Bianca Buitendag and Tatjana Schoenmaker wins silver at Tokyo Olympics fundraisers
Bianca Buitendag and Tatjana Schoenmaker win silver at Tokyo Olympics Photo: Anton Geyser and REUTERS/Lisi Niesner (Buitendag)

Home » 2 Silver Medals for South Africa as Buitendag Bags SA’s Second, in Surfing

2 Silver Medals for South Africa as Buitendag Bags SA’s Second, in Surfing

What turned out a grey day after inclement weather rolled into Japan turned out to have a silver lining for Team SA at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics. Two silver linings in fact, as Tatjana Schoenmaker and Bianca Buitendag opened the country’s medals tally… writes GARY LEMKE in Tokyo For the fifth time in the last eight […]

Bianca Buitendag and Tatjana Schoenmaker wins silver at Tokyo Olympics fundraisers
Bianca Buitendag and Tatjana Schoenmaker win silver at Tokyo Olympics Photo: Anton Geyser and REUTERS/Lisi Niesner (Buitendag)

What turned out a grey day after inclement weather rolled into Japan turned out to have a silver lining for Team SA at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics. Two silver linings in fact, as Tatjana Schoenmaker and Bianca Buitendag opened the country’s medals tally… writes GARY LEMKE in Tokyo

For the fifth time in the last eight Olympics’ it was a breaststroke swimmer who delivered South Africa’s first medal at the Games – just like Penny Heyns had done in 1996 and 2000 and Cameron van der Burgh had in 2012 and 2016.

This time it was Tatjana Schoenmaker who did the business, denied the gold in the last 25 minutes by 17-year-old American Lydia Jacoby in the women’s 100m breaststroke final.

A couple of hours later Bianca Buitendag continued her dream run in what is the final professional surfing competition of her career. An Olympic silver medal is a fine way to sign things off.

Schoenmaker, in her debut Olympics, came to Tokyo on the back of her breakthrough at the 2018 Commonwealth Games where she’d done the 100/200m double on the Gold Coast. Despite the fact that her better event is the 200m, she laid down her marker with an Olympic record 1min 04.82sec performance in the 100m heats.

Tatjana Schoenmaker wins silver at Tokyo Olympics Photo: Anton Geyser
Tatjana Schoenmaker wins silver at Tokyo Olympics Photo: Anton Geyser

She followed up by getting the better of the defending Olympic champion Lilly King in the semi-finals, delivering the American her first defeat in the event since 2015, and qualified fastest for the final, securing lane four in the process.

On Tuesday she found herself the meat in a United States sandwich with Jacoby on one side and King on the other. And for 75 glorious metres she held both at bay, having reached the wall first in 30.41 before the teenage American, somewhat surprisingly, finished off the race stronger.

The winning time was 1:04.95, with Schoenmaker’s silver coming in 1:05.22 and King, the bronze medallist in 1:05.54 being defeated twice in two days.

Schoenmaker’s immediate body language showed that she’d won silver, not lost the gold. She looked at the scoreboard and burst out into a broad smile, and quickly gave Jacoby of of the biggest bear hugs we’ve seen at these Games. The smile and genuine delight at winning silver was apparent hours later.

Buitendag, who had earlier in the week said that these Games would be the swansong to an international career that started at the age of 13, had the toughest draw imaginable. She took on the Australian legend, seven-time world champion Stephanie Gilmore in the third round. After then seeing her off she was thrust into a quarter-final with Yolanda Hopkins, the No9 seed. With that challenge out the way a stiffer task awaited her in the semi-finals.

Tokyo 2020 Olympics - Surfing - Women's Shortboard - Medal Ceremony - Tsurigasaki Surfing Beach, Chiba, Japan – July 27, 2021. Silver medallist, Bianca Buitendag of South Africa wearing a protective face mask poses on the podium REUTERS/Lisi Niesner
Tokyo 2020 Olympics – Surfing – Women’s Shortboard – Medal Ceremony – Tsurigasaki Surfing Beach, Chiba, Japan – July 27, 2021. Silver medallist, Bianca Buitendag of South Africa wearing a protective face mask poses on the podium REUTERS/Lisi Niesner

No2 seed Caroline Marks of the United States was dispatched with ease, 11.00 to 3.67 and suddenly it was a case of gold or silver in the final, with No1 seed and four-time world champion Carissa Moore awaiting her.

After beating Marks, Buitendag said:

“The ocean is wild. It can go anyone’s way. It really is just a question of chance out there. I really fought with everything that I had, I had nothing left. The tank was empty by the time I got out of the water.”

It proved to be a bridge too far on a day which suited Buitendag, possibly the tallest women’s surfer at these Games and who prefers the bigger waves to the smaller swells. A typhoon that had made landfall during the night turned conditions in her favour throughout the day, but she found the world No1 just a bit too much in the final.

Now that South Africa is on the medals board, more will follow. That’s how it has been every Games where the swimmers, especially the breaststrokers, have got things rolling. Thanks to Schoenmaker for following what is now a proud, and lucky, tradition. And take a bow Bianca Buitendag, your achievements will go down as one of the better medal performances by a South African at an Olympics, given the draw she negotiated and the fact she was an unheralded. No17 seed coming into the competition.

The men’s Sevens rugby players should add to the medals tally on Wednesday, while Chad le Clos looks to be in a dogfight for silver and bronze in the men’s 200m butterfly, with the Hungarian Kristof Milak looking nailed on for gold, given the impressive manner in which he has powered his way through to that treasured lane four in the final.

Source: TeamSA

Where to watch Tokyo Olympics if you’re in South Africa

You can watch all the key moments from the Olympics online at www.showmax.com or on your phone using the Showmax app, plus score an additional free month when you sign up for Showmax Pro before 31 August. (To claim your free month, go to www.showmax.com to subscribe or upgrade. That’s it, you’re all set!)