In just one performance, Singapore’s Joseph Schooling beat swimming great Michael Phelps, took home his city state’s first Olympic gold medal and became an instant millionaire.

Known at home for smashing national records and taking multiple titles in regional competitions, Schooling had held the hopes of Singapore, a Southeast Asian island nation of less than six million, which had only won two silvers and two bronzes since it joined the Olympic fold in 1948.

“Its been a hard road, I’ve done something that no one in our country has done before. I’ve received a lot of support and that’s phenomenal,” Schooling said.

“It’s been a tough road, I’m not going to lie, the first guy through the wall, it’s always bloody,” he said.

Watched by his mother and president Tony Tan in the stands, the 21-year-old beat Phelps, South Africa’s Chad Le Clos and Hungary’s Laszlo Cseh in the 100 metres butterfly final on Friday, to grab the gold while the others completed a remarkable three-way dead-heat for silver.

Singapore has spent millions trying to win more medals at the Olympics, including offering a Foreign Sports Talent programme which grants promising foreign athletes citizenship, as well as a S$1 million ($743,494.42) prize for gold medals.

Schooling left the country at 14 to train in the US and now studies at the University of Texas in Austin, whose programme is led by two-time US Olympic men’s head coach Eddie Reese.

He was inspired to aim for the Olympics as a six-year-old after a dinner conversation with his grand-uncle, Lloyd Valberg, a former national high-jumper who was also Singapore’s first Olympian, according to local media reports.

“This moment is not about me, it’s all about my coaches my friends my family that believed that when I was a six year old kid that I could do it,” he said.

Schooling won Singapore’s first medal at last year’s World Championships in the 100 butterfly. He also broke two Asian records.

On Friday he set a new Olympic record of 50.39 seconds.

Like many of his contemporaries in Rio, who grew up idolising Phelps, he keeps an old photo of himself as a bespectacled teenager with the American that was taken at a meeting in Singapore after the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

“I’m excited just to see how much faster he goes,” Phelps told reporters about Schooling.

“It’s up to him where he wants to take it. As big as he wants to dream, as hard as he wants to work, to do whatever is in his head.”

Fastest man in water

Anthony Ervin of the United States reclaimed the mantle of fastest man in the water by taking the Olympic 50 metres freestyle gold medal 16 years after he first won it, and by the slimmest of margins.

“I kind of laughed. It’s almost absurd I was able to do it again,” said Ervin of his immediate reaction to seeing his name with the number one against it.

France’s Florent Manaudou, the defending champion, finished second and just 0.01 seconds behind the 35-year-old veteran, who won in 21.40 seconds in a splash and dash down the pool.

Nathan Adrian of the United States took the bronze in the shortest and fastest race on the programme. He also finished third in the 100 freestyle on Wednesday.

“It was a very disappointing race. I flagged at the end. I did exactly the opposite of what I did four years ago,” said Manaudou.

“Tonight I was hungry and I really wanted to win. Unfortunately, I wasn’t the best today. I was the best in the heats but tonight he was better.

“I felt after 15 metres that the race wasn’t going well, that I was too deep in the water and I couldn’t get any speed. It’s hard to come back after that.”

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