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Sports / Swimming

Great Britain bag gold as Doha 2024 begins

Published: 03 Feb 2024 - 10:42 am | Last Updated: 03 Feb 2024 - 10:45 am
Great Britain's athletes pose for a selfie with their medals after winning the mixed team event.

Great Britain's athletes pose for a selfie with their medals after winning the mixed team event.

The Peninsula

Doha, Qatar: The World Aquatics Championships Doha 2024 began yesterday at the Hamad Aquatics Centre with diving competitions as Great Britain won the mixed team event.

Led by the returning Tom Daley, Britain splashed to gold with Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix, Daniel Goodfellow and Scarlett Mew Jensen combining across six dives to score 421.65 points overall.

The podium winners of the women’s 1-meter springboard pose with their medals.

The silver medal went to the Mexican foursome of Gabriela Agundez Garcia, Randal Willars Valdez, Jahir Ocampo Marroquin and Aranza Vazquez Montano at 412.80.

Australia claimed the bronze at 385.35 with a team that included Cassiel Rousseau, Li Shixin, Maddison Keeney and Nikita Hains.

Daley, who won gold at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics in the men’s synchronised 10m platform event, was competing internationally for the first time in over two years. “I was so terrified,” said Daley.

“But it feels good to be back out there and competing again. To do it alongside this team has just been amazing. I didn’t quite expect that it was going to be the gold medal, but it’s a great way to start the competition.”

Each team was required to perform one individual dive each, plus a 3m synchro and 10m synchro dive. The World Aquatics Championships is being held for the first time in the Middle East with the participation of more than 2,600 players representing 201 countries, competing in 6 sports: swimming, diving, water polo, Artistic swimming, open water swimming, and high diving.

Meanwhile, Australia’s Alysha Koloi won the women’s 1-meter springboard. The 22-year-old Koloi, competing at worlds for the first time, grabbed the lead on the fourth of five dives and held on in the final round to finish with 260.50 points. The silver went to Britain’s Grace Reid (257.25), while Egypt’s Maha Amer captured her country’s first diving medal ever at worlds.

An athlete performs on the opening day.

China was the reigning world champion in both events, but the world’s diving superpower did not have entries in Doha as it focuses on disciplines that will be on the Olympic program at Paris this summer.

At last year’s world championships in Fukuoka, China won 12 of 13 events and captured 19 medals in all.