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Olympics 2012: Risztov caps comeback with unlikely win in swimming

In a sport where comebacks rarely end in success, Hungarian long-distance swimmer Eva Risztov bucked the trend by winning gold in the women's open water race.

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 In a sport where comebacks rarely end in success, Hungarian long-distance swimmer Eva Risztov bucked the trend on Thursday by winning gold in the women's open water race. Risztov was an accomplished pool swimmer who never quite made it to the Olympic podium.

She won three silver medals at the 2003 world championships in Barcelona but came up short at her two previous Olympic appearances, at Sydney in 2000 and Athens four years later. In 2005, she quit, believing her chances of winning an elusive Olympic medal were sunk.

But after watching the 2008 Beijing Games on television, she decided to try again after being persuaded by the manager of her local swim club. "I finished because I wasn't happy with the results but after three years I felt I missed out on the Olympics and I was capable of a medal," she told a news conference. "I didn't think about it to begin with.

I got a telephone call from the manager of the swimming club in Debrecen asking me to begin swimming again so I began again." Risztov also decided on a change of events. Although she continued to train for the pool, the 26-year-old switched her focus to the marathon, which was only added to the Olympic schedule four years ago. She made the Hungarian team for the pool events in London, finishing 16th in the 400 metres freestyle, 13th in the 800 freestyle and 15th in the 4x100 freestyle relay but they were just preparations for the 10 kilometre event at The Serpentine in London's Hyde Park.

Still a novice to distance swimming, she was disqualified from last year's world championships in Shanghai for impeding another competitor, but learnt her lesson. In London, she used her superior speed from the pool to get in the lead early where she could not get in trouble, then stayed there apart from a brief moment when she flipped to backstroke after pausing for an energy drink.

"I decided to make it a very clean race today. If I led, no-one could say I did anything," she said. "That was my tactic and if I could not win from first place, my mind would have been clear. "This is the toughest way to win but I decided to follow this tactic because this is the only way to win clearly. That is what I trained for."

After leading for all but one of the first five loops of the recreational lake, which was packed with tens of thousands of spectators, Risztov broke away at the start of the final loop, opening up a three body length lead over her nearest rivals. Then she had to repeal a late charge from American Haley Anderson, who drew level with her as they closed in on the finish.

The pair sprinted to the line but Risztov had just enough in reserve to win by four-tenths of a second after nearly two hours of churning through the murky water. "After the Shanghai race I did not understand exactly why I was disqualified but I am not very experienced in open water swimming," she said. "This race is only the seventh of my life. I hope from now I will become a member of the elite in open water swimming."

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