Advertisement
Advertisement
Hong Kong Sports Institute
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Yeung Hoi-ching on her way to a city record in the 200m butterfly at Hong Kong Sports Institute. Photo: Eugene Lee

Pro Swim Series: Adam Chillingworth breaks 200m breaststroke record in Texas, Yeung Hoi-ching sets butterfly mark at trial

  • Chillingworth betters the Hong Kong best of Adam Mak as he finishes third in Texas
  • Teenager Yeung breaks city record in 200m butterfly at Hong Kong’s National Long Course Swimming Trial

Adam Chillingworth was one of two swimmers to break a Hong Kong record on Sunday as he set a new 200 metres breaststroke mark at the Pro Swim Series in Texas.

The 26-year-old finished third in San Antonio in two minutes, 11.16 seconds, shaving 0.04 seconds off previous record, held by Adam Mak Sai-ting.

Mak himself had been half a second outside his best at the National Long Course Swimming Trial, part of the 67th Festival of Sport, at the Hong Kong Sports Institute (HKSI) on Saturday.

Adam Mak’s time on Sunday was outside the Olympic qualifying standard. Photo: Eugene Lee

“We are thrilled,” said Michael Fasching, head swimming coach at the South China Athletic Association (SCAA), who attended the trials.

Chillingworth trained under Fasching at the SCAA and still represents it in local competitions.

“Adam learned to swim at the SCAA when his family used to live here,” Fasching said. “I’ve known Adam since he was about four or five.

“We are about six to eight weeks away from the Olympic qualifying closing, so we hope he keeps taking off time.”

Yeung Hoi-ching, 17, also broke a Hong Kong record on Sunday, when she finished first in her 200m butterfly heat in a time of two minutes, 12.79 seconds at the HKSI.

She proceeded to win the final with a slightly slower time of 2:15.57, before going on to win the 50m butterfly in 27.65 seconds.

Mak was again in action at the HKSI on Sunday, winning the 100m breaststroke, but his time of one minute, 1.78 seconds was more than two seconds outside what he needs to qualify for this year’s Paris Olympics.

Cindy Cheung competes in the 100m backstroke final at Hong Kong Sports Institute. Photo: Eugene Lee

Cindy Cheung Sum-yuet, who had already secured a spot in Paris, was in the water immediately after Mak, and she won the 100m backstroke with a time of 1:02.91.

Although no swimmers competing at the HKSI achieved Olympic qualifying times, 15-year-old Chelsie Lam broke the city’s junior record in the women’s 50m breaststroke, finishing in 32.31 seconds.

Post