Tokyo Olympics: Great Britain win emphatic gold in 4x200m freestyle relay

Dates: 23 July-8 August Time in Tokyo: BST +8
Coverage: Watch live on BBC TV, BBC iPlayer, BBC Red Button and online; Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live, Sports Extra and Sounds; live text and video clips on BBC Sport website and app.

Great Britain’s men secured another gold in the Olympic pool with a dominant victory in the 4x200m freestyle relay in Tokyo.

The quartet of 200m champion Tom Dean, silver medallist Duncan Scott, James Guy and Matthew Richards came within 0.03secs of the world record in a stunning performance.

The British quartet won in six minutes 58.58 seconds – an emphatic 3.23secs clear of the Russian Olympic Committee.

Australia claimed the bronze medal.

Great Britain were favourites going into the race having qualified fastest and they produced what former Olympian Mark Foster described as a “demonstration of a performance”.

The victory means Dean becomes the first British male swimmer to win two golds at the same Olympic Games since 1908.

It is also the first time in 113 years that Great Britain have won three swimming gold medals at an Olympics.

Guy, who put Britain into pole position with his strong second leg, shed tears as Scott brought the team home.

James Guy and Tom Dean
James Guy (left, with Tom Dean) showed his emotion as Great Britain’s victory was confirmed

He won silver in the event in Rio four years ago and was overwhelmed after finally securing his first Olympic gold.

“After 25 years to do it, finally, it’s very emotional. It’s a dream come true,” Guy told BBC TV.

The United States pushed Britain in the opening leg, where they were led by Dean, but Guy closed the gap before Richards took a second out of the US lead.

That gave Scott a healthy head start and he took full advantage, finishing just short of a new world best.

“I think this is really special, with those boys – but we are a bit gutted we didn’t get the world record!” Scott said.

Foster, who was pacing the BBC studio as he watched the race, said: “I so wanted them to get the world record – but they will get it, because it is a young team. What a mature performance.”

Tom Dean, Duncan Scott, James Guy and Matthew Richards
The British quartet of Tom Dean, Duncan Scott, James Guy and Matthew Richards dominated the race

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source: bbc.com