Swimming star Florian Wellbrock won his fifth medal in the fifth World Championship race, but missed the historic title triple.

The Olympic champion secured the bronze medal in Budapest on the Olympic 10-kilometer course after 1:51:11.2 hours in the photo finish ahead of Frenchman Marc-Antoine Olivier. 

The defending champion, who was the first open water swimmer in history to have won three gold medals at a World Championships, was a whopping 14.4 seconds behind the winner Gregorio Paltrinieri from Italy.

Silver went to Italy's Domenico Acerenza.

Niklas Frach ended up in seventh place.

Wellbrock's balance sheet was a bit "ambivalent": "Second title that I couldn't defend, but I'm very happy with the bronze medal.

I can go to the awards ceremony with my head held high.”

Nevertheless, Wellbrock ended the title fights in Hungary's metropolis with a historic overall success.

It's been 40 years since a German swimmer last won five gold medals at a world championship: Back then, "Albatros" Michael Groß had cleared the field in Ecuador - but only in the pool.

Kristin Otto won six women's World Championship medals in Madrid in 1986.

Beck happy with silver

Meanwhile, Leonie Beck was very happy about silver after a thrilling sprint to the finish line.

Exhausted but smiling, the 25-year-old spoke on the sandy beach of Lupa Lake in bright sunshine about her first world championship medal in the Olympic 10 km open water swim.

At the award ceremony in front of shiny water, she gave the precious metal a kiss.

“A medal at a world championship is really great.

In the end you also need a little bit of luck.

But second in this field is really, really good,” said Beck.

In a furious three-way battle for the podium places, she had to admit defeat to Sharon van Rouwendaal from the Netherlands in the photo finish, but came in just ahead of Ana Marcela Cunha from Brazil.

"I'm happy that it finally worked out at a world championship," said Beck, who won gold on Sunday in the relay with Olympic champion Florian Wellbrock.

Looking at the strenuous race in the early morning in the 27.6 degree warm lake on the outskirts of Budapest, she said with a laugh: "I don't want to do anything anymore right now."

Five tenths of a second are missing to gold

After finishing fourth over five kilometers two days earlier, Beck swam much more aggressively and even looked like the winner with 200 meters to go.

However, Van Rouwendaal had the higher top speed and finished after 2:02:29.20 hours - five tenths of a second ahead of Beck.

A second behind was Olympic champion and five-kilometer world champion Cunha.

The second German starter, Lea Boy, took eighth place.

At the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro in 2016, Beck competed as a pool swimmer.

She was eliminated in the 800 meter freestyle.

Since things didn't go as planned in the pool, the woman from Würzburg switched to open water.

In the outdoor sport, in which tactical finesse, experience and assertiveness are important in addition to speed and endurance, she already won bronze at the World Championships over five kilometers in South Korea in 2019 and was very satisfied with fifth place at the Olympic Games in Tokyo.

“I was really looking forward to the race.

I'm really enjoying it now," said Beck.

"I think I've established myself in the open water and I've already reached the top somewhere." After a bit of rest, she wants to give everything again this Thursday.

However, not in the water, but to support Boy in the 25-kilometer race.

"Tomorrow I'll support with everything that's still in my body," said Beck.