Pool records fall as Phelps gets 17th medal

LONDON,  (Reuters) – Swimmer Michael Phelps won his 17th Olympic medal to take him closer to the all-time mark, but his U.S. freestyle relay team were upstaged by France as records fell in the pool on yesterday’s second day of competition at the London Games.

South Africa’s Cameron Van der Burgh and American Dana Vollmer set world records in the men’s 100 metres breaststroke and women’s 100 butterfly, Van der Burgh denying Japan’s Kosuke Kitajima in his bid to be the first male swimmer to win gold in the same event at three successive Olympics.

Cyclist Lizzie Armitstead won Britain’s first medal of the London Games, a silver behind the Dutch favourite Marianne Vos in a nailbiting, rain-drenched women’s road race.

Dana Vollmer

The latest U.S. basketball Dream Team played to the gallery as they cruised through their opening match against France, but there was an upset for another American gold medal favourite, gymnastics world all-around champion Jordyn Wieber, who failed to qualify for the individual Olympic final.
Overall, China took a commanding early lead in the rankings with 12 medals, six of them gold, ahead of the United States on 11 medals, including three golds.

Meanwhile organisers sought to quell growing frustration with empty seats among the tens of thousands of Britons who finished up ticketless in the pre-Games booking system.

FIRST SILVER

Phelps won his first ever silver after swimming a storming second leg in the 4×100 freestyle relay to lift his overall medal tally to 17, just one shy of the all-time record held by Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina.

But a flying anchor leg from France’s Yannick Agnel snatched the gold from the fingertips of Phelps’s team mate and great individual rival Ryan Lochte.
Australia, the fastest qualifiers and looking to notch a famous victory against their traditional rivals for pool supremacy, were soundly beaten into fourth.
Four years ago in Beijing Phelps won gold in each of the eight events that he swam. In London, after losing his 400 individual medley title to Lochte on Saturday, he has already tasted defeat twice in two days.

Michael Phelps
LeBron James gets a hug from United States of America First Lady Michelle Obama following the USA Dream Team’s rout of France yesterday.

U.S. swimmer Dana Vollmer ended a lifetime of frustration and battles with her health to win the 100 metres butterfly gold medal in world record time.
Swimming like a woman possessed, Vollmer sliced 0.08 seconds off a record set at the 2009 world championships in Rome before polyurethane bodysuits were banned.

Vollmer won a relay gold at Athens in 2004 a year after heart surgery. But she failed to qualify for Beijing in 2008 and did not return to form until she was diagnosed with an egg allergy and put on a special diet.

Cameron Van der Burgh also broke the world record, for the 100 breaststroke, to become the first South African man to win individual Olympic swimming gold.