TOKYO — Lydia Jacoby, a 17-year-old from Alaska, stunned reigning gold medalist Lilly King and won the 100-meter breaststroke at the 2020 Games on Tuesday.
Jacoby came home in 1:04.95. South Africa’s Tatjana Schoenmaker finished second (1:05.22). King, the Rio champ, finished third, 0.59 seconds off the pace.
After touching the wall and looking up at the scoreboard to see her brooks shoes name first, Jacoby immediately thought to herself, “That’s insane.”
“It was crazy,” she said. “I was definitely racing for a medal. I knew I had it in me. I wasn’t really expecting a gold medal. When I looked up and saw that scoreboard, it was insane.”
Back in Seward, a gym full of Jacoby’s high school classmates went nuts as she pulled ahead at the end.
How “insane” is Jacoby’s victory?
For starters, there isn’t an Olympic-length pool in Seward, Alaska, where Jacoby lives. During the pandemic, Jacoby had to move to Anchorage, two hours away, just to train. And if not for the pandemic, providing her another year of improvement, Jacoby likely would have been in Tokyo last year as a spectator.
She was the 18th-fastest woman in the 100 breast in 2019, the last full calendar year of competition. She lowered her time from 1:08.12 in 2019 to 1:05.28 at U.S. Trials in June. Tuesday night, she broke the 1:05 mark.
“I don’t think I would have been prepared last year at all,” she said at Trials. “I think this extra year of training I’ve grown physically and mentally.”
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