a single positive case.
"I think it is not proper to single Chinese swimmers out once they produce good results. Some people are just biased."
Former
British swimmer Adrian Moorhouse, a gold medallist in the 100m
breaststroke in the 1988 Seoul Games, issued a strong defence of Ye,
saying it was possible China had unearthed their own Phelps.
"I think it's sour grapes," Moorhouse said. "I think it's quite insulting actually."
In
the gymnastics arena, the United States won the women's team final to
claim their first gold medal in the event since 1996. Russia had to
settle for silver while Romania pipped 2008 Olympic champions China to
bronze.
The first of 15 golds up for grabs Tuesday was won
by defending champions Germany in the equestrian three-day eventing,
with Michael Jung then becoming the first rider to hold the European,
world and Olympic individual titles.
Great Britain finished second in the team event to earn a silver medal for Queen Elizabeth II's granddaughter Zara Phillips.
China
won their third diving gold in three events when world champions Chen
Ruolin and Wang Hao clinched the women's 10m synchro platform.
Chen,
the individual 10m platform champion from the Beijing Games and the
synchronised 10m platform champion, teamed with Wang to tally 368.40
points from their five dives off the tower. (AFP)