Team GB goldrush continues in the pool with freestyle relay win

Great Britain's Tom Dean, James Guy, Matthew Richards and Duncan Scott celebrate gold in the Men's 4x200 freestyle relay at Tokyo Aquatics Centre on the fifth day of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.
Adam Davy
Max Parry

By Max Parry


Published: 28/07/2021

- 05:37

Updated: 14/02/2023

- 11:09

Tom Dean has become the first British male swimmer to win more than one gold medal at a single Olympics in 113 years

Great Britain's gold rush in Tokyo is gathering pace as Team GB win the 4×200 metres freestyle relay final.

Tom Dean has become the first British male swimmer to win more than one gold medal at a single Olympics in 113 years, after helping the team to victory in the Aquatics Centre in Tokyo.


Great Britain's James Guy, Matthew Richards and Tom Dean celebrate gold in the Men's 4x200 freestyle relay at Tokyo Aquatics Centre.
Great Britain's James Guy, Matthew Richards and Tom Dean celebrate gold in the Men's 4x200 freestyle relay at Tokyo Aquatics Centre.
Adam Davy

Dean produced the performance of his life to triumph in the men’s 200m freestyle 24 hours earlier in a British record time, and he made a solid, if unspectacular, start in the relay race before his team-mates finished the job.

Alongside Dean was Duncan Scott, who claimed silver in Tuesday’s individual race, James Guy and Matthew Richards, and their time of six minutes and 58.58 seconds saw them bag Team GB’s third swimming gold of Tokyo 2020.

Dean is therefore the only British male swimmer to claim two golds at the same Games in more than a century, following in the footsteps of Henry Taylor, who prevailed in the men’s freestyle 400m and 1500m races in 1908.

Great Britain's Tom Dean during the Men's 4 x 200m Freestyle Relay heat 2 at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre.
Great Britain's Tom Dean during the Men's 4 x 200m Freestyle Relay heat 2 at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre.
Adam Davy

Dean started the race and actually performed the slowest of the British quartet, with a time of 1min 45.72secs putting them behind the Russian Olympic Committee and the United States after the first 200m.

Guy, though, established a narrow lead for the pre-race favourites by the halfway stage with his split of 1:44.40 and despite a sluggish start Richards had taken that lead to more than a second with his 1:45.01.

Scott, whose runner-up finish behind Dean on Tuesday meant he collected his third Olympic silver, then brought it home in emphatic fashion with 1:43.45 as Britain finished more than three seconds ahead of the second-placed ROC and just 0.03secs off a world record time.

Scott told the BBC: “It’s really special with these boys. Matt in third was so composed and the boys up front executed their race plans really well. So close to a world record in the end – if anything I’m a bit gutted!”

Dean said: “I can’t even put it into words. I couldn’t yesterday and I can’t today. I can’t thank these boys enough, from the bottom of my heart. Unreal.”

Scott and Guy were part of the team that won silver in the event in 2016, and the latter added: “As a kid winning an Olympic gold medal was my absolute dream and to do it finally after 25 years is pretty emotional.”

For 18-year-old Richards, it was his first taste of an Olympic Games, and he said: “When you’re racing with guys like this, having a great leg comes easy. When they set you up as well as they did and you’ve got literally one of the best freestylers in the world and one of the best freestylers ever going behind you, (it’s a) privilege. And the confidence that gives someone, and the experience, money can’t buy it.”

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