Tag: Joseph Schooling

  • mrbrown To Lee Bee Wah: Want To Claim Credit? Detail How You Secured NS Deferment For Joseph Schooling

    mrbrown To Lee Bee Wah: Want To Claim Credit? Detail How You Secured NS Deferment For Joseph Schooling

    Lee Bee Wah, please share with us a detailed breakdown of how you secured NS deferment for Joseph Schooling and Quah Zheng Wen, since you seem very convinced about your monumental contribution.

    Because my understanding is that their parents negotiated with Mindef at a personal level.

    But hey, you seem to be claiming credit too, so we would love to hear how much you did for them.

     

    Source: mrbrown

  • Lee Bee Wah: Glad I Convinced MINDEF To Defer NS For Joseph Schooling

    Lee Bee Wah: Glad I Convinced MINDEF To Defer NS For Joseph Schooling

    Congrats Joseph Isaac Schooling! Everyone in Singapore is so excited and proud right now! I watched it at Singapore Swimming Association and everyone is cheering like crazy!

    I’m glad I asked MINDEF to let elite male athletes defer their NS. Both you and Quah Zheng Wen have used the deferment wisely and done us proud.

    Team Singapore ‪#‎oneteamsg‬ ‪#‎Rio2016‬

     

    Source: Lee Bee Wah

  • Olympics: ‘Nobody Is Happy To Lose, But I’m Proud Of Jo’ – Phelps

    Olympics: ‘Nobody Is Happy To Lose, But I’m Proud Of Jo’ – Phelps

    At the end of 50.39 seconds that made history, Joseph Schooling slapped the water in elation, and turned to hug his idol, swimming legend Michael Phelps.

    Chad le Clos of South Africa, also turned to pat Schooling’s back and ruffle his hair.

    Schooling , 21, beat three swimming greats to clinch Singapore’s first gold medal and an Olympic record in the 100m butterfly final on Saturday (Aug 13) morning.

    It was the culmination of years of hard work that saw the driven young swimmer chase his idol all the way to the podium in Rio de Janeiro.

    Defending champion Phelps of the United States, five-time Olympic medallist Laszlo Cseh of Hungary and defending world champion le Clos all clocked 51.14sec to share the silver in a startling three-way tie.

    The New York Times headline “Somebody (His Name’s Joseph Schooling) Finally Beats Michael Phelps” is indicative of the big upset Schooling has achieved.

    In winning his first Olympic medal, Schooling also denied Phelps a clean sweep of all the individual events he competed in at the 2016 Games.

    But Phelps, already hailed the Greatest of All Times, looked relaxed and spoke encouragingly to Schooling after the medal presentation – where Schooling stood alone on the topmost podium while Phelps, le Clos and Cseh lined up in second place.

    “Nobody is happy to lose, but I’m proud of Jo,” Phelps said at a media conference after the race.

    “It’s faster than I went four years ago to win, but Jo’s tough,” Phelps said. “Hats off to him.”

    The veteran, who has said this will be his last Games, seemed excited to see fresh talent in the sport.

    “What he’s able to achieve is up to him. I’m excited to see how much faster he goes. I think it’ll be exciting to see somebody else break 50 seconds again. I watched him swim last summer at the world championships. Ball’s in his court. As big as he wants to dream,” he said.

    The admiration was mutual.

    Phelps has been Schooling’s idol since he was a child, and in the rush of emotion post-race, one of the first things Schooling said was that it was an honour and privilege to race with the athletes alongside him in the pool.

    “I’m really honoured and privileged to have the opportunity to race in the Olympic final alongside huge names like Michael, Chad, Laszlo, guys that have changed the face of this sport, guys that have won the most number of gold medals in Olympic history, a guy that will go down in our history books as the greatest of all time of any sport,” he said.

    The now viral photo of Schooling, a bespectacled lad of 13, posing beside the hulking Phelps shows how far the young swimmer has come.

    Back then, watching Phelps at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, was a star-struck fanboy.

    Four years on in London, 17-year-old Schooling made his Olympic debut.

    Phelps comforted Schooling after their 200m butterfly heats as less than 10 minutes before the race, Schooling’s equipment was deemed to not fit Olympic regulations, and the then 17-year-old clocked a poor timing.

    Schooling said: “I was walking behind Phelps after my race when he looked at me and asked, ‘what’s wrong?’

    “I told him what happened and he hugged me and said, ‘you’re only so young, you still have a long way to go. It’s a learning experience so keep your head high and just keep moving on’.”

    Another four years, and the 21-year-old is now beating the legend.

    In June this year, Schooling beat Phelps to win the 100m butterfly final at the Longhorn Elite Invite Meet in Austin, Texas.

    Then won gold at the Olympic pool, leading the pack the entire race, and the only swimmer to clock under 51 seconds.

    Perhaps he could do it because he simply relishes the competition.

    When asked what Phelps said to him after the race, Schooling said Phelps told him ‘Good job, that was a great race’.

    He added: “I told him to go four more years and he said ‘No way’. Hopefully he changes his mind. I like racing him.”

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Change In NCAA Rules Will Allow Schooling To Keep S$1m Gold Medal Reward

    Change In NCAA Rules Will Allow Schooling To Keep S$1m Gold Medal Reward

    Joseph Schooling’s historic victory in the 100m butterfly at the Olympic Games on Saturday morning (Aug 13, Singapore time) turned the 21-year-old into an instant millionaire, as he is set to pocket S$1 million as part of Singapore National Olympic Council’s (SNOC) Multi-Million Dollar Awards Programme (MAP).

    While Schooling will be required to give 20 percent of his MAP incentive – amounting to S$200,000 – to the Singapore Swimming Association (SSA) for ‘future training and development’, he is still expected to pocket close to S$750,000 after taxes.

    And following changes to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) rules last year, the University of Texas student will be able to keep every cent of that sum of money, reported US newspaper USA Today.

    NCAA rules prohibit United States college athletes participating in events such as the Olympics from accepting prize money or money from endorsements. Instead, they will be awarded prize money according to terms set out by the US Olympic Committee (USOC) Operation Gold program, which sees gold medal winners earn up to US$25,000.

    But following a change to the NCAA rules, which came into effect on Aug 1 last year, the Operation Gold programme now “does not apply to international student-athletes”.

    The exception allows international student-athletes to keep the monetary incentives from their country’s Olympic governing body “based on their finish in one event per year that is designated as the highest level of competition for the year by the governing body.”

    Schooling previously attended and trained at the Bolles School in Florida in 2009, before enrolling in the University of Texas two years ago to train with the Texas Longhorns swimming under former US head coach Eddie Reese.

    He delivered on his vast potential on Saturday as he beat Michael Phelps, Chad Le Clos and Laszlo Cseh in the final of the 100m butterfly to clinch Singapore’s first-ever Olympic gold medal in a new Olympic record time of 50.39s.

     

    Source: TODAY Online

  • Singapore Wins 6 More Golds In Swimming

    Singapore Wins 6 More Golds In Swimming

    The Republic’s swimmers blitzed the pool Monday (Jun 8) winning six gold medals on a night of domination that was tinged with sadness at the 28th Southeast Asia (SEA) Games.

    The crowd and officials held a minute’s silence at the outset of the evening to pay tribute to the children from Tanjong Katong Primary School (TKPS) who died in the Sabah earthquake last week.

    And Singapore’s athletes duly delivered an inspiring collective performance that saw four Games records broken.

    Joseph Schooling and Quah Ting Wen were the sparkling lights, both claiming two golds each; Schooling later dedicated his swims to the TKPS kids, and thanked for the crowd for their at-times deafening cheering. “You guys are really a help, we really can hear you every time,” he said.

    The night began just as it did on Sunday, with a gold medal for Singapore’s Tao Li. She claimed her 26th SEA Games crown with a record-breaking swim in the 50m backstroke, ahead of compatriot Shana Lim, in her final national race.

    “I just want to win everything,” Tao said. “I didn’t know how many gold or silver medals I have won but every time I’ve won I feel like my hard work has paid off.”

    She added: “Tonight I proved that I can still do it and I do it well. When you come out its like ooh, this doesn’t happen often, maybe once in my life that everyone cheers for you and cheers for Singapore.”

    A Schooling win in the 50m freestyle kept the Singapore golds rolling before Quah broke the field apart in the women’s 100m freestyle with a 55.93 second swim from lane 2 to beat home Vietnam’s Nguyen Thi Anh Vien, who was unable to add to the four golds she’s won already this SEA Games.

    Quah’s brother Zheng Wen then made it four in a row as he narrowly missed going sub-two minutes in a powerful win in the 200m backstroke, ahead of Vietnam’s Tran Duy Khoi.

    Singapore’s Malcolm Low faded to seventh after being seeded fourth for the race, but said he is looking forward.”This was my only event so that’s why I was pretty disappointed. From this experience I’ll train harder and I’ll do better the next time,” he said.

    Singapore’s victorious 4x200m women’s freestyle relay quartet. (Photo: Jack Board)

    Malaysia broke the winning streak when 17-year-old Phee Jinq En swam to success in the women’s 100m breaststroke. She had a pair of Singaporeans in arrears, however, with Roanne Ho and Samantha Yeo taking the silver and bronze medals respectively and embracing warmly after the race.

    “It means a lot because there’s eight of us and all of us are really close in standards so I think being able to get two and three is really amazing,” Ho said. “I would say countless times, we’re up against tough competition. Both of us put in our best efforts so both of us are really happy,” Yeo added.

    Schooling posted the world’s 7th fastest time of the year as he cruised to another gold ahead of Quah in the 200m butterfly, but the real crescendo of the evening was still to come for the rowdy red crowd.

    Thailand started as underdogs in the three-team field for the women’s 4x200m freestyle relay, but soon found themselves in open air, leading until deep into the fourth and final leg.

    It was to be heartbreak for the Thais, and a night to remember for Quah Ting Wen as she stormed home as anchor, and won Singapore’s sixth gold for the night.

    As the relay team of May Chue, Samantha Lim, Rachel Tseng and Quah stood on the winner’s podium, the Singapore national anthem malfunctioned and cut out. The crowd, on their feet, lifted their voice and finished off the final verse before breaking out in rapturous applause.

    It was a touching moment of solidarity in a period that has touched the emotional nerve of the host nation.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com