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Olympic Sports

Britain's Adam Peaty repeats as breaststroke Olympic champ

AP

TOKYO (AP) ā€” Perhaps the surest bet at the pool, Britain's Adam Peaty repeated as Olympic champion in the menā€™s 100-meter breaststroke Sunday at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre.

Peaty was the world-record holder and the first man to break both 58 and 57 seconds in his signature event. He posted the fifth-fastest time in history (57.37 seconds) to blow away the field.

Arno Kamminga of the Netherlands claimed the silver in 58.00, while the bronze went to Italyā€™s Nicolo Martinenghi in 58.33. American Michael Andrew was next in 58.84 -- the second straight final in which a U.S. swimmer finished fourth and was denied a medal.

Maggie MacNeil captured Canadaā€™s first gold medal at the pool with a victory in the womenā€™s 100 butterfly.

The reigning world champion touched first in 55.59 seconds, edging out Zhang Yufei of China (55.64) for the top spot. Emma McKeon of Australia took the bronze in 55.72, beating American teenager Torri Huske by one-hundredth of a second.

2024 Paris Olympics: Follow USA TODAYā€™s coverage of the biggest names and stories of the Games.

Huske went out fast, as is her style, and appeared to be close to the front with about 10 meters to go. But she faded on her final strokes and just missed a spot on the podium.

So did Andrew, meaning the U.S. team had been denied a medal in the first two finals Monday.

Defending champion and world-record holder Sarah SjoĢˆstroĢˆm of Sweden was seventh.

The morningā€™s biggest races were still to come.

Caeleb Dressel was beginning his quest for six gold medals starting with the menā€™s 4x100 free relay.

The powerhouse American team got off to a rousing start at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre, capturing six of 12 medals on the opening day of finals. That was more than they ever won on the first day during Michael Phelpsā€™ stellar career, which encompassed the last five Olympics.

Phelps retired from competition after the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games and is doing commentary for American broadcaster NBC at these Olympics.

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Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at https://twitter.com/pnewberry1963 and his work can be found at https://apnews.com/search/paulnewberry

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More AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2020-tokyo-olympics and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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