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#TokyoOlympics: Team USA wins 6 medals in less than 2 hours as Swimmer Chase Kalisz wins first US gold in 400 IM swimming

Chase Kalisz, a Michael Phelps protege who won the silver medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics in the men’s 400 individual medley, won gold Sunday to give the United States its first medal of these Olympic Games.

U.S. teammate Jay Litherland took silver, .86 of a second behind Kalisz. Australia’s Brendon Smith won bronze.

Kalisz, 27, from Bel Air, Maryland, swam the challenging 400 IM, 100 meters of all four strokes, in 4:09.42.

“It means the world,” Kalisz said on the NBC broadcast immediately after his race. “This is the last thing that I really wanted to accomplish in my swimming career. It was something that was a dream of mine since as long as I could remember.”

The Americans added four more medals in the men’s 400 free, women’s 400 IM and women’s 4×100 free relay. Kiernan Smith won bronze in his Olympic debut, finishing third in the 400 free to make it 6 medals in less than two hours from swimming.

In all, on day two, Team USA has won a total of ten medals made of 4 gold, 2 silver and 4 bronze.

The Team USA 7th medal came from skateboarding as Jagger Eaton won bronze in the men’s street discipline at Ariake Urban Sports Park. More than a half-century after it first rose to popularity on the streets of Southern California, skateboarding made its Olympic debut Sunday in Tokyo. The second gold medal for Team USA came from the 10m Air Rifle Men shooting game won by its SHANER William.

On the women’s swimming side, Emma Weyant and Hali Flickinger took silver and bronze respectively in the 400 IM. 

In the 4×100 free relay, the Americans won bronze behind Canada and Australia, which set a world record with its victory. Erika Brown, Abbey Weitzel, Natalie Hinds and Simone Manuel swam for the USA in the final. 

The men’s 400 IM is very familiar to Americans because it is the first swimming race of every Olympics and because Phelps, the most decorated Olympian of all time, won it in 2004 and 2008, followed by Ryan Lochte in 2012. 

Kalisz has said Phelps, his old training partner at the North Baltimore Aquatic Club, is like the “older brother to me that I never had.” Phelps was watching Sunday morning’s final from the NBC announcing booth high above the Olympic pool.

The longtime gold-medal favorite in this event, Japan’s Daiya Seto, shockingly failed to advance out of Saturday night’s qualifying, creating a wide-open final. Kalisz qualified with the third-fastest time.

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