<p>In an Olympics where many of the favorites have faltered, Caeleb Dressel lived up to the hype.</p>.<p>Dressel claimed the first individual Olympic gold medal of his career with two furious laps of the pool Thursday morning, winning the 100-meter freestyle over defending champion Kyle Chalmers.</p>.<p>As is his style, Dressel dove into the pool and came up with the lead. He was still ahead at the lone flip, and turned away the Aussie's bid for a second straight gold.</p>.<p>Dressel's winning time was an Olympic record of 47.02 seconds — a mere six-hundredths of a second ahead of Chalmers, who had to settle for a silver this time.</p>.<p>“I wasn't worried about anything,” Dressel said. “During the race there's only so much you can do. Whatever's going to happen is going to happen. I stuck to my race plan so if it got me first, OK, if it got me second, OK.”</p>.<p>The bronze was claimed by Russia's Kliment Kolesnikov (47.44), who added to his silver in the 100 backstroke.</p>.<p><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/tokyo-olympics-live-Tokyo-2020-Olympics-Tokyo-Olympics-Japan-Covid-19-coronavirus-Tokyo-Tokyo-games-Japan-olympics-tokyo-summer-olympics-1014055.html" target="_blank"><strong>Follow live Tokyo Olympics updates here</strong></a></p>.<p>The first three gold medals of Dressel's career were all in the relays — two in Rio de Janeiro, another in the 4x100 free relay at the Tokyo Games.</p>.<p>Now, Dressel has earned a gold all by himself.</p>.<p>“It is a lot different. I guess I thought it would be, I just didn't want to admit to it,” he said. “It's a lot tougher. You have to rely on yourself, there's no one to bail you out from a bad split.”</p>.<p>Dressel climbed atop the lane rope, a look of wonder on his face, and held up the index finger on each hand.</p>.<p>No. 1 indeed.</p>.<p>Dressel's gold was the second of the morning for the Americans, who got a surprise victory from Bobby Finke in the Olympic debut of the men's 800 free.</p>.<p>Also winning golds: Australia's Izaac Stubblety-Cook in the men's 200 breaststroke and China's Zhang Yufei in the women's 200 butterfly.</p>.<p>After Michael Phelps retired, Dressel emerged as the world's dominant swimmer.</p>.<p>He turned in staggering performances at the last two world championships, earning seven gold medals at Budapest in 2017, followed by a six-gold, two-silver performance at Gwangju in 2019.</p>.<p>As important as those meets were, they're not the Olympics.</p>.<p>He needed an individual gold to solidify his legacy.</p>.<p>Mission accomplished.</p>.<p>“These moments are a lot different than worlds,” Dressel conceded.</p>.<p>Finke's pulled out his victory with a dazzling burst on the final lap.</p>.<p>Germany's Florian Wellbrock snatched the lead from Italy's Gregorio Paltrinieri on the final flip, with Finke lurking back in fourth.</p>.<p>But the American turned on the speed at the end of the 16-lap race, passing all three swimmers ahead of him to take the gold. Finke's final 50 was 26.39 — nearly 2 seconds faster than anyone else.</p>.<p>“I had no idea I was going to do that,” Finke said. “I noticed with 10 meters off (the final turn) I was catching a little bit of ground, and that was the only motivation I needed.”</p>.<p>Finke's winning time was 7 minutes, 41.87 seconds, just 0.24 ahead of Paltrinieri. Mykhailo Romanchuk of Ukraine touched in 7:42.33 to take the bronze, knocking Wellbrock back to fourth.</p>.<p>Over two swims, Finke knocked about 6 seconds off his personal best coming into the Olympics to walk away with a historic gold.</p>.<p>He wasn't thinking about the pain until he touched the wall.</p>.<p>“Your mind just kind of disappears and you're blocking it out at the end,” Finke said.</p>.<p>The men's 800 freestyle was added to the Olympic program for these games, marking the first time that approximate distance was contested by the men since there was an 880-yard race at the 1904 St. Louis Games.</p>.<p>Mirroring Finke's finish, albeit over a much shorter distance, Stubblety-Cook rallied on the final lap to pass Arno Kamminga of the Netherlands, who went out fast and tried to hold on.</p>.<p>The winning time was an Olympic record of 2:06.38, giving the team from Down Under their fifth gold of the swimming competition.</p>.<p>“I was happy enough just to be here,” Stubblety-Cook said. “Honestly, I'm just pretty lost for words at the moment. It's still all sinking in.”</p>.<p>Dressel's victory pulled the Americans ahead of the Aussies with six golds in Tokyo. They also led the overall medal tally with 20.</p>.<p>Kamminga was under world-record pace through the first 150 meters, but he faded to the silver in 2:07.01. The bronze went to Finland's Matti Mattsson in 2:07.24.</p>.<p>American Nic Fink finished fifth.</p>.<p>Zhang turned in a dominating performance to win China's first swimming gold of these games in the women's 200-meter butterfly. Her Olympic-record time of 2:03.86 put her more than a body length ahead of the pair of Americans, Regan Smith and Hali Flickinger.</p>.<p>The US swimmers dueled back and forth for the silver, with Smith pulling ahead at the end to touch in 2:05.30. Flickinger earned the bronze in 2:05.65.</p>.<p>In the final event of the morning, Katie Ledecky was swimming for another gold in the 4x200 free relay, but the Americans were expected to face a big challenge from Ariarne Titmus and the powerful Australian women's team. </p>
<p>In an Olympics where many of the favorites have faltered, Caeleb Dressel lived up to the hype.</p>.<p>Dressel claimed the first individual Olympic gold medal of his career with two furious laps of the pool Thursday morning, winning the 100-meter freestyle over defending champion Kyle Chalmers.</p>.<p>As is his style, Dressel dove into the pool and came up with the lead. He was still ahead at the lone flip, and turned away the Aussie's bid for a second straight gold.</p>.<p>Dressel's winning time was an Olympic record of 47.02 seconds — a mere six-hundredths of a second ahead of Chalmers, who had to settle for a silver this time.</p>.<p>“I wasn't worried about anything,” Dressel said. “During the race there's only so much you can do. Whatever's going to happen is going to happen. I stuck to my race plan so if it got me first, OK, if it got me second, OK.”</p>.<p>The bronze was claimed by Russia's Kliment Kolesnikov (47.44), who added to his silver in the 100 backstroke.</p>.<p><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/tokyo-olympics-live-Tokyo-2020-Olympics-Tokyo-Olympics-Japan-Covid-19-coronavirus-Tokyo-Tokyo-games-Japan-olympics-tokyo-summer-olympics-1014055.html" target="_blank"><strong>Follow live Tokyo Olympics updates here</strong></a></p>.<p>The first three gold medals of Dressel's career were all in the relays — two in Rio de Janeiro, another in the 4x100 free relay at the Tokyo Games.</p>.<p>Now, Dressel has earned a gold all by himself.</p>.<p>“It is a lot different. I guess I thought it would be, I just didn't want to admit to it,” he said. “It's a lot tougher. You have to rely on yourself, there's no one to bail you out from a bad split.”</p>.<p>Dressel climbed atop the lane rope, a look of wonder on his face, and held up the index finger on each hand.</p>.<p>No. 1 indeed.</p>.<p>Dressel's gold was the second of the morning for the Americans, who got a surprise victory from Bobby Finke in the Olympic debut of the men's 800 free.</p>.<p>Also winning golds: Australia's Izaac Stubblety-Cook in the men's 200 breaststroke and China's Zhang Yufei in the women's 200 butterfly.</p>.<p>After Michael Phelps retired, Dressel emerged as the world's dominant swimmer.</p>.<p>He turned in staggering performances at the last two world championships, earning seven gold medals at Budapest in 2017, followed by a six-gold, two-silver performance at Gwangju in 2019.</p>.<p>As important as those meets were, they're not the Olympics.</p>.<p>He needed an individual gold to solidify his legacy.</p>.<p>Mission accomplished.</p>.<p>“These moments are a lot different than worlds,” Dressel conceded.</p>.<p>Finke's pulled out his victory with a dazzling burst on the final lap.</p>.<p>Germany's Florian Wellbrock snatched the lead from Italy's Gregorio Paltrinieri on the final flip, with Finke lurking back in fourth.</p>.<p>But the American turned on the speed at the end of the 16-lap race, passing all three swimmers ahead of him to take the gold. Finke's final 50 was 26.39 — nearly 2 seconds faster than anyone else.</p>.<p>“I had no idea I was going to do that,” Finke said. “I noticed with 10 meters off (the final turn) I was catching a little bit of ground, and that was the only motivation I needed.”</p>.<p>Finke's winning time was 7 minutes, 41.87 seconds, just 0.24 ahead of Paltrinieri. Mykhailo Romanchuk of Ukraine touched in 7:42.33 to take the bronze, knocking Wellbrock back to fourth.</p>.<p>Over two swims, Finke knocked about 6 seconds off his personal best coming into the Olympics to walk away with a historic gold.</p>.<p>He wasn't thinking about the pain until he touched the wall.</p>.<p>“Your mind just kind of disappears and you're blocking it out at the end,” Finke said.</p>.<p>The men's 800 freestyle was added to the Olympic program for these games, marking the first time that approximate distance was contested by the men since there was an 880-yard race at the 1904 St. Louis Games.</p>.<p>Mirroring Finke's finish, albeit over a much shorter distance, Stubblety-Cook rallied on the final lap to pass Arno Kamminga of the Netherlands, who went out fast and tried to hold on.</p>.<p>The winning time was an Olympic record of 2:06.38, giving the team from Down Under their fifth gold of the swimming competition.</p>.<p>“I was happy enough just to be here,” Stubblety-Cook said. “Honestly, I'm just pretty lost for words at the moment. It's still all sinking in.”</p>.<p>Dressel's victory pulled the Americans ahead of the Aussies with six golds in Tokyo. They also led the overall medal tally with 20.</p>.<p>Kamminga was under world-record pace through the first 150 meters, but he faded to the silver in 2:07.01. The bronze went to Finland's Matti Mattsson in 2:07.24.</p>.<p>American Nic Fink finished fifth.</p>.<p>Zhang turned in a dominating performance to win China's first swimming gold of these games in the women's 200-meter butterfly. Her Olympic-record time of 2:03.86 put her more than a body length ahead of the pair of Americans, Regan Smith and Hali Flickinger.</p>.<p>The US swimmers dueled back and forth for the silver, with Smith pulling ahead at the end to touch in 2:05.30. Flickinger earned the bronze in 2:05.65.</p>.<p>In the final event of the morning, Katie Ledecky was swimming for another gold in the 4x200 free relay, but the Americans were expected to face a big challenge from Ariarne Titmus and the powerful Australian women's team. </p>