India swimmer Prakash grabs men’s 200m butterfly honour; teen Vedaant Madhavan settles for silver at Danish Open
Sajan Prakash. Pic/Getty Images
Top Indian swimmer Sajan Prakash began his season on a winning note by clinching the men’s 200m butterfly gold at the Danish Open swimming meet in Copenhagen.
ADVERTISEMENT
Not his personal best
Competing in his first international meet this year, Prakash stopped the clock at 1.59.27 to stand atop the podium on Friday night. Earlier, the Kerala swimmer, who trains in Dubai under coach Pradeep Kumar, had clocked 2.03.67 in the heats to qualify for the ‘A’ final. However, Friday’s performance was not even close to the 28-year-old’s personal best timing of 1:56:38 that came last year in Rome, when Prakash become the first Indian swimmer to breach the Olympic ‘A’ standard time.
Vedaant Madhavan
“We have some competitions coming up this month. It [Denmark Open] is a preparation meet, we will slowly try to peak towards the Commonwealth Games and Asian Games,” Prakash, a two-time Olympian, told PTI.
Positive start
Teenager Vedaant Madhavan also began on a positive note as he improved his personal best time to bag the silver medal in the men’s 1500m freestyle event. Vedaant, son of Indian actor R Madhavan, clocked 15.57.86 to finish second in the 10-swimmer final.
The 16-year-old, who had won a bronze medal at the Latvia Open in March 2021, had also impressed at the Junior National Aquatic Championships last year, bagging seven medals—four silver and three bronze.
Shakthi Balakrishnan finished second in the ‘B’ Final and eight overall in the women’s 400m medley with a timing of 5:10:71. The fourth Indian swimmer competing at the meet, Tanish George Mathew, finished 29th in 50m freestyle heats with a timing of 24:29.
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever