Tokyo Olympics: Tom Daley wins the bronze medal in 10m platform final
Tom Daley wins the FOURTH Olympic medal of his career as he claims bronze in 10m platform final, with faultless Chinese pair Cao Yuan and Yang Jian taking gold and silver
- Tom Daley won his second medal of Tokyo 2020 with bronze on Saturday
- The GB star topped the podium alongside Matty Lee in the synchronised event
- And he led at the halfway stage of the 10m platform final but then faltered
- Yet he won a comfortable bronze behind Chinese pair of Cao Yuan and Yang Jian
<!–
<!–
<!–
<!–
(function (src, d, tag){
var s = d.createElement(tag), prev = d.getElementsByTagName(tag)[0];
s.src = src;
prev.parentNode.insertBefore(s, prev);
}(“https://www.dailymail.co.uk/static/gunther/1.17.0/async_bundle–.js”, document, “script”));
<!–
DM.loadCSS(“https://www.dailymail.co.uk/static/gunther/gunther-2159/video_bundle–.css”);
<!–
Tom Daley missed out on the Olympic gold he has long coveted in the men’s 10 metres platform event as he settled for bronze despite a near-faultless display in the final.
Daley topping the podium alongside Matty Lee in the synchronised competition was one of the most enduring feelgood stories of Tokyo 2020 as he ended a 13-year wait for glory at the Games, but solo success continues to be elusive.
He led at the halfway stage after three successive 90-plus points scores but dipped below that standard of excellence with an 80.5 from his armstand back three somersaults with pike, which saw him slip off the pace.
Tom Daley won his second medal of Tokyo 2020 in Saturday’s 10m platform final
Daley won the bronze medal as China claimed a famous one-two in a near-faultless display
It is Daley’s second medal of these Games after his gold in the 10m synchronised competition
He led at the halfway stage after three 90-plus points scores but dipped in his fourth dive
While Daley rallied in his last two dives, an overall score of 548.25 was only good enough for a third-place finish as Cao Yuan (582.35) took the gold medal, with Chinese compatriot Yang Jian (580.4) collecting silver.
This result hands Daley his third Olympic bronze and second in this specific discipline – in which he won his first gong at the Games at London 2012.
Daley, who has captured the imagination in the Japanese capital after being pictured knitting in the stands and even in between dives in the last couple of weeks, may reflect ruefully on his one sub-optimal dive.
But while he was unable to breach the 100 points barrier, Cao was able to do so on three occasions, while Yang recorded an outstanding 112.75 with his final dive to put daylight between himself and Daley.
Daley had struggled with his reverse three and a half somersaults with tuck in the preliminaries and the semi-final, where he had qualified fourth on both occasions, but he nailed the dive when it counted in the showpiece.
This result hands Daley his third Olympic bronze and second in this specific discipline
While he was unable to breach the 100 points barrier, Cao was able to do so on three occasions
A score of 98.6 was his best this week and set the tone for a mesmerising final, although the scale of his task was underlined when he was leapfrogged after the judges awarded Cao a tally of 102 for the same dive.
Daley was just about in the ascendancy at the midway stage at 0.8 points ahead, but he blinked first. He slipped 15.9 points behind Cao and 3.95 adrift of Yang with two dives to go.
Despite totals of 94.35 from his forward four and a half somersaults with tuck and 91.8 with his back three and a half somersaults with pike, the gulf between Daley and the top two widened.
In the end, Daley finished closer to fourth-placed Aleksandr Bondar (514.5) of the Russian Olympic Committee than he did to gold medallist Cao.
Daley told the BBC: ‘I’m so happy. Back in May I didn’t know if I would make it to the Games. If someone had told me then I’d win a gold and a bronze I would probably have laughed in their face.
Daley finished closer to fourth-placed Aleksandr Bondar than he did to gold medallist Cao
Nonetheless, the Brit was ‘extremely happy’ with his gold and bronze won at these Games
‘I’m extremely happy with a gold and a bronze and I’m so overwhelmed with all the love and support back home.
‘It was close all the way through (the final) with the Chinese pair but they pulled away from me in the fourth round.’
Daley, 27, is keeping an open mind about his future after his successful Games in Tokyo.
‘I’m going to take a break now but I’m feeling better, I feel like I’m a different athlete, so we’ll see,’ he added.