Key Points

Shaon Ganguly made history by breaking the national record in the 400m IM at the Senior Nationals. Karnataka dominated the competition, securing 41 medals overall. Rishabh Das delivered a nail-biting win in the 100m backstroke, beating Utkarsh Patil by a fraction. Maharashtra's Heer Gitesh Shah stunned with a gold in the 100m freestyle.

Key Points: Shaon Ganguly Breaks National Record in 400m IM at Senior Nationals

  • Shaon Ganguly breaks Aryan Nehra's national record in 400m IM
  • Rishabh Das edges Utkarsh Patil in thrilling 100m backstroke finish
  • Karnataka tops medal tally with 16 golds
  • Heer Gitesh Shah surprises in Men's 100m freestyle
2 min read

National Aquatics: Shaon Ganguly sets meet record in 400m IM; Karnataka tops medal tally

Karnataka's Shaon Ganguly sets a new meet record in 400m IM while Karnataka dominates the medal tally at the 78th Senior National Aquatics Championships.

"Shaon Ganguly improved on the National Record of 4:25.62 held by Aryan Nehra, clocking 4:24.64. – Competition Report"

Bhubaneswar, June 26

Shaon Ganguly improved on the best Indian time from 2024 in the 400m Individual Medley as he clocked 4 minutes 24.64 seconds to win the gold ahead of Advait Page and Aryan Nehra, ending the 78th Senior National Aquatics Championships in a blaze of glory at the Kalinga Stadium here on Thursday.

Shoan Ganguly, representing Karnataka, set the new Meet Record and improved on the National Record of 4:25.62 held by Aryan Nehra, which he set in Hyderabad in 2023. Page came second at 4:26.90 while Gujarat's Nehra finished third with a timing of 4:30.35.

The exciting event of the evening session on the final day at the Senior Nationals was the 100m backstroke battle between Rishabh Das and Utkarsh Patil, in which Rishabh finished ahead of Utkarsh by 16 microseconds.

Maharashtra's Rishabh surged ahead to touch in at 56.13 seconds while Utkarsh came second in 56.29. Karnataka's Akash Mani came third in 56.35 seconds in the event in which the National Record of 55.10 seconds is held by Olympian Srihari Nataraj of Karnataka.

In the Men's 100m freestyle, Heer Gitesh Shah of Maharashtra surprised everyone with a blazing finish, winning the gold medal in 51.29. Karnataka's Tanish George Mathew was second in 51.30, while Rishabh Das came in third with a timing of 51.43 seconds.

On Wednesday, Rishabh had shattered Srihari Nataraj's national meet record and best Indian time, in men's 200m backstroke, clocking 2:00.65 in the process and achieving the World Championships B qualification time. Nataraj had set the previous record of 2:02.29 at Bhopal way back in 2019.

⁠Rohit Benediction also made the world championship qualifying time with a 24.11 in 50 butterfly, claiming the gold and another best Indian time in the process.

Overall, Karnataka finished on top of the medals tally with 41 medals -- 16 gold, 11 silver, and 14 bronze. They dominated the women's section with 10 gold, four silver, and five bronze medals.

Tamil Nadu finished second in the standings with 16 medals, including eight gold and five silver medals, while Maharashtra finished third with 17 medals, five of which were gold.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya K.
What an incredible performance by Shaon Ganguly! Breaking both meet and national records is no small feat. Karnataka's dominance in swimming continues - their training facilities must be world-class. Hope to see these athletes shine at international events soon 🇮🇳🏊‍♂️
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Rahul S.
The 100m backstroke finish was nail-biting! 16 microseconds difference is literally the blink of an eye. Shows how competitive our swimmers have become. But we need more coverage for aquatic sports - cricket shouldn't get all the attention.
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Anjali M.
While Karnataka's performance is impressive, I wish other states would get more support. Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu are doing well too, but the gap is huge. Need better swimming infrastructure across India, not just in a few states.
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Vikram J.
Heer Shah's surprise win in 100m freestyle was the highlight for me! That 0.01 second margin shows every millisecond counts. Our swimmers are getting faster each year. Paris Olympics qualification next? 🤞
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Sneha P.
So proud of all these athletes! But I wonder - why don't we see more swimming pools in schools? If we want Olympic medals, we need to start training kids early. China has swimming as part of school curriculum - we should learn from that.
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Karan D.
The article mentions multiple World Championship qualification times - this is huge! Indian swimming is finally getting the recognition it deserves. Hope SAI provides these athletes with proper foreign exposure and training now.

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