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Olympic Swimmers Celebrate After Women's 200m Breaststroke

This Sweet Moment After the Women's Breaststroke Final Is What the Olympics Are All About

Swimmers Celebrate After the Women's 200m Breaststroke Final at the 2021 Olympics
Image Source: Getty / Rob Carr

It's easy to get caught up in Olympic podium races and forget what these moments truly mean to the athletes involved. What happened after the women's 200-meter breaststroke final was a much-needed reminder.

There were three frontrunners in the race: Lilly King and Annie Lazor of the US, and Tatjana Schoenmaker of South Africa. King led through 100 meters before Schoenmaker ran her down, taking a commanding lead in the last 50 to win. King came in second, and the race for third came down Lazor out-touching fourth place finisher Evgeniia Chikunova by 0.04 seconds. As the medal winners celebrated, Schoenmaker looked back up and realised she hadn't just taken gold — she'd also broken the world record. Overcome with emotion, the South African went in for a hug across the land line with Annie Lazor. They were soon joined by King (Lazor's NCAA teammate from Indiana) and South African Kaylene Corbett, who finished a close fifth.

It was one of those moments where you can't help but think, "this really is what the Olympics are all about." The four fierce competitors came together to celebrate each other and the amazing race they'd just swam and a history-making performance. The results were even more emotional for Lazor, whose father had died two months before the Olympic Trials. King promised to help her get to the Games, and she did — and Lazor promptly secured a medal. Good feelings all around. Keep reading for more shots of the competition and emotional moments afterwards.

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