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A new world

Michael Phelps powers to fourth gold of Rio 2016 Olympic Games

By Sam Green

American legend dominates 200m individual medley and becomes first swimmer to win four consecutive golds in the same individual event

Michael Phelps powers to fourth gold of Rio 2016 Olympic Games

Phelps reminds the world how many golds he has won at Rio 2016 (Photo: Getty Images/Al Bello)

Michael Phelps powered to his fourth gold medal of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games – and his 22nd in total – on another incredible night in the Olympic Aquatics Stadium.

The great American swimmer won his fourth straight 200m individual medley, finishing 1.95 seconds ahead of Japan's Kosuke Hagino. China's Wang Shun took silver.

Finishing in one minute and 54.66 seconds, Phelps took his overall medal tally to 26, further extending his reign as the most decorated Olympian of all time. He also became the first swimmer to win four gold medals in the same individual event in consecutive Olympic Games. 

And he is not finished yet: on Friday he will race in the 100m butterfly and on Saturday he could win another gold in the 4x100m medley relay, which would be the 31-year-old's farewell race.

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Phelps won the USA's second gold of the night in the pool, after Ryan Murphy completed a sweep of the men's backstroke events, winning the 200m.

Murphy had also won the 100m backstroke, becoming the third American man in the last three Olympic Games to take both races. Aaron Peirsol pulled off the sweep at Athens in 2004 and Lenny Krayzelburg claimed both golds at the 2000 Sydney Games.

The 21-year-old touched home in 1:53.62 with Australia's Mitch Larkin taking silver in 1:53.96, just ahead of Russia's Evgeny Rylov with the bronze in 1:53.97.

Glory for Japan

Rie Kaneto pulled away from Yulia Efimova to take gold in the women's 200m breaststroke in Thursday's first final.

The Japanese swimmer grabbed the lead on the third of four laps and powered to the finish comfortably in front, ahead of Russia's Yulia Efimova and China's Shi Jinglin.

Rie Kaneto celebrates her gold medal on Thursday night (Photo: Getty Images/Clive Rose)

In a dramatic last final of the evening, the USA's Simone Manuel and Penny Oleksiak of Canada touched home at exactly the same moment and shared the gold medal in the women's 100m. Sarah Sjostrom of Sweden took the bronze.