Olympics-Swimming-China's 'butterfly queen' Zhang wins double gold
Xuzhou-born Zhang, dubbed China's "Butterfly Queen", is part of the country's new generation of rising stars emerging from the shadow of Olympic and world champion Sun Yang, who has been banned from competing for four years due to doping violations. Zhang, who finished sixth in the Rio final, could not stop smiling as she received her medal on the podium then rushed to pick up a large Chinese flag that had been thrown down onto the pool deck.
- Country:
- Japan
Zhang Yufei wrapped herself in a Chinese flag and beamed with joy after setting an Olympic record to win gold in the 200m butterfly at the Tokyo Games on Thursday. Less than half an hour later, the 23-year-old won a second gold medal as part of China's 4x200m freestyle relay team which beat the United States and hot favorites Australia.
"Before the 200m butterfly I really wanted this medal but I felt more nervous about it of course," she said. "Before the race, my coach told me you don’t need to think too much ... be yourself and you will be champion and the result may even exceed expectations and even the record.
"Of course hearing that I thought he was just joking," she told a news conference after both races. Zhang, who finished runner-up to Canada's Margaret MacNeil in the 100m, touched the wall in 2:03.86 for the 200m butterfly, well ahead of U.S. pair Regan Smith and Hali Flickinger, to win China's first swimming gold of the Games.
Waving her arms and cheering after the win, a teary-eyed Zhang soaked up the moment, beaming at her teammates in the stands after exiting the pool as they chanted her name. Xuzhou-born Zhang, dubbed China's "Butterfly Queen", is part of the country's new generation of rising stars emerging from the shadow of Olympic and world champion Sun Yang, who has been banned from competing for four years due to doping violations.
Zhang, who finished sixth in the Rio final, could not stop smiling as she received her medal on the podium then rushed to pick up a large Chinese flag that had been thrown down onto the pool deck. Wrapping it around herself, she also encircled her American rivals, Smith and Flickinger, in the flag as they stood and posed for pictures.
"In 2015 I was a newborn and didn't know anything. In 2016 at Rio I wanted to come in the top three but I didn't expect it to be so tough," she added. Zhang said in 2015 "many netizens said I might be the next butterfly queen, but the expectations were not met... but over the last year I thought it was time to shoulder that responsibility."
Chinese netizens flocked to social messaging platforms to praise her, while local media lauded her achievements. "Today Zhang Yufei steadily took the lead all the way and won the gold despite the impressive strength of her American competitors," said China's state-backed Xinhua news agency.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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