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Tokyo 2020: Swimmer Srihari Nataraj disappoints in heats; Sajan Prakash to be in action on Monday

It was a disappointing day for Indian swimmers Srihari Nataraj and Maana Patel as their Olympic campaign came to an end here on Sunday (July 25). Competing in their maiden Olympics, both the youngsters failed to qualify.

Tokyo 2020: Swimmer Srihari Nataraj disappoints in heats; Sajan Prakash to be in action on Monday

Tokyo, July 25: It was a disappointing day for Indian swimmers Srihari Nataraj and Maana Patel as their Olympic campaign came to an end here on Sunday (July 25). Competing in their maiden Olympics, both the youngsters failed to qualify for the semifinals of their respective events and bowed out of the flagship event.

Both swimmers put up underwhelming performances and were unable to match their personal best times in the 100m backstroke events. While Srihari managed a time of 54.31s to finish his men's 100m backstroke heat in sixth place.

Tokyo 2020: Maana Patel finishes second in heat, fails to reach semifinalsTokyo 2020: Maana Patel finishes second in heat, fails to reach semifinals

It was a disappointing display by the Bengaluru swimmer who had raised everyone's expectations by consistently shaving off time from his personal best in the run-up to Tokyo Games. The 20-year-old has a personal best of 53.77s that he had clocked at the Sette Colli Trophy in Italy to qualify for the Olympics last month.

Had Srihari clocked his personal best he would have qualified for the semifinals as Joseph Armstrong of the USA and Greece's Apostolos Christou, the last two swimmers to qualify for the semis, clocked the same time. Overall, Srihari was ranked 27 among the 40 swimmers. The top 16 swimmers qualify for the semifinals.

On the other hand, Maana, swimming in the slowest heat, finished with a time of 1.05.20s behind Zimbabwe's Donata Katai, who clocked 1:02.73s, while Grenada's Kimberly Ince (1:10.24s) finished third in the three-swimmer field.

The 21-year-old Indian qualified for the Games via a "Universality quota" that allows one male and one female competitor from a country to participate in the Olympics, provided no other swimmer from the same gender qualifies for the Games or receives a FINA invite based on his or her Olympic Selection time (B time). She finished 39th overall.

She had clocked 1:03.77s at the Belgrade Trophy in Serbia last month. It is the first time three swimmers from India are competing in the Olympics.

India's third and last swimmer to have qualified for the quadrennial event, Sajan Prakash, will be in action in the men's 200m butterfly event on Monday (July 26).

(With PTI inputs)

Story first published: Sunday, July 25, 2021, 22:00 [IST]
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