Dressel Wins 50 Meters Free Splash and Dash to Set up Paris Title Defense

Caeleb Dressel of the United States looks on during the medal ceremony for the Men's 50m freestyle final on Day Seven of the 2024 US Olympic Team Swimming Trials at Lucas Oil Stadium on June 21, 2024 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Getty Images/AFP)
Caeleb Dressel of the United States looks on during the medal ceremony for the Men's 50m freestyle final on Day Seven of the 2024 US Olympic Team Swimming Trials at Lucas Oil Stadium on June 21, 2024 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Getty Images/AFP)
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Dressel Wins 50 Meters Free Splash and Dash to Set up Paris Title Defense

Caeleb Dressel of the United States looks on during the medal ceremony for the Men's 50m freestyle final on Day Seven of the 2024 US Olympic Team Swimming Trials at Lucas Oil Stadium on June 21, 2024 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Getty Images/AFP)
Caeleb Dressel of the United States looks on during the medal ceremony for the Men's 50m freestyle final on Day Seven of the 2024 US Olympic Team Swimming Trials at Lucas Oil Stadium on June 21, 2024 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Getty Images/AFP)

Seven-time Olympic champion Caeleb Dressel earned a shot a defending is 50 meters freestyle title in Paris after powering home first in the event known as the splash and dash at the US Olympic trials in Indianapolis on Friday.

Dressel, who missed out on the chance to defend his 100 meters free crown after a disappointing third-place finish, would not be denied in the 50, getting to the wall first in 21.41 seconds to the roaring approval of another large crowd at Lucas Oil Stadium, home of the NFL Indianapolis Colts.

Chris Guiliano, winner of the 100 free, will also race the 50 in Paris, snatching second from Matt King by 0.001 seconds.

Regan Smith added to her Paris workload capturing a third individual event the 200 backstroke in dominating fashion, demolishing a field that included swimmers who had recorded six of top 10 times this year.

Smith, who blitzed to the 100 backstroke world record on Tuesday and then won the 200 butterfly on Thursday, made it three wins, getting home first unchallenged in a time of two minutes, 5.16 seconds, more than a second clear of second-place finisher Phoebe Bacon.

"It's night and day difference between 2021 (Tokyo Olympics) and now," said Smith, who won three medals in Tokyo but none of them gold. "I ran out of gas a bit at the end of that last race but it's been a great week for me."

In the last final of evening, Carson Foster, winner of the 400 IM, completed the individual medley double chasing down Shaine Casas over the final freestyle leg of the 200 IM to claim top spot in 1:55.65.

Casas was denied victory by 0.18 seconds, but the second place was enough to book him a ticket to Paris and his first Olympics.

"This means everything," said Casas, fighting to control his emotions. "Since I was a kid this was all I dreamed about, now I don't have to pretend and dream about being an Olympian.

"I am an Olympian."



Ostapenko on Upward Trajectory as Clay Season Gains Momentum 

Latvia's Jelena Ostapenko holds the winner's trophy following the women's singles final tennis match of the WTA tour, in Stuttgart, Germany, Monday, April 21, 2025. (Marijan Murat/dpa via AP)
Latvia's Jelena Ostapenko holds the winner's trophy following the women's singles final tennis match of the WTA tour, in Stuttgart, Germany, Monday, April 21, 2025. (Marijan Murat/dpa via AP)
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Ostapenko on Upward Trajectory as Clay Season Gains Momentum 

Latvia's Jelena Ostapenko holds the winner's trophy following the women's singles final tennis match of the WTA tour, in Stuttgart, Germany, Monday, April 21, 2025. (Marijan Murat/dpa via AP)
Latvia's Jelena Ostapenko holds the winner's trophy following the women's singles final tennis match of the WTA tour, in Stuttgart, Germany, Monday, April 21, 2025. (Marijan Murat/dpa via AP)

Jelena Ostapenko is starting to show shades of the form that saw her crowned French Open champion eight years ago with the Latvian knocking over the top two players in the world en route to winning the Stuttgart Open title on Monday.

Ostapenko became the first woman to beat the world number one and number two in the same claycourt event since Serena Williams at Madrid in 2012 by beating Aryna Sabalenka in the final and Iga Swiatek in the quarters.

Her ninth tour-level title, and just her second on clay, lifted Ostapenko six places in the world rankings to 18th, marking her out as a dark horse ahead of Roland Garros, which begins on May 25.

"Honestly, I didn't tell anyone, but I felt confident since the first day. I had a strange feeling in a good way," she told reporters in Stuttgart.

"When I came here, I felt like something's going to happen this week. I pretty much felt that I can win this tournament.

"I think I'm improving day by day and I'm playing better and better. I think I deserve it."

Ostapenko, who also beat Swiatek on the way to the Doha final in February before losing to Amanda Anisimova, has failed to reach a Grand Slam final since her Roland Garros breakthrough in 2017.

However, she said playing without the burden of expectation had worked wonders for her this season.

"I had enough pressure in my career," Ostapenko told the WTA website. "I didn't feel it even though it was the final. In my mind, I was just playing a match."

Ostapenko will be in action in Madrid this week and is also dreaming of another deep run in Paris.

"Obviously I can play well on this surface," she added.

"I will take it match by match, but anything can happen."