Spanish swimming is looking for an end on Wednesday in the form of a medal in Games in Paris and he already has. He 4×100 medley 49-point medley relayfor visually impaired swimmers, the bronze medal to expand the massive national pool performance.
José Ramón Cantero, María Delgado, Emma Feliu and Enrique Alhambra they are done third with a time of 3:57.95. They have been overtaken by Ukraine (3:53.84 with Maryna Piddubna, Oleksii Virchenko, Anna Stetsenko and Yaroslav Denysenko) and by Brazil (Matheus Rheine Correa, Douglas Matera, Lucilene da Silva and Maria Carolina Gomes, 3:56.94).
has begun Stone cutter in the fight for third place in a first post where China left. He gave ground as the meters ticked by, but handed over his baton in fourth position and in the fight for the podium.
Spain is betting Maria Delgado in the second post instead of for her second man. This caused several countries to continue, but Delgado remained in the fourth position that gave Feliuwith all the girls in the pool, the choice to fight for third place. In fact, the CNB swimmer overtook Ukraine to take over Enrique Alhambra. He pushed himself hard in search of second place, but couldn’t get there and tied the bronze.
With this they are thirteen medals added by Spain to the poolwith two gold, three silver and eight bronze. The total counter of the Spanish delegation is at thirty two medals, with seven gold, eight silver and seventeen bronze. Thirty-three are already sure of table tennis.
María Delgado, fourth will lead the rest of the finals with the Spaniards
For other Spaniards, Maria Delgado is one step away from the medals on 100 free S12. It has been quarter in the final with a time of 1:01.74 leaving her behind Brazilian Maria Carolina Gomes (59.30), Ukrainian Anna Stetsenko (1:00.39) and Japanese Ayano Tsujiuchi (1:01.05).
Delgado made up for the ground he gave up at the start, losing positions to drop to seventh on the first pitch. He pushed forward into the turn in search of a comeback and gained three places which left him one step away from the podium. Up front, Gomes led from start to finish and had no problem taking the win.
Sixth it’s over Sarai Gascón in 100 free S9. She did it in a time of 1:04.55 beating Australian Alexa Leary’s world record of 59.53 seconds. American Christie Raleigh-Crossley followed her with an American record of 1:00.18 and Brazilian Mariana Ribeiro was third with 1:02.22.
Gascón was initially in the fight for third place, but as the race progressed he dropped to sixth position where he touched the wall. He battled for fifth place on the second pitch, with an imperial Leary just out of reach, but Sims overtook him at the end for Egarense to seal that sixth spot.
Seventh it’s over Nahia Zudaire in 400 free S8. He set a time of 5:05.46 which left him well short of the medals. They are for the American Jessica Long (4:48.74), for the British Alice Tai (4:52.24) and for the Italian Xenia Francesca Palazzo (5:00.13). Zudaire was unable to withstand Tai’s initial push, which broke the race, and she was seventh throughout the race, a distance from the women in front. There, Long accelerated in the final stretch to pass Tai and take the gold.
Not winning places in the final 100 free S12 Ivan Salguerowho finished eighth with 54.65 seconds, two hundredths behind Ukrainian Illia Yaremenko. The Spaniard was behind from the start of the race and could not make positions in a final with a Ukrainian double. Yaroslav Denysenko (53.11) won ahead of Maksym Veraksa (53.64), who won an even match for silver against the Azerbaijani Roman Salei (53.65) and the British Stephen Clegg (53.67), without a podium.
He was also left behind Inigo Llopis in 400 free S8. After his gold in the 100 backstroke and his bronze in the mixed 4×100 freestyle relay, the Basque swimmer did not have a chance to get places on this occasion. He finished eighth with 4:37.29 in a race won by Italian Alberto Amodeo (4:23.23) ahead of Canadian Reid Maxwell (American record 4:23.90) and neutral Russian Andrei Nikolaev (4:24.00). Amodeo, from less to more, held off his rivals in an even sprint. Behind, Llopis, in seventh position for most of the race, finally finished eighth.
Source: La Verdad
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