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Friday, 30 July 2021

New top story from Time: Katie Ledecky Adds Another Gold to Her Medal Haul in Tokyo



Distance is where Katie Ledecky feels at home. There’s no one better at powering through the long (and tedious) races, and Ledecky reaffirmed that with a decisive win in the 800-m freestyle, the event that started her Olympic experience back in 2012.

The win capped off Ledecky’s Tokyo Olympics; it was her last individual after racing four freestyle distances—the 200 m, 400 m, 800 m and 1,500 m—and medaling in three events. Days earlier, she made history by winning the first women’s 1,500-m ever raced at an Olympics—and she did it about an hour after swimming the 200-m freestyle.
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In typical Ledecky fashion, she pulled out ahead of the field after the first turn, and never gave up the lead. Rowdy Gaines, Olympic champion and NBC commentator, tells TIME that no one is better than Ledecky at finding “fresh water”—meaning she’s far enough ahead of the pack that she’s not wasting energy battling anyone’s wake or splash.

Ledecky swam past growing freestyle rival Ariarne Titmus of Australia, who attempted to pull off what Ledecky had done in Rio and sweep the 200-m, 400-m and 800-m freestyle races. But fell short in the 800-m, finishing 8:12.57. Ledecky also held off her young teammate, Katie Grimes, who like Ledecky did in 2012, is only 15 years old and appearing in her first Olympics to race in the same event Ledecky had, and finished fourth.

While Ledecky wasn’t able to beat her own world record, which she’s done four time since setting her first one in 2013, her swim was the 17th fastest time in history, and she still owns the 10 fastest times for the 800-m freestyle.

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